diff options
author | toma <toma@283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da> | 2009-11-25 17:56:58 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | toma <toma@283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da> | 2009-11-25 17:56:58 +0000 |
commit | 460c52653ab0dcca6f19a4f492ed2c5e4e963ab0 (patch) | |
tree | 67208f7c145782a7e90b123b982ca78d88cc2c87 /libkcal/DESIGN | |
download | tdepim-460c52653ab0dcca6f19a4f492ed2c5e4e963ab0.tar.gz tdepim-460c52653ab0dcca6f19a4f492ed2c5e4e963ab0.zip |
Copy the KDE 3.5 branch to branches/trinity for new KDE 3.5 features.
BUG:215923
git-svn-id: svn://anonsvn.kde.org/home/kde/branches/trinity/kdepim@1054174 283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da
Diffstat (limited to 'libkcal/DESIGN')
-rw-r--r-- | libkcal/DESIGN | 63 |
1 files changed, 63 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/libkcal/DESIGN b/libkcal/DESIGN new file mode 100644 index 000000000..37023c1a4 --- /dev/null +++ b/libkcal/DESIGN @@ -0,0 +1,63 @@ +LIBKCAL +======= + +libkcal provides the non-GUI part of calendaring. It is partly based +on libical, an implementation of the iCalendar format defined in +rfc2445. libical is an object-oriented C library, which provides basic +but complete handling of calendaring components. libkcal puts a C++ +face on it, which fully encapsulates the library. + +Calendaring data is handled by the Calendar class interface, which +provides a storage for calendar components. One implementation of the +Calendar interface exists, the CalendarLocal class, which provides +local storage as a file. (TODO: Explain the resources.) + +The Calendar class uses the CalFormat class interface to convert +calendar data into a textual representation. There are two +implementations, the VCalFormat for vCalendar and the ICalFormat for +iCalendar. + +Actual calendaring components are handled by the classes Event, Todo +and Journal, all inheriting from the common base class +Incidence. These classes store the information related to an event, +todo or journal entry. + +Specifics +========= + +This is the place to put in developer notes for various specific +places that need extra description. + +The scheduling ID +----------------- + +In the Incidence class, there is an attribute called mSchedulingID. +It is only set when you have an event or to-do that is the result of +accepting an invitation. In this case it is the value of the UID of +the invitation, and is used for looking up the event if you get +changes to the original invitations - changes, canceling, updates... + +The get-method that returns the schedulingID checks if this is set +at all. If not, it returns the UID. And when the incidence is saved in +iCal, the schedulingID (i.e. the UID if no SID is there) is saved in +the iCal UID field, and if schedulingID is not null, the UID of the +incidence is saved in X-KDE-LIBKCAL-ID. The reason for this is +compatibility with other iCal based applications, because they expect +the UID of the invitation to be saved in the iCal UID field. In the +Kolab resource XML format, there is a tag <scheduling-id> where it is +stored if present. + +This is the scenario that led to the introduction of this scheme: If +you have access to some other persons calendar - for example with the +IMAP or Kolab resources using shared folders - and both you and the +other accept the same invitation, then you both have an event with the +same SID. Had this been the UID (as was previously the case and as is +done by other applications) then you would have two incidences with +the same UID, and libkcal is designed with a very basic assumption +that this must never happen. By storing the UID in SID and making a +new and private UID, there is still the link to the invitation UID +that is necessary for scheduling, and the UIDs of the two incidences +in your calendar are different. The scenario that really has this +problem is the secretary scenario - the secretary will often be at the +same events as the boss, and has access to the boss' folders. This +means he or she would see this problem all the time. |