[kronolith] Default external calendar

Jan Schneider jan at horde.org
Sat Mar 17 18:28:32 UTC 2012


Zitat von gerard breiner <gerard.breiner at ias.u-psud.fr>:

> Jan Schneider <jan at horde.org> a écrit :
>
>> Zitat von Gerard Breiner <gerard.breiner at ias.u-psud.fr>:
>>
>>> Le 14/02/2012 15:37, Jan Schneider a écrit :
>>>>
>>>> Zitat von Martin Hochreiter <linuxbox at wavenet.at>:
>>>>
>>>>>> You cannot simply replace strings in the value copied from the  
>>>>>> database, because it is a serialized hash. Using $registry in  
>>>>>> prefs.local.php is not a good idea either.
>>>>>> Instead you should create a preference hook that builds the  
>>>>>> hash, and return it serialized.
>>>>>>
>>>>> what a pitty :)  ... ok, thank you I will create a hook for that  
>>>>> (new world for me...)
>>>>> What should I use instead of the $registry variable to get the  
>>>>> credentials - or is it ok
>>>>> to use it in the hooks?
>>>>
>>>> The prefs_init hook already gets the user name passed.
>>>>
>>> Hello ,
>>>
>>> I'm working on this too... So I followed the above Jan's advice   
>>> and as well as read the very good doc /horde/config/hooks.php.dist  
>>> (many thanks for all the work). The result is that I managed to  
>>> create the remote calendar by working with prefs and  
>>> hooks.local.php.
>>>
>>> Here is what I've done :
>>> kronolit/config/prefs.local.php
>>>
>>> [CODE]
>>> // remote calendars
>>> $_prefs['remote_cals'] = array(
>>>   'value' => '',
>>>   'hook' => 'true',
>>>   'locked' => 'false'
>>> );
>>> [/CODE]
>>>
>>> [CODE]
>>> kronolith/config/hooks.local.phpclass Kronolith_Hooks
>>> {
>>>   public function prefs_init($prefs, $value, $username, $scope_ob)
>>>   {
>>>       switch ($prefs) {
>>>            case 'remote_cals':
>>>                 $no_serialize = array(array('name'=>'Calendar',
>>>                                              
>>> 'url'=>'https://myurl/caldav.php/' .$username. '/agenda',
>>>                                             'user'=> $username
>>>       //                                    'password' => $password
>>>                                       )
>>>                                );
>>>               $value = serialize($no_serialize);
>>>               return $value;
>>>       }
>>>  }
>>> }
>>> [/CODE]
>>>
>>> Nevertheless at this time I don't know how to catch the  
>>> password... If Jan look at this again I would appreciate a little  
>>> more hints about this last issue.
>>
>> Try $GLOBALS['registry']->getAuthCredential('password')
>>
>> Jan.
>>
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>> http://www.horde.org/
>>
>>
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>
> Many thanks Jan for this advice... This command give the password  
> without encodage (I tried it in admin/phpshell.php ). Nevertheless   
> it seems that username and password are expecting as something like  
> : s:4:"user";s:12:"PYnhqb8tbok=";s:8:"password";s:15:"PQ7F+FGnp7t="; .

Sorry?

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