Followed your suggestion book 1. and 3. have vanished now - Yet, the
public book mentioned in point 4 is still there, and the personal is
still named "personal" :(
On 09/21/2010 03:09 PM, Mark Adams wrote:
If your having trouble with Tbird I would suggest recreating the profile. If it
corrects the issue you could try narrowing down the cause further if it
occurred again.
Regards,
Mark
On 21 Sep 2010, at 11:59, "M. Stoffers"<m.stoff...@web.de> wrote:
Ok, that makes sense.
So I would like to hide the user list from the users as it even does not show
any users at all. So I think it would just confuse them if there is an empty
address book.
I set "is addressBook = NO;" and restarted sogod. In the web interface there is
only the personal address book left what's exactly what I expected. However, in TB there
are still four address books:
1. This global one - Trying to delete, it tells me, I could not delete the
common address book.
2. "personal" - Synched to the personal address book in the web interface, but
named differently. However, I can change the name, but I cannot use German umlauts (err
400) - Yet additional adressbooks are even synched in name. Can I somehow synch the name
of the personal address book, too?
3. "public" - If I klick delete, it asks for confirmation, but doesn't do
anything after confirmation
4. "public" - Trying to delete, it tells me, I could not delete the common
address book.
It would be nice if I could somehow make 1., 3. and 4. vanish and synch the
names of 2. as my user's wouldn't appreciate confusing address books ;)
Thanks
Mirko
On 09/21/2010 12:14 PM, Mark Adams wrote:
It's a list of all users on the server. It's not meant to be edited by
users.
If you want an "office" addressbook where all users can edit, create a
seperate account and share that to everyone.
On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 10:21:28AM +0200, M. Stoffers wrote:
On 09/20/2010 08:30 PM, Jason Oster wrote:
As far as I know, SOGo does not have the capability to write LDAP
entries. (I am assuming your global address book is stored in LDAP,
as my setup is.)
This assumption doesn't hold :P - My user source is Postgres. However,
there is this "isAddressBook = YES;" setting in my GNUStep user sources.
Doesn't this imply that the user source is also a global address book
for our company's client addresses?
Probably, I haven't got it yet: The users can see an empty address book
in Thunderbird and in the web interface. Nobody can add entries here.
So: What is the purpose of this address book?
Thanks
Mirko
On 09/20/2010 04:56 AM, M. Stoffers wrote:
PS: Sorry, for the strange formatting. I did not set up my mail client
till now for this freemail address and the webmail interface does
strange things - I think is was better some decades ago :P
On 09/20/2010 01:42 PM, Mirko Stoffers wrote:
Hi community, so, now that E-Mail runs fine, I would like to setup the
contacts component. All users can already see a global address book.
However, there is no user able to insert "cards" into this address
book: When I klick on "New card" the "Add to" drop down menu simply
does not show the global address book. I would assume that by default
no user has write permissions on that address book, right? However,
how do I set those permissions? Thanks Mirko Btw: It's the same
behaviour as in the demo. However, I thinks that it is intended for
the demo?
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