From 50569114acdc64e7c7cae1498635d3f821517c30 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Lange Date: Mon, 7 Mar 2016 15:53:16 +0100 Subject: Initial commit of the Faster IT roundcube_calendar plugin distribution This includes: * Kolab plugins 3.2.9 (calendar and libcalendaring) * CalDAV driver 3.2.8 * .htaccess files for at least some security * SabreDAV updated to 1.8.12 (Jan 2015 release) * Support for CURLOPT_SSL_* settings to allow self-signed certificates * Small fixes & improved documentation --- .../OldSabre/CalDAV/Backend/BackendInterface.php | 233 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 233 insertions(+) create mode 100644 calendar/lib/SabreDAV/lib/OldSabre/CalDAV/Backend/BackendInterface.php (limited to 'calendar/lib/SabreDAV/lib/OldSabre/CalDAV/Backend/BackendInterface.php') diff --git a/calendar/lib/SabreDAV/lib/OldSabre/CalDAV/Backend/BackendInterface.php b/calendar/lib/SabreDAV/lib/OldSabre/CalDAV/Backend/BackendInterface.php new file mode 100644 index 0000000..81f7778 --- /dev/null +++ b/calendar/lib/SabreDAV/lib/OldSabre/CalDAV/Backend/BackendInterface.php @@ -0,0 +1,233 @@ + array( + * '{DAV:}displayname' => null, + * ), + * 424 => array( + * '{DAV:}owner' => null, + * ) + * ) + * + * In this example it was forbidden to update {DAV:}displayname. + * (403 Forbidden), which in turn also caused {DAV:}owner to fail + * (424 Failed Dependency) because the request needs to be atomic. + * + * @param mixed $calendarId + * @param array $mutations + * @return bool|array + */ + public function updateCalendar($calendarId, array $mutations); + + /** + * Delete a calendar and all it's objects + * + * @param mixed $calendarId + * @return void + */ + public function deleteCalendar($calendarId); + + /** + * Returns all calendar objects within a calendar. + * + * Every item contains an array with the following keys: + * * id - unique identifier which will be used for subsequent updates + * * calendardata - The iCalendar-compatible calendar data + * * uri - a unique key which will be used to construct the uri. This can be any arbitrary string. + * * lastmodified - a timestamp of the last modification time + * * etag - An arbitrary string, surrounded by double-quotes. (e.g.: + * ' "abcdef"') + * * calendarid - The calendarid as it was passed to this function. + * * size - The size of the calendar objects, in bytes. + * + * Note that the etag is optional, but it's highly encouraged to return for + * speed reasons. + * + * The calendardata is also optional. If it's not returned + * 'getCalendarObject' will be called later, which *is* expected to return + * calendardata. + * + * If neither etag or size are specified, the calendardata will be + * used/fetched to determine these numbers. If both are specified the + * amount of times this is needed is reduced by a great degree. + * + * @param mixed $calendarId + * @return array + */ + public function getCalendarObjects($calendarId); + + /** + * Returns information from a single calendar object, based on it's object + * uri. + * + * The returned array must have the same keys as getCalendarObjects. The + * 'calendardata' object is required here though, while it's not required + * for getCalendarObjects. + * + * This method must return null if the object did not exist. + * + * @param mixed $calendarId + * @param string $objectUri + * @return array|null + */ + public function getCalendarObject($calendarId,$objectUri); + + /** + * Creates a new calendar object. + * + * It is possible return an etag from this function, which will be used in + * the response to this PUT request. Note that the ETag must be surrounded + * by double-quotes. + * + * However, you should only really return this ETag if you don't mangle the + * calendar-data. If the result of a subsequent GET to this object is not + * the exact same as this request body, you should omit the ETag. + * + * @param mixed $calendarId + * @param string $objectUri + * @param string $calendarData + * @return string|null + */ + public function createCalendarObject($calendarId,$objectUri,$calendarData); + + /** + * Updates an existing calendarobject, based on it's uri. + * + * It is possible return an etag from this function, which will be used in + * the response to this PUT request. Note that the ETag must be surrounded + * by double-quotes. + * + * However, you should only really return this ETag if you don't mangle the + * calendar-data. If the result of a subsequent GET to this object is not + * the exact same as this request body, you should omit the ETag. + * + * @param mixed $calendarId + * @param string $objectUri + * @param string $calendarData + * @return string|null + */ + public function updateCalendarObject($calendarId,$objectUri,$calendarData); + + /** + * Deletes an existing calendar object. + * + * @param mixed $calendarId + * @param string $objectUri + * @return void + */ + public function deleteCalendarObject($calendarId,$objectUri); + + /** + * Performs a calendar-query on the contents of this calendar. + * + * The calendar-query is defined in RFC4791 : CalDAV. Using the + * calendar-query it is possible for a client to request a specific set of + * object, based on contents of iCalendar properties, date-ranges and + * iCalendar component types (VTODO, VEVENT). + * + * This method should just return a list of (relative) urls that match this + * query. + * + * The list of filters are specified as an array. The exact array is + * documented by OldSabre\CalDAV\CalendarQueryParser. + * + * Note that it is extremely likely that getCalendarObject for every path + * returned from this method will be called almost immediately after. You + * may want to anticipate this to speed up these requests. + * + * This method provides a default implementation, which parses *all* the + * iCalendar objects in the specified calendar. + * + * This default may well be good enough for personal use, and calendars + * that aren't very large. But if you anticipate high usage, big calendars + * or high loads, you are strongly adviced to optimize certain paths. + * + * The best way to do so is override this method and to optimize + * specifically for 'common filters'. + * + * Requests that are extremely common are: + * * requests for just VEVENTS + * * requests for just VTODO + * * requests with a time-range-filter on either VEVENT or VTODO. + * + * ..and combinations of these requests. It may not be worth it to try to + * handle every possible situation and just rely on the (relatively + * easy to use) CalendarQueryValidator to handle the rest. + * + * Note that especially time-range-filters may be difficult to parse. A + * time-range filter specified on a VEVENT must for instance also handle + * recurrence rules correctly. + * A good example of how to interprete all these filters can also simply + * be found in OldSabre\CalDAV\CalendarQueryFilter. This class is as correct + * as possible, so it gives you a good idea on what type of stuff you need + * to think of. + * + * @param mixed $calendarId + * @param array $filters + * @return array + */ + public function calendarQuery($calendarId, array $filters); + +} -- cgit v1.2.3