I haven't. Though, I haven't tried this for users with b in the name. I remember troubleshooting a printer for an hour once before realizing it wasn't plugged into the network, so my first inclination is swapping out the keyboard for sanity's sake, then pasting in the username from another doc after that to see if the terminal is filtering b out of input. cheers, tack On Apr 24, 2008, at 8:39 PM, Nick wrote:
tack,
Thanks for your reply. It works (mostly), but I have one problem. When I'm typing "acl -i calendars/users/$USERNAME/calendar", I cannot type the letter "b". There is absolutely no effect when I hit the "b" key. All other keys seem to work as expected. Have you run into this problem?
Thanks, nutbar
PS - my username has a 'b' in it so I'm seemingly out of luck
tack wrote:
You can use the command line tool to edit the ACL's.
http://trac.macosforge.org/projects/calendarserver/wiki/CalDAVClientLibrary
I added read only in acl position 1 for all logged in users. This may be some handy context in getting around the process:
http://wantedfornerder.blogspot.com/2008/04/darwin-calendar-server-client-to...
Cheers, tack
On Apr 24, 2008, at 5:44 PM, Nick wrote:
Hi all,
I can't seem to find this information anywhere. I have about 5 users with separate accounts and their own calendars. I want every user to have read/write access to their own calendar, but read-only access to all other users' calendars. How can I accomplish this?
Thanks, Nick "nutbar" Legg _______________________________________________ calendarserver-users mailing list calendarserver-users@lists.macosforge.org http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo/calendarserver-users
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