Hi,
is there any way to do backups on a per user or per calendar basis?
If Davical ist used by - say - /lots of users/, it is nearly always the
case that someone deleted something /important/.
In this case I cannot restore the whole database backuped an hour ago
(or so). The whole rest of the user base is killing you. :)
One way to archive this would be a backup via WebDAV on each and every
calendar. There needs to be a list of all calendars and a user who has
read access to all the data. Is there any way to do this automatically?
E.g. define a user "backup" that has read access an every created
calendar by default.
I found this in the documentation:
$c->default_relationships = array();
116 * An array of groups / permissions which should be automatically added
117 * for each new user created. This is a crude mechanism which we
118 * will hopefully manage to work out some better approach for in the
119 * future. For now, create an array that looks something like:
120 * array( 9 => 'R', 4 => 'A' )
121 * to create a 'read' relationship to user_no 9 and an 'all' relation
122 * with user_no 4.
123 * Default: none
So, if user backup has ID 3, it would be:
$c->default_relationships = array( 3 => 'R' );
Or not?
Marc
is there any way to do backups on a per user or per calendar basis?
If Davical ist used by - say - /lots of users/, it is nearly always the
case that someone deleted something /important/.
In this case I cannot restore the whole database backuped an hour ago
(or so). The whole rest of the user base is killing you. :)
One way to archive this would be a backup via WebDAV on each and every
calendar. There needs to be a list of all calendars and a user who has
read access to all the data. Is there any way to do this automatically?
E.g. define a user "backup" that has read access an every created
calendar by default.
I found this in the documentation:
$c->default_relationships = array();
116 * An array of groups / permissions which should be automatically added
117 * for each new user created. This is a crude mechanism which we
118 * will hopefully manage to work out some better approach for in the
119 * future. For now, create an array that looks something like:
120 * array( 9 => 'R', 4 => 'A' )
121 * to create a 'read' relationship to user_no 9 and an 'all' relation
122 * with user_no 4.
123 * Default: none
So, if user backup has ID 3, it would be:
$c->default_relationships = array( 3 => 'R' );
Or not?
Marc