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GroupDAV: Standardizing Groupware

IGnatius T Foobar writes "There are lots of open source groupware products out there, but the perpetual problem has always been that we don't have a single, unified standard protocol to connect open source groupware clients to open source groupware servers. GroupDAV changes all that. Support for GroupDAV now exists in Citadel, OpenGroupware.org, KDE Kontact, and connectors are currently in beta for Evolution and Mozilla Sunbird. Unlike CAP and CalDAV, the GroupDAV effort is backed by real code that works today. "

14 of 150 comments (clear)

  1. untouched versions by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    DAV is versioning, especially relevant to concurrency in groups. How does GroupDAV model that kind of versioning? And how are our existing, divergent client apps supposed to represent that?

    --

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    make install -not war

  2. Question number one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    How will this get me laid?

    1. Re:Question number one by alachyr · · Score: 5, Interesting
    2. Re:Question number one by ggvaidya · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not that I have much experience, but visiting Slashdot may be entirely the wrong way to go about answering that particular question ...

      (For those who think parent is a troll: here's the idea, with relevant bits highlighted)

  3. Lack of this is keeing us with Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And this lack of a GroupWare standard is EXACTLY why organizations like mine (state government) still turn to MS.

    If we could get an opensource standard that worked with exiting MS standards then we would switch, if for nothing else then price alone.

    1. Re:Lack of this is keeing us with Microsoft by bozone · · Score: 5, Informative

      My company was planing on migrating from NT4 domain / Exchange 5.5 / SQL2000 / Win2k desktops to more platform independant solutions - Novell NDS / Groupwise / mix of SQL2k & PostgreSQL / mix of Linux & W2k desktops

      The show stopper? PDA synch with shared calendar used by management. The PDAs synch through outlook. Outlook doesn't talk to Groupwise calendaring. Exchange 2003 requires Active Directory. Having AD makes SQL2005 directory integration an option now...

      5 crappy PDAs and not wanting to retrain people on a new mail client is directing our infrastructure....*snif*

      --
      "Hatred is the coward's revenge for being intimidated" ...George Bernard Shaw
  4. Re:And Groupware is... by kebes · · Score: 5, Informative

    I didn't know what it was either. Apparently it's software that helps manage to efforts of groups of people, allowing them to collaborate on projects. So it's exactly what's needed for a distributed OSS project. Refer to useability first for some details.

  5. Re:Still needs more... by Wier · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You're joking, right? Open source supports the open standards when Exchange uses them.

    For instance, you can use active directory as a regular LDAP instance (albiet with funny cn= syntax)

    And you can access email boxes as IMAP folders.

    In fact, most of the iCal processing is done by outlook and just stored in mail folder (accessible via IMAP). In fact, some people have actually gotten calendaring working with open source software via Exchange.

    The only parts that aren't supported are those that aren't open. For instance, the MAPI messaging that exchange can do and those wonky objects in Active Directory that you can't access via the LDAP interface.

  6. Re:Product support by FuzzzyLogik · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just because it doesn't work now doesn't mean it won't in the future. You have to start somewhere. The reason everything has become divided on this front is probably due to there not being a good standard to rely on. Now that we have that maybe it can be implemented on those apps that most people use. So hold your judgement until you see what happens in the future.

  7. Re:Still needs more... by nlinecomputers · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Agreed.

    For me the problem isn't Exchange. It's Oulook. People want to use outlook. They don't give a flying frack what it connects to but they want the useabilty of Outlook.

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  8. Terrible news for Slashdotters everywhere by FreeLinux · · Score: 4, Insightful

    so if you say microsoft is a standard (ok, its used by a lot of ppl, but a standard is by definition something from an upper committee like iso or rfc or din, not a single firm itself)

    I've got terrible news for most Slashdotters, that isn't the definition of a standard. The fact that many Microsoft products, such as Exchange, are used by more people and organizations than any other available product makes those Microsoft products the de facto standard. This will naturally come as a shock but, that doesn't change the fact that Microsoft Exchange is the de facto standard in GroupWare applications.

    You can brand me a heretic and mod me down but that won't change the facts or the standard.

  9. Lacking in features by Fluffy+the+Cat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The GroupDAV standard is nice and simple, and it ought to be easy enough to implement. However, it's lacking in various useful features. For instance,

    Due to this reasons the client SHOULD store alarms locally and SHOULD NOT transmit them to server. The server is MAY reject iCalendar resources containing alarms but MUST signal that using a proper error code.

    Woo. I use a GroupDAV server to store my calendar information from my desktop. While I'm on the road, I synchronise my PDA against it. Then I have to go through every event to reset the alarms, since otherwise I don't get any warning about them. Excellent.

    Clients SHOULD not post recurring tasks to the server.

    I mean, come on.

    To allow the client to search for UIDs stored in the server, the server would need to expose the UID as a WebDAV property for use in DASL queries. While this is possible in some implementations (eg OpenGroupware.org ZideStore) it would complicate basic implementations significantly.

    Yeah, I can see that making synchronisation fun.

    The standard is littered with "This is difficult, so it's not implemented". That's fine - it results in a lightweight specification that's easy to implement, and in many cases it may well be good enough. But it's not appropriate for this to be the standard for open source groupware. It's missing too much functionality. Trying to sell it as a solution for competing with existing groupware solutions is just insane.

  10. Re:A naive question by morzel · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Why am I not hearing about Lotus Notes on linux? Did something change while my back was turned?
    (I'm assuming you're talking about the client application, since for the Domino server Linux is one of the target platforms.)

    For one: the native unix Notes client implementation (version 4.5 was the last) sucked tennisballs through a garden hose. It was justly terminated: why supporting a unix client that wasn't even used by 1% of all clients?

    Secondly: with Notes release 5, for standard groupware stuff the Notes client ran acceptably in a Wine environment. Some guys at IBM even made a special Wine package for notes (NUL - Notes under Linux) -- remember that R5 went gold in 1999, when Lotus wasn't part of IBM and Linux wasn't all the brouhaha it is now.

    Thirdly: from the most recent release (6.5), all the groupware functionalities can be accessed using Domino Web Access (formerly known as iNotes), and IBM went through great lenghts to make Mozilla a supported platform for this. Think webmail on steroids.

    Lastly: IBM is pushing the "Workplace" technology, centralizing everything on beefy servers and provide all the technologies on-line, based on heaps and heaps of Java. Lotus Notes is part of this transition, and my guess is that with the release after the upcoming release (R7 is currently in public beta) the Notes client as we know it ceases to exist and is replaced by something that is based on Eclipse.

    Disclaimer: I'm a certified Notes/Java developer.

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    Okay... I'll do the stupid things first, then you shy people follow.
    [Zappa]
  11. Unlike what now? by Mike+Shaver · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Unlike CAP and CalDAV, the GroupDAV effort is backed by real code that works today.
    Huh. I participated in an interop in January in which we had CalDAV implementations from 3 different vendors interoperate pretty darned well. (Where they didn't the limitations were almost exclusively due to differences in handling of various ICS details, which problem plagues all ICS-based calendaring efforts, from CAP to GroupDAV and beyond.)

    In addition to the IETF-style interop checklist we ran over the course of two sessions, we also had demonstrations of things like Sunbird and Outlook sharing a calendar on the basis of a CalDAV adapter for Exchange (written by Oracle). Is this code that's not real? That would make me and others sad, because we spent a fair bit of time writing this code, and it sure seemed real when we ran it and shared calendars!

    I'm also interested, as someone who works on Sunbird pretty much every day, to hear more about this "Sunbird connector" that is in beta. I haven't seen it yet, and we're always looking for useful new providers -- where is the beta testing being done? (The discussion of the implementations on the groupdav.org site confused me -- why would you need to have a server as a goal for a client-side connector? Isn't the whole point of a pseudo-standard like GroupDAV that you code to the protocol and not the peer?)

    Mike