Caldav sync for Emacs Orgmode
Minimum Emacs version needed: 24.3
CalDAV servers:
-
Owncloud and Nextcloud: Regularly tested.
-
Google Calendar: Should work, but you need to register an application with the Google Developer Console for OAuth2 authentication (see below).
-
Radicale and Baikal: Should work. If you get problems with 'Digest' authentication, switch back to 'Basic' (make sure to use https, though!). If you get asked for password repeatedly, put it in .authinfo file (see below).
-
SOGo and Kolab: Reported to be working (https://kolabnow.com/clients/emacs)
Note that current Emacs releases do not correctly handle https over a proxy connection (https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=11788). If you need that, you'll have to use a recent Emacs 26.0.x snapshot.
IMPORTANT: Before using this code, please make sure you have backups of your precious Org files. Also, I strongly suggest to create a new, empty calendar on your server for using this package.
ALSO IMPORTANT: When using this package, possibly all Org entries will get an UID property (see doc-string of org-icalendar-store-UID for further details). If you don't want this, then do not use this package; there is just no way around that. It is the only reliable way to uniquely identify Org entries.
-
Create a new calendar; the name does not matter.
-
Set
org-caldav-url
to the base address of your CalDAV server:- Owncloud/Nextcloud (9.x and above): https://OWNCLOUD-SERVER-URL/remote.php/dav/calendars/USERID
- Owncloud 8.x and below: https://OWNCLOUD-SERVER-URL/remote.php/caldav/calendars/USERID
- Google: Set to symbol 'google. See below for further documentation.
-
Set
org-caldav-calendar-id
to the calendar-id of your new calendar:- Own/NextCloud: Click on that little symbol next to the calendar name and inspect the link of the calendar; the last element of the shown path is the calendar-id. This should usually be the same as the name of the calendar, but not necessarily: Owncloud might replace certain characters (upper- to lowercase, for instance), or it might even be entirely different if the calendar was created by another CalDAV application.
- Google: Click on 'calendar settings' and the id will be shown
next to "Calendar Address". It is of the form
[email protected]
. Do not omit the domain!
-
Set
org-caldav-inbox
to an org filename where new entries from the calendar should be stored. Just to be safe, I suggest using an empty, dedicated Org file for that. -
Set
org-caldav-files
to the list of org files you would like to sync. The aboveorg-caldav-inbox
will be automatically added, so you don't have to add it here. -
It is usually a good idea to manually set
org-icalendar-timezone
to the timezone of your remote calendar. It should be a simple string like "Europe/Berlin". If that doesn't work and your events are shifted by a few hours, try the setting "UTC" (the SOGo calendar server seems to need this).
Please note that org-caldav does not directly control how and which
entries are exported, it just uses the org-icalendar
exporter. Therefore, you should also take a look at the options from
the org-icalendar exporter. Most importantly, take a look at
org-icalendar-alarm-time
to add a reminder to your entries, and
org-icalendar-use-deadline
and org-icalendar-use-scheduled
to control
which timestamps should be used.
Call org-caldav-sync
to start the sync. The URL package will ask you
for username/password for accessing the calendar. (See below on how to
store that password in an authinfo file.)
The first sync can easily take several minutes, depending on the
number of calendar items. Especially Google's CalDAV interface is
pretty slow. If you have to abort the initial sync for some reason,
just start org-caldav-sync
again in the same Emacs session and you
should get asked if you'd like to resume.
The same goes for sync errors you might get. Especially when using
Google Calendar, it is not unusual to get stuff like '409' errors
during the initial sync. Only Google knows why. Just run
org-caldav-sync
again until all events are uploaded.
The new CalDAV endpoint for Google Calendar requires OAuth2 authentication. So first, you need to install the oauth2 library from GNU ELPA, and afterwards you need to acquire an application ID and secret from the Google Developer Console. For details on how to do this, follow the Google documentation at
https://developers.google.com/google-apps/calendar/caldav/v2/guide#creating_your_client_id
Put the client ID and secret into org-caldav-oauth2-client-id
and
org-caldav-oauth2-client-secret
, respectively. Then set org-caldav-url
to the symbol 'google, and look up the org-caldav-calendar-id
as
described above.
On first connection, the oauth2 library should redirect you to the
Google OAuth2 authentication site. This requires a javascript enabled
browser, so make sure that browse-url-browser-function
is set to
something like browse-url-firefox
(the internal shr or w3m browser
will not work). After authentication, you will be given a key that
you have to paste into the Emacs prompt. The oauth2 library will save
this key in Emacs' secure plist store, which is encrypted with
GnuPG. If you have not yet used a secure plist store, you will be
asked for its encryption passphrase. In the future, you should only
need to enter that passphrase again to connect with Google Calendar.
By default, plstore will not cache your entered password, so it will possibly ask you many times. To activate caching, use
(setq plstore-cache-passphrase-for-symmetric-encryption t)
Compared to earlier versions of this package from 2012, it now does
proper two-way syncing, that means it does not matter where and how
you change an entry. You can also move Org entries freely from one
file to another, as long as they are all listed in
org-caldav-files
. The org-icalendar package will put a unique ID on
each entry with an active timestamp, so that org-caldav can find
it. It will also sync deletions, but more on that later.
An Org entry can store much more information than an iCalendar entry, so there is no one-to-one correspondence between the two formats which makes syncing a bit difficult.
- Org to iCalendar
This package uses the org-icalendar package to do the export to the
iCalendar format (.ics files). By default, it uses the title of the
Org entry as SUMMARY and puts the entry's body into DESCRIPTION,
snipping stuff like properties and timestamps (you can override that
with properties of the same name, but IMO it makes stuff just more
complicated). The variable org-icalendar-include-body
denotes how many characters from the body should be included as
DESCRIPTION (by default all characters are included).
- iCalendar to Org
If you create a new iCalendar entry in your calendar, you'll get an
Org entry with SUMMARY as heading, DESCRIPTION as body and the
timestamp. However, if you change an existing entry in the calendar,
things get more complicated and the variable
org-caldav-sync-changes-to-org
comes into play. Its default is the
symbol "title-and-timestamp", which means that only the entry's
heading is synced (with SUMMARY) and the timestamp gets updated, but
not the entry's body with DESCRIPTION. The simple reason is that
you might loose data, since DESCRIPTION is rather limited in what it
can store. Still, you can set the variable to the symbol "all", which
will completely replace an existing Org entry with the entry that
gets generated from the calendar's event. You can also limit syncing
to heading and/or timestamp only.
To be extra safe, org-caldav will by default backup entries it
changes. See the variable org-caldav-backup-file
for details.
- Org sexp entries
A special case are sexp entries like
%%(diary-anniversary 2 2 1969) Foo's birthday
* Regular meeting
<%%(diary-float t 4 2)>
As you can see, they can appear in two different ways: plain by themselves, or inside an Org entry. If they are inside an Org entry, there's a good chance they will be exported (see below) and have an ID property, so they can be found by org-caldav. We can sync the title, but syncing the timestamp with the s-expression is just infeasible, so this will generate a sync error (which are not critical; you'll just see them at the end of the sync, just so that you're aware that some stuff wasn't synced properly).
However, sexp-entries are insanely flexible, and there are limits as to what the icalendar exporter will handle. For example, this here
** Regular event
<%%(memq (calendar-day-of-week date) '(1 3 5))>
will not be exported at all.
If the sexp entry is not inside an Org entry but stands by itself,
they still will be exported, but they won't get an ID (since IDs are
properties linked to Org entries). In practice, that means that you
can delete and change them inside Org and this will be synced, but if
you change them in the calendar, this will not get synced
back. Org-caldav just cannot find those entires, so this will generate
a one-time sync error instead (again: those are not critical, just
FIY). If you don't want those entries to be exported at all, just set
org-icalendar-include-sexps
to nil.
There are several possibilities to choose which entries should be synced and which not:
-
If you only want to sync manually marked entries, use
org-caldav-select-tags
, which is directly mapped toorg-export-select-tags
, so see its doc-string on how it works. -
If you want to exclude certain tags, use
org-caldav-exclude-tags
, which is mapped toorg-icalendar-exclude
tags. -
If you want more fine grained control, use
org-caldav-skip-conditions
. The syntax of the conditions is described in the doc-string oforg-agenda-skip-if
. -
In case you just want to keep your remote calendar clean, set
org-caldav-days-in-past
to the number of days you want to keep in the past on the remote calendar. This does not affect your org files, it works just as a filter for entries older than N days.
Note however that the normal org-agenda-skip-function(-global)
will
not have any effect on the icalendar exporter (this used to be the
case, but changed with the new exporters).
If you delete entries in your Org files, the corresponding iCalendar
entries will by default get deleted. You can change that behavior with
org-caldav-delete-calendar-entries
to never delete, or to ask before
deletion.
You must be careful to not simply remove previously synced files from
org-caldav-files
, as org-caldav would view all the entries from those
files as deleted and hence by default also delete them from the
calendar. However, org-caldav should be able to detect this situation
and warn you with the message 'Previously synced file(s) are missing',
asking you whether to continue nonetheless.
If you delete events in your calendar, you will by default get asked
if you'd like to delete the corresponding Org event. You can change
that behavior through org-caldav-delete-org-entries
.
If you answer a deletion request with "no", the event should get
re-synced to the calendar next time you call org-caldav-sync
.
Now that's an easy one: Org always wins. That means, if you change an entry in Org and in the calendar, the changes in the calendar will be lost. I might implement proper conflict handling some day, but don't hold your breath (patches are welcome, of course).
If you don't want to enter your user/password every time, you can store it permanently in an authinfo file. In Emacs, the auth-source package takes care of that, but the syntax for https authentication is a bit peculiar. You have to use a line like the following
machine www.google.com:443 port https login username password secret
Note that you have to specify the port number in the URL and also specify 'https' for the port. This is not a bug. For more information, see (info "auth"), especially section "Help for users".
Since you are storing your password in a file it makes sense to encrypt it using GnuPG. While Emacs supports this, there's a subtle bug which makes this feature unusable for the URL package (see bug 11981). This was fixed in Emacs 24.2, so if you're using an older version, you'll have to upgrade if you want encrypted authinfo files for org-caldav.
The current sync state is stored in a file org-caldav-SOMEID.el
in
the ~/.emacs.d directory. You can change the location through the
variable org-caldav-save-directory
. SOMEID directly depends on the
calendar id (it's a snipped MD5).
If you sync your Org files across different machines and want to use
org-caldav on all of them, don't forget to sync the org sync state,
too. Probably your best bet is to set org-caldav-save-directory
to the
path you have your Org files in, so that it gets copied alongside with
them.
If your sync state somehow gets broken, you can make a clean slate by doing
C-u M-x org-caldav-delete-everything
The function has to be called with a prefix so that you don't call it
by accident. This will delete everything in the calendar along with
the current sync state. You can then call org-caldav-sync
afterwards
and it will completely put all Org events into the now empty
calendar. Needless to say, don't do that if you have new events in
your calendar which are not synced yet...
Deleting many events can be slow, though; in that case, just delete the calendar and re-create it, delete the sync state file in ~/.emacs.d and restart Emacs.
This can be done by setting the variable org-caldav-calendars
. It
should be a list of plists (a 'plist' is simply a list with alternating
:key's and values). Through these plists, you can override the global
values of variables like org-caldav-calendar-id
, and calling
org-caldav-sync
will go through these plists in order.
Example:
(setq org-caldav-calendars
'((:calendar-id "work@whatever" :files ("~/org/work.org")
:inbox "~/org/fromwork.org")
(:calendar-id "stuff@mystuff"
:files ("~/org/sports.org" "~/org/play.org")
:skip-conditions (regexp "soccer")
:inbox "~/org/fromstuff.org")) )
This means that you have two calendars with IDs "work@whatever" and
"stuff@mystuff". Both will be accessed through the global value of
org-caldav-url, since the key :url isn't specified. The calendar
"work@whatever" will be synced with the file 'work.org' and inbox
'fromwork.org', while "stuff@mystuff" with 'sports.org' and
'play.org', unless there's the string 'soccer' in the heading, and
and inbox is 'fromstuff.org'. See the doc-string of
org-caldav-calendars
for more details on which keys you can use.
See the doc-string of org-caldav-inbox
if you want more flexibility in
where new items should be put. Instead of simply providing a file, you
can also choose an existing entry or headline.
Timezone handling is plain horrible, and it seems every CalDAV server
does it slightly differently, also using non-standard headers like
X-WR-TIMEZONE. If you see items being shifted by a few hours, make
really really sure you have properly set org-icalendar-timezone
, and
that your calendar is configured to use the same one.
If it still does not work, you can try setting org-icalendar-timezone
to the string "UTC". This will put all events using UTC times and the
server should transpose the time to the timezone you have set in your
calendar preferences. For some servers (like SOGo) this might work
better than setting a "real" timezone.
If org-caldav reports a problem with the given URL, please triple-check that the URL is correct. It must point to a valid calendar on your CalDAV server.
If the error is that the URL does not seem to accept DAV requests, you can additionally check with 'curl' by doing
curl -D - -X OPTIONS --basic -u mylogin:mypassword URL
The output of this command must contain a 'DAV' header like this:
DAV: 1, 3, extended-mkcol, access-control, ... etc. ...
By default, org-caldav will put all kinds of debug output into the buffer *org-caldav-debug*. Look there if you're getting sync errors or if something plain doesn't work. If you're using an authinfo file and authentication doesn't work, set auth-info-debug to t and look in the *Messages* buffer. When you report a bug, please try to post the relevant portion of the *org-caldav-debug* buffer since it might be helpful to see what's going wrong. If Emacs throws an error, do
M-x toggle-debug-on-error
and try to replicate the error to get a backtrace.
You can also turn on excessive debugging by setting the variable
org-caldav-debug-level
to 2. This will also output the contents of
the events into the debug buffer. If you send such a buffer in a bug
report, please make very sure you have removed personal information
from those events.
This section is experimental. So please make sure you have backups before you use this. Create issues if it doesn't work for you. This was developed with a nextcloud 12 server, and it is not sure if it works somewhere else. Please report if you have another setup, so we can fix that.
To enable this, just use
(setq org-icalendar-include-todo 'all
org-caldav-sync-todo t)
The first will include your todos to the exporter (org->cal) the second controls
the use of downloaded vtodo events to import it to the inbox
.
It is also a good idea to set
(setq org-icalendar-categories '(local-tags))
so the tags on the nextcloud will not include the local category. If you need that, leave a message. On cal->org this would add it to the tags.
See the variables org-caldav-todo-priority
and
org-caldav-todo-percent-states
for some customization.
There is also org-caldav-todo-deadline-schedule-warning-days
which can be set
to t
if you want to include a scheduled date. Some apps like OpenTasks will
move tasks out of the widget if there is a scheduled, until it actually starts.
I would recommend you to test this and report issues, because I also want to have a stable todo handling.
-
Recurring events created or changed on the calendar side cannot be synced (they will work fine as long as you manage them in Org, though).
-
Syncing is currently pretty slow since everything is done synchronously.
-
Pretty much everything besides SUMMARY, DESCRIPTION and time is ignored in iCalendar (like 'LOCATION', for instance).
-
When trying to sync todo entries org-mode's export to ical can create empty entries. org-caldav tries to sync this, which results in errors. In this case you can set
org-icalender-sync-todo
tot
instead of'all
, until it is fixed.
(This is probably not interesting, so you can just stop reading.)
CalDAV is a mess.
First off, it is based on WebDAV, which has its own fair share of problems. The main design flaw of CalDAV however, is that UID and ressource name (the "filename", if you want) are two different things. I know that there are reasons for that (not everything has a UID, like timezones, and you can put several events in one ressource), but this is typical over-engineering to allow some marginal use cases pretty much no one needs. Another problem is that you have to do additional round-trips to get Etag and sequence number, which makes CalDAV pretty slow.
Org-caldav takes the easy route: it assumes that every ressource contains one event, and that UID and ressource name are identical. In fact, Google's CalDAV interface even enforces the latter. And while Owncloud does not enforce it, at least it just does it if you create items in its web interface.
However, the CalDAV standard does not demand this, so I guess there are servers out there with which org-caldav does not work. Patches welcome.
Now, all this would be bad enough if it weren't for the sloppy server implementations which make implementing a CalDAV client a living hell and led to several rewrites of the code. Especially Google, the 500 pound gorilla in the room, doesn't really care much for CalDAV. I guess they really like their own shiny REST-based calendar API better, and I can't blame them for that.