This is a CalDAV and CardDAV adapter for EteSync
This package provides a local CalDAV and CardDAV server that acts as an EteSync compatibility layer (adapter). It's meant for letting desktop CalDAV and CardDAV clients such as Thunderbird, Outlook and Apple Contacts connect with EteSync.
If all you want is to access your data from a computer, you are probably better off using the web app.
Note: This software is still in beta. It should work well and is used daily by many users, but there may be some rough edges.
The easiest way to start using etesync-dav is by getting one of the pre-built binaries from the releases page.
These binaries are self-contained and can be run as-is, though they do not start automatically on boot. You'd need to either start them manually, or set up autostart based on your OS.
- Run
etesync-dav
and open the management UI in your browser: http://localhost:37358/ - Add your EteSync user through the web UI.
- Copy the DAV specific password by click the "Copy Password" button next to your newly added username.
For advanced usage and CLI instructions please refer to the advanced usage section.
Please note that some antivirus/internet security software may block the CalDAV/CardDAV service from running - make sure that etesync-dav is whitelisted.
Don't forget to set up EteSync to automatically start on startup. Instructions for this are unfortunately OS dependent and out of scope for this README.
You now need to set up your CalDAV/CardDAV client using your username and the password you got in the previous step.
Depending on the client you use, the server path should either be:
http://localhost:37358/
http://localhost:37358/[email protected]/
On most clients this should automatically detect your collections (i.e. calendars and address books).
If your client does not automatically detect your collections, you will need to manually add them. You can find the links in the management UI when you click on your username.
- Install TbSync and the accompanying DAV provider.
- Open the TbSync window: Edit -> TbSync
- Add new DAV account (choose manual configuration).
- Use
http://localhost:37358/[email protected]/
for both servers, your EteSync username as the username and the DAV password you got in configuration and running as the password.
GNOME Calendar and Contacts do not support adding WebDAV calendars and address books directly, but you can add them in Evolution and they will appear correctly in all the apps.
- Open Evolution and click File -> NEw -> Collection account
- Put your username ([email protected]) in the user field.
- Click Advanced Options and use
http://localhost:37358/
as the server. - Make sure "Look up for a CalDAV/CardDAV server" is ticked, and untick all the rest.
- Click "Look Up" and when prompted, the DAV password you got in configuration and running.
- Click Next/Finish until done.
While EteSync-DAV works great on macOS, due to bugs in macOS Mojave, the instructions require a few extra steps for syncing with Contacts.app and Calendar.app. Other clients, such as Thunderbird, do no require these extra steps.
Please take a look at the macOS instructions for more information.
By default, iOS only syncs events 30 days old and newer, which may look as if events are not showing. To fix this, got to: Settings -> Calendar -> Sync and change to the wanted time duration.
Or better yet, just use the EteSync iOS client.
It's probably easiet to just follow these instructions for setting up autostart. Alternatively, you can try following the instructions below.
Make sure you have /usr/lib/systemd/user/etesync-dav.service
on your system (should be there when installing from your distro's package manager), and then, to start the service:
systemctl --user start etesync-dav
To enable auto-start on boot:
systemctl --user enable etesync-dav
Make sure you installed etesync-dav.app
by dragging it to your Applications
directory through finder.
Enable autostart by for example following these instructions.
Follow these instructions.
This methods are not as easy as the pre-built binaries method above, but are also simple. Please follow the instructions below, following which follow the instructions in the Configuration and running section below.
Run one time initial setup to persist the required configuration into a docker volume. Check out the configuration section below for more information.
docker run -it --rm -v etesync-dav:/data etesync/etesync-dav manage add USER_EMAIL
Run etesync-dav in a background docker container with configuration from previous step. This wil (re)start the container on boot and after crashes.
docker run --name etesync-dav -d -v etesync-dav:/data -p 37358:37358 --restart=always etesync/etesync-dav
After this, refer to the Setting up clients section below and start using it!
To update to the latest version of the docker image, run:
docker pull etesync/etesync-dav
If you're self-hosting the EteSync server, you will need to add the following before the -v
in the above commands:
--env "ETESYNC_URL=https://your-etesync-url.com"
The package etesync-dav
is available on AUR.
You can either follow the Docker instructions above (get Docker here), or alternatively install Python3 for windows from here.
Install virtual env (for Python 3) from your package manager, for example:
- Arch Linux: pacman -S python-virtualenv
- Debian/Ubuntu: apt-get install python3-virtualenv
The bellow commands will install etesync to a directory called venv
in the local path. To install to a different location, just choose a different path in the commands below.
Set up the virtual env:
virtualenv -p python3 venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install etesync-dav
Run the etesync commands as explained in the Configuration and running section:
./venv/bin/etesync-dav manage ...
./venv/bin/etesync-dav ...
Please note that you'll have to run source venv/bin/activate
every time you'd like to run the EteSync commands.
- Open a terminal and navigate to the binary's loctaion by typing
cd /path/to/file
(most likelycd ~/Downloads
). - Rename the binary to
etesync-dav
for ease of use, by e.g:mv linux-etesync-dav etesync-dav
- Make it executable:
chmod +x etesync-dav
You need to first add an EteSync user using ./etesync-dav manage
, for example:
./etesync-dav manage add [email protected]
Substitute [email protected]
with the username or email you use with your
EteSync account or self-hosted server.
and then run the server:
./etesync-dav
If you are self-hosting the EteSync server, you will need to set the
ETESYNC_URL
environment variable to the URL of your server every time
you run etesync-dav.
By default it uses the official EteSync server at https://api.etesync.com
.
EteSync-DAV should automatically use the system's proxy settings if set correctly. Alternatively, you can set the HTTP_PROXY
and HTTPS_PROXY
environment variables to manually set the proxy settings.
If the etesync backend server is using self signed certs, the DAV bridge may refuse to connect. To solve this, run the following commands prior to starting the DAV bridge.
export REQUESTS_CA_BUNDLE=/path/to/your/certificate.pem
or
export SSL_CERT_FILE=/path/file.crt
Alternatively, if the security of certificate is not an issue (say the server is on a private network and not publicly accessible), you can ignore the certificate completely with the following commands prior to starting the DAV bridge.
export CURL_CA_BUNDLE='';
export REQUESTS_CA_BUNDLE='';
etesync-dav
stores data in the directory specified by the ETESYNC_CONFIG_DIR
environment variable. This includes a database and the credentials cache.
This directory is not relocatable, so if you change
ETESYNC_CONFIG_DIR
you will need to regenerate these files (which means
reconfiguring clients). It may be possible to manually edit these files to
the new path. Note that the database will just mirror the content of your
main EteSync database so in most cases you should not lose anything if you
delete it.
ETESYNC_CONFIG_DIR
defaults to a subdirectory of the appropriate config directory
for your platform (~/.config/etesync-dav
on Unix/Linux, see
appdirs module docs for where it
will be on other platforms).
This depends on the Radicale server for operation.