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A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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Exactly for what you want it for. I've been using it about 3 months. Contacts and calender. It's a real pain to set up. Not straight forward. I didn't a lot of time with ai as could not get my head round the guide.
Yeah I hear you. I've installed it but I have no idea what to do from here. Cant access any kind of dash. I've just learnt it doesn't have a native dash but you need a third party app for that?
Take a look at the config file (
/etc/radicale/config). It's extensively commented. Although you barely need to change any defaults for regular use.Just create an htpasswd file (with htpsswd, apache-tools or just any of the one million available online generators) and edit two lines under [auth] to read
type = htpasswdandhtpasswd_filename = <the location and file you created>.And you can start (and enable) Radicale via the systemd service usually included in the installed package. (Or for early testing just start the server manually...
radicalestarts it with the defaults from the config file. You can also configure everything with parameters but that's an insanely long list (radicale --helpif you are interested in seeing them)...)The webinterface to login will be available (by default settings) under http://localhost:5232/.
All you have to do then is change the config so Radicale listens on the server's IP instead so it's available in in your network. (Plus the usual stuff of making it available from the outside if you need that like for any other sevice)
And any calendar/contact software will bring a wizard that guides you through the process of sync'ing, usually just asking for an address to reach your server, as well as user and password.
EDIT: I looked up the defaults and you can skip all the autehntification stuff in the beginning. By default just anyone can access the webpage at port 5232. So you can just test it and only bother with authentication later (definitely when you plan to make it available from the outside, for example to sync phones).