streams/vendor/sabre/dav/lib/CalDAV/Backend/BackendInterface.php

269 lines
9.9 KiB
PHP
Raw Normal View History

<?php
namespace Sabre\CalDAV\Backend;
/**
* Every CalDAV backend must at least implement this interface.
*
* @copyright Copyright (C) fruux GmbH (https://fruux.com/)
* @author Evert Pot (http://evertpot.com/)
2014-06-28 20:28:08 +00:00
* @license http://sabre.io/license/ Modified BSD License
*/
interface BackendInterface {
/**
* Returns a list of calendars for a principal.
*
* Every project is an array with the following keys:
* * id, a unique id that will be used by other functions to modify the
* calendar. This can be the same as the uri or a database key.
* * uri, which is the basename of the uri with which the calendar is
* accessed.
* * principaluri. The owner of the calendar. Almost always the same as
* principalUri passed to this method.
*
* Furthermore it can contain webdav properties in clark notation. A very
* common one is '{DAV:}displayname'.
*
* Many clients also require:
* {urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:caldav}supported-calendar-component-set
* For this property, you can just return an instance of
* Sabre\CalDAV\Property\SupportedCalendarComponentSet.
*
* If you return {http://sabredav.org/ns}read-only and set the value to 1,
* ACL will automatically be put in read-only mode.
*
* @param string $principalUri
* @return array
*/
function getCalendarsForUser($principalUri);
/**
* Creates a new calendar for a principal.
*
* If the creation was a success, an id must be returned that can be used to
* reference this calendar in other methods, such as updateCalendar.
*
* @param string $principalUri
* @param string $calendarUri
* @param array $properties
* @return void
*/
function createCalendar($principalUri, $calendarUri, array $properties);
/**
* Updates properties for a calendar.
*
* The list of mutations is stored in a Sabre\DAV\PropPatch object.
* To do the actual updates, you must tell this object which properties
* you're going to process with the handle() method.
*
* Calling the handle method is like telling the PropPatch object "I
* promise I can handle updating this property".
*
* Read the PropPatch documentation for more info and examples.
*
* @param string $path
* @param \Sabre\DAV\PropPatch $propPatch
* @return void
*/
function updateCalendar($calendarId, \Sabre\DAV\PropPatch $propPatch);
/**
* Delete a calendar and all its objects
*
* @param mixed $calendarId
* @return void
*/
function deleteCalendar($calendarId);
/**
* Returns all calendar objects within a calendar.
*
* Every item contains an array with the following keys:
* * calendardata - The iCalendar-compatible calendar data
* * uri - a unique key which will be used to construct the uri. This can
* be any arbitrary string, but making sure it ends with '.ics' is a
* good idea. This is only the basename, or filename, not the full
* path.
* * lastmodified - a timestamp of the last modification time
* * etag - An arbitrary string, surrounded by double-quotes. (e.g.:
* '"abcdef"')
* * size - The size of the calendar objects, in bytes.
* * component - optional, a string containing the type of object, such
* as 'vevent' or 'vtodo'. If specified, this will be used to populate
* the Content-Type header.
*
* Note that the etag is optional, but it's highly encouraged to return for
* speed reasons.
*
* The calendardata is also optional. If it's not returned
* 'getCalendarObject' will be called later, which *is* expected to return
* calendardata.
*
* If neither etag or size are specified, the calendardata will be
* used/fetched to determine these numbers. If both are specified the
* amount of times this is needed is reduced by a great degree.
*
* @param mixed $calendarId
* @return array
*/
function getCalendarObjects($calendarId);
/**
* Returns information from a single calendar object, based on it's object
* uri.
*
* The object uri is only the basename, or filename and not a full path.
*
* The returned array must have the same keys as getCalendarObjects. The
* 'calendardata' object is required here though, while it's not required
* for getCalendarObjects.
*
* This method must return null if the object did not exist.
*
* @param mixed $calendarId
* @param string $objectUri
* @return array|null
*/
function getCalendarObject($calendarId, $objectUri);
/**
* Returns a list of calendar objects.
*
* This method should work identical to getCalendarObject, but instead
* return all the calendar objects in the list as an array.
*
* If the backend supports this, it may allow for some speed-ups.
*
* @param mixed $calendarId
* @param array $uris
* @return array
*/
function getMultipleCalendarObjects($calendarId, array $uris);
/**
* Creates a new calendar object.
*
* The object uri is only the basename, or filename and not a full path.
*
* It is possible to return an etag from this function, which will be used
* in the response to this PUT request. Note that the ETag must be
* surrounded by double-quotes.
*
* However, you should only really return this ETag if you don't mangle the
* calendar-data. If the result of a subsequent GET to this object is not
* the exact same as this request body, you should omit the ETag.
*
* @param mixed $calendarId
* @param string $objectUri
* @param string $calendarData
* @return string|null
*/
function createCalendarObject($calendarId, $objectUri, $calendarData);
/**
* Updates an existing calendarobject, based on it's uri.
*
* The object uri is only the basename, or filename and not a full path.
*
* It is possible return an etag from this function, which will be used in
* the response to this PUT request. Note that the ETag must be surrounded
* by double-quotes.
*
* However, you should only really return this ETag if you don't mangle the
* calendar-data. If the result of a subsequent GET to this object is not
* the exact same as this request body, you should omit the ETag.
*
* @param mixed $calendarId
* @param string $objectUri
* @param string $calendarData
* @return string|null
*/
function updateCalendarObject($calendarId, $objectUri, $calendarData);
/**
* Deletes an existing calendar object.
*
* The object uri is only the basename, or filename and not a full path.
*
* @param mixed $calendarId
* @param string $objectUri
* @return void
*/
function deleteCalendarObject($calendarId, $objectUri);
/**
* Performs a calendar-query on the contents of this calendar.
*
* The calendar-query is defined in RFC4791 : CalDAV. Using the
* calendar-query it is possible for a client to request a specific set of
* object, based on contents of iCalendar properties, date-ranges and
* iCalendar component types (VTODO, VEVENT).
*
* This method should just return a list of (relative) urls that match this
* query.
*
* The list of filters are specified as an array. The exact array is
* documented by Sabre\CalDAV\CalendarQueryParser.
*
* Note that it is extremely likely that getCalendarObject for every path
* returned from this method will be called almost immediately after. You
* may want to anticipate this to speed up these requests.
*
* This method provides a default implementation, which parses *all* the
* iCalendar objects in the specified calendar.
*
* This default may well be good enough for personal use, and calendars
* that aren't very large. But if you anticipate high usage, big calendars
* or high loads, you are strongly adviced to optimize certain paths.
*
* The best way to do so is override this method and to optimize
* specifically for 'common filters'.
*
* Requests that are extremely common are:
* * requests for just VEVENTS
* * requests for just VTODO
* * requests with a time-range-filter on either VEVENT or VTODO.
*
* ..and combinations of these requests. It may not be worth it to try to
* handle every possible situation and just rely on the (relatively
* easy to use) CalendarQueryValidator to handle the rest.
*
* Note that especially time-range-filters may be difficult to parse. A
* time-range filter specified on a VEVENT must for instance also handle
* recurrence rules correctly.
* A good example of how to interprete all these filters can also simply
* be found in Sabre\CalDAV\CalendarQueryFilter. This class is as correct
* as possible, so it gives you a good idea on what type of stuff you need
* to think of.
*
* @param mixed $calendarId
* @param array $filters
* @return array
*/
function calendarQuery($calendarId, array $filters);
/**
* Searches through all of a users calendars and calendar objects to find
* an object with a specific UID.
*
* This method should return the path to this object, relative to the
* calendar home, so this path usually only contains two parts:
*
* calendarpath/objectpath.ics
*
* If the uid is not found, return null.
*
* This method should only consider * objects that the principal owns, so
* any calendars owned by other principals that also appear in this
* collection should be ignored.
*
* @param string $principalUri
* @param string $uid
* @return string|null
*/
function getCalendarObjectByUID($principalUri, $uid);
}