From de2d358926885856d43a5f53aecb3739a9b5f3c8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: nobody Date: Sun, 21 May 2000 22:40:15 +0000 Subject: This commit was manufactured by cvs2svn to create tag 'gnomoku-0_3'. svn path=/tags/gnomoku-0_3/; revision=3161 --- help/C/config-sync.sgml | 67 ------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 67 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 help/C/config-sync.sgml (limited to 'help/C/config-sync.sgml') diff --git a/help/C/config-sync.sgml b/help/C/config-sync.sgml deleted file mode 100644 index ae78a6daaf..0000000000 --- a/help/C/config-sync.sgml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,67 +0,0 @@ - - - - - Setting up your synchronization system - - Synchronization presents you with two issues you'll need to - deal with. The first one is pretty simple: you'll need to get - the data to move among the various devices you're using. If - you've already got Gnome-Pilot - working, then all you have to do is tell it to use Evolution - as a conduit. If you haven't used - Gnome-Pilot before, you'll need to - run the GNOME Control Center and go - through the hand-held device setup assistant. Then you can - create the Evolution conduit and press the hotsync button. - - - If that doesn't work, jump up and down several times and swear - loudly. Then make sure you've got - Gnome-Pilot going to the right - device (for my serial port, it's /dev/ttys0, not the default - /dev/pilot) and that you have read and write permission on - that device. If you don't you'll need to be added to whatever - group has those permissions (for my system, it's tty). - Alternately, if you're the only user of your computer and - don't care too much about security, just use - su to become root, and then use - chmod a+rw /dev/[DEVICENAME] to set - universal read and write permissions on that port— just - don't tell your sysadmin I said you could. (Sysadmins, of - course, would never do such a thing.) - - - Once Evolution knows where to get - the mail, address, and calendar data, it needs to know what to - do with it. When you synchronize your local data with the data on - a server or handheld device, you may run into conflicts: - perhaps you have ended up with two cards with the same name - and different addresses, or old mail that has been deleted - from one device but not the other. What if you want to keep - only the most recent mail on your hand-held or your laptop, - but all the mail on the LDAP server or your desktop machine? - Select the Synchronization tab from the - Preferences window to set up the - conflict resolution preferences. - - - You can set Evolution's - synchronization behavior in the following ways: - - - - - Data Loss Prevention - - It's always a good idea to make a backup. If you set your - synchronization behaviors wrong, you could end up deleting - the messages and cards you want to keep, and keeping the - ones you want to delete. Before you change these - preferences, make a backup of your - Evolution files. You can do - this by... - - - - -- cgit v1.2.3