JMAP for Calendars
draft-ietf-jmap-calendars-04
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| Authors | Neil Jenkins , Michael Douglass | ||
| Last updated | 2020-07-26 (Latest revision 2020-06-14) | ||
| Replaces | draft-jenkins-jmapcalendars | ||
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draft-ietf-jmap-calendars-04
JMAP N. Jenkins
Internet-Draft Fastmail
Intended status: Standards Track M. Douglass
Expires: January 28, 2021 Spherical Cow Group
July 27, 2020
JMAP for Calendars
draft-ietf-jmap-calendars-04
Abstract
This document specifies a data model for synchronizing calendar data
with a server using JMAP.
Status of This Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
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This Internet-Draft will expire on January 28, 2021.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. Data Model Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2. Accounts, Push, and the Session Object . . . . . . . . . 5
1.2.1. UIDs and CalendarEvent Ids . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
1.3. Notational Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
1.4. The LocalDate Data Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
1.5. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
1.6. Addition to the Capabilities Object . . . . . . . . . . . 6
1.6.1. urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendars . . . . . . . . . . . 6
1.6.2. urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendarprincipals . . . . . . . 7
2. Calendar Principals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2.1. CalendarPrincipal/get . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.2. CalendarPrincipal/changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.3. CalendarPrincipal/set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.4. CalendarPrincipal/query . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.4.1. Filtering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.5. CalendarPrincipal/queryChanges . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.6. CalendarPrincipal/getAvailability . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3. Calendars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
3.1. Calendar/get . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
3.2. Calendar/changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
3.3. Calendar/set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
4. Calendar Share Notifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4.1. Auto-deletion of Notifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4.2. Object Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
4.3. CalendarShareNotification/get . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
4.4. CalendarShareNotification/changes . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
4.5. CalendarShareNotification/set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
4.6. CalendarShareNotification/query . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
4.6.1. Filtering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
4.6.2. Sorting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
4.7. CalendarShareNotification/queryChanges . . . . . . . . . 20
5. Calendar Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
5.1. Additional JSCalendar properties . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
5.1.1. mayInviteSelf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
5.1.2. mayInviteOthers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
5.1.3. hideAttendees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
5.2. Attachments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
5.3. Per-user properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
5.4. Recurring events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
5.5. Updating for "this-and-future" . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
5.5.1. Splitting an event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
5.5.2. Updating the master and overriding previous . . . . . 24
5.6. CalendarEvent/get . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
5.7. CalendarEvent/changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
5.8. CalendarEvent/set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
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5.8.1. Patching . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
5.8.2. Sending invitations and responses . . . . . . . . . . 31
5.9. CalendarEvent/copy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
5.10. CalendarEvent/query . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
5.10.1. Filtering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
5.10.2. Sorting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
5.11. CalendarEvent/queryChanges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
5.12. Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
6. Alerts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
6.1. Push events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
6.2. Acknowledging an alert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
6.3. Snoozing an alert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
7. Calendar Event Notifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
7.1. Auto-deletion of Notifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
7.2. Object Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
7.3. CalendarEventNotification/get . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
7.4. CalendarEventNotification/changes . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
7.5. CalendarEventNotification/set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
7.6. CalendarEventNotification/query . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
7.6.1. Filtering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
7.6.2. Sorting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
7.7. CalendarEventNotification/queryChanges . . . . . . . . . 41
8. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
8.1. Denial-of-service Expanding Recurrences . . . . . . . . . 41
8.2. Privacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
9. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
9.1. JMAP Capability Registration for "calendars" . . . . . . 42
9.2. JSCalendar Property Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
9.2.1. id . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
9.2.2. calendarId . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
9.2.3. isDraft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
9.2.4. utcStart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
9.2.5. utcEnd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
9.2.6. mayInviteSelf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
9.2.7. mayInviteOthers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
9.2.8. hideAttendees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
10.3. URIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
1. Introduction
JMAP ([RFC8620] - JSON Meta Application Protocol) is a generic
protocol for synchronizing data, such as mail, calendars or contacts,
between a client and a server. It is optimized for mobile and web
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environments, and aims to provide a consistent interface to different
data types.
This specification defines a data model for synchronizing calendar
data between a client and a server using JMAP. The data model is
designed to allow a server to provide consistent access to the same
data via CalDAV [RFC4791] as well as JMAP, however the functionality
offered over the two protocols may differ. Unlike CalDAV, this
specification does not define access to tasks or journal entries
(VTODO or VJOURNAL iCalendar components in CalDAV).
1.1. Data Model Overview
A CalendarPrincipal (see Section XXX) represents an individual, team
or resource (e.g. a room or projector). The object contains
information about the entity being represented, such as a name,
description and time zone. A CalendarPrincipal has a 1:1
correspondence with an Account (see [RFC8620], Section 1.6.2) that
supports the "urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendars" capability.
Each such Account contains zero or more Calendar objects, which is a
named collection of CalendarEvents belonging to the
CalendarPrincipal. Sharing permissions are managed per calendar.
For example, an individual may have separate calendars for personal
and work activities, with both contributing to their free-busy
availability, but only the work calendar shared in its entirety with
colleagues. Calendars can also provide defaults, such as alerts and
a color to apply to events in the calendar. Clients commonly let
users toggle visibility of events belonging to a particular calendar
on/off.
A CalendarEvent is a representation of an event or recurring series
of events in JSEvent [I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar] format. Simple
clients may ask the server to expand recurrences for them within a
specific time period, and optionally convert times into UTC so they
do not have to handle time zone conversion. More full-featured
clients will want to access the full event information and handle
recurrence expansion and time zone conversion locally.
CalendarEventNotification objects keep track of the history of
changes made to a calendar by other users, allowing calendar clients
to notify the user of changes to their schedule. Similarly, the
CalendarShareNotification type notifies the user when their access to
another user's calendar is granted or revoked.
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1.2. Accounts, Push, and the Session Object
The JMAP Session object (see [RFC8620], Section 2) typically includes
an object in the "accounts" property for every account that the user
has access to. Calendaring systems may share data between a
(potentially very) large number of CalendarPrincipals, most of which
the user does not care about day-to-day but may occasionally need to
query when scheduling events.
Users can normally subscribe to any calendar to which they have
access (see Section XXX). This indicates the user wants this
calendar to appear in their regular list of calendars. The separate
"isVisible" property stores whether the user would currently like to
view the events in a subscribed calendar.
The Session object MUST only include Accounts where the user is
subscribed to at least one Calendar or they have access to some other
data type in the account. StateChange events for changes to
CalendarEvent data SHOULD only be sent for events in calendars the
user has subscribed to and MUST NOT be sent for any Account where the
user is not subscribed to at least one calendar.
The server MAY reject the user's attempt to subscribe to some
calendars, e.g. those representing resources.
A user may query the set of CalendarPrincipals they have access to
with "CalendarPrincipal/query" (see Section XXX). The
CalendarPrincipal object may have an "accountId" property that can be
used to then fetch calendars and events associated with that
principal, subject to appropriate permissions.
1.2.1. UIDs and CalendarEvent Ids
Each CalendarEvent has a "uid" property
([I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar], Section 4.1.2), which is a globally
unique identifier that identifies the same event in different
Accounts, or different instances of the same recurring event within
an Account.
An Account MUST NOT contain more than one CalendarEvent with the same
uid unless all of the CalendarEvent objects have distinct, non-null
values for their "recurrenceId" property. (This situation occurs if
the principal is added to one or more specific instances of a
recurring event without being invited to the whole series.)
Each CalendarEvent also has an id, which is scoped to the JMAP
Account and used for referencing it in JMAP methods. There is no
necessary link between the uid property and the CalendarEvent's id.
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CalendarEvents with the same uid in different Accounts MAY have
different ids.
1.3. Notational Conventions
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP
14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
capitals, as shown here.
Type signatures, examples, and property descriptions in this document
follow the conventions established in Section 1.1 of [RFC8620]. Data
types defined in the core specification are also used in this
document.
1.4. The LocalDate Data Type
Where "LocalDate" is given as a type, it means a string in the same
format as "Date" (see [RFC8620], Section 1.4), but with the "time-
offset" omitted from the end. The interpretation in absolute time
depends upon the time zone for the event, which may not be a fixed
offset (for example when daylight saving time occurs). For example,
"2014-10-30T14:12:00".
1.5. Terminology
The same terminology is used in this document as in the core JMAP
specification, see [RFC8620], Section 1.6.
The terms CalendarPrincipal, Calendar, CalendarEvent,
CalendarEventNotification, and CalendarShareNotification (with these
specific capitalizations) are used to refer to the data types defined
in this document and instances of those data types.
1.6. Addition to the Capabilities Object
The capabilities object is returned as part of the JMAP Session
object; see [RFC8620], Section 2. This document defines two
additional capability URIs.
1.6.1. urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendars
This represents support for the Calendar, CalendarEvent, and
CalendarEventNotification data types and associated API methods. The
value of this property in the JMAP Session capabilities property is
an empty object.
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The value of this property in an account's accountCapabilities
property is an object that MUST contain the following information on
server capabilities and permissions for that account:
o *accountIdForCalendarPrincipal*: "String|null" The id of an
account with the "urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendarprincipals"
capability that contains the corresponding CalendarPrincipal
object. This may be the same account id. This is null for
single-user systems that do not support the CalendarPrincipal data
type.
o *minDateTime*: "LocalDate" The earliest date-time the server is
willing to accept for any date stored in a CalendarEvent.
o *maxDateTime*: "LocalDate" The latest date-time the server is
willing to accept for any date stored in a CalendarEvent.
o *maxExpandedQueryDuration*: "Duration" The maximum duration the
user may query over when asking the server to expand recurrences.
o *maxParticipantsPerEvent*: "Number|null" The maximum number of
participants a single event may have, or null for no limit.
o *mayCreateCalendar*: "Boolean" If true, the user may create a
calendar in this account.
1.6.2. urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendarprincipals
Represents support for the CalendarPrincipal and
CalendarShareNotification data types and associated API methods.
Single user systems do not need this and MAY choose not to support
it.
The value of this property in the JMAP Session capabilities property
is an empty object.
The value of this property in an account's accountCapabilities
property is an object that MUST contain the following information on
server capabilities and permissions for that account:
o *currentUserPrincipalId*: "String|null" The id of the principal in
this account that corresponds to the user fetching this object, if
any.
o *maxAvailabilityDuration*: The maximum duration over which the
server is prepared to calculate availability in a single call (see
Section XXX).
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2. Calendar Principals
A CalendarPrincipal represents an individual, group, schedulable
location (e.g. a room), bookable resource (e.g. a projector) or other
entity in the calendar system. In a shared calendar environment such
as a workplace, a user may have access to a large number of
principals.
In most systems the user will have access to a single Account
containing CalendarPrincipal objects, but they may have access to
multiple if, for example, aggregating calendar data from different
places.
A *CalendarPrincipal* object has the following properties:
o *id*: "Id" The id of the principal.
o *name*: "String" The name of the principal, e.g. "Jane Doe", or
"Room 4B".
o *description*: "String|null" A longer description of the
principal, for example details about the facilities of a resource,
or null if no description available.
o *email*: "String|null" An email address for the principal, or null
if no email is available.
o *type*: "String" This MUST be one of the following values:
* "individual": This represents a single person.
* "group": This represents a group of people.
* "resource": This represents some resource, e.g. a projector.
* "location": This represents a location.
* "other": This represents some other undefined principal.
o *timeZone*: "String" The time zone for this principal. The value
MUST be a time zone id from the IANA Time Zone Database TZDB [1].
o *mayGetAvailability*: "Boolean" May the user call the
"CalendarPrincipal/getAvailability" method with this
CalendarPrincipal?
o *accountId*: "Id|null" Id of Account with the
"urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendars" capability that contains the data
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for this principal, or null if none (e.g. the CalendarPrincipal is
a group just used for permissions management), or the user does
not have access to any data in the account (with the exception of
free/busy, which is governed by the mayGetAvailability property).
o *account*: "Account|null" The JMAP Account object corresponding to
the accountId, null if none.
o *sendTo*: "String[String]|null" If this principal may be added as
a participant to an event, this is the map of methods for adding
it, in the same format as Participant#sendTo in JSEvent (see
[I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar], Section 4.4.5).
2.1. CalendarPrincipal/get
This is a standard "/get" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.1.
2.2. CalendarPrincipal/changes
This is a standard "/changes" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.2.
2.3. CalendarPrincipal/set
This is a standard "/set" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.3. However, the user may only update the "timeZone"
property of the CalendarPrincipal with the same id as the
"currentUserPrincipalId" in the Account capabilities. Any other
change MUST be rejected with a "forbidden" SetError.
Managing calendar principals is likely tied to a directory service or
some other vendor-specific solution, and occurs out-of-band, or via
an additional capability defined elsewhere.
2.4. CalendarPrincipal/query
This is a standard "/query" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.5
2.4.1. Filtering
A *FilterCondition* object has the following properties:
o *accountIds*: "String[]" A list of account ids. The
CalendarPrincipal matches if the value for its accountId property
is in this list.
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o *email*: "String" Looks for the text in the email property.
o *name*: "String" Looks for the text in the name property.
o *text* "String" Looks for the text in the name, email, and
description properties.
o *type*: "String" The type must be exactly as given to match the
condition.
o *timeZone*: "String" The timeZone must be exactly as given to
match the condition.
All conditions in the FilterCondition object must match for the
CalendarPrincipal to match.
2.5. CalendarPrincipal/queryChanges
This is a standard "/queryChanges" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.6.
2.6. CalendarPrincipal/getAvailability
Calculates the availability of the principal for scheduling within a
requested time period. It takes the following arguments:
o *accountId*: "Id" The id of the account to use.
o *id*: "Id" The id of the CalendarPrincipal to calculate
availability for.
o *utcStart*: "UTCDate" The start time (inclusive) of the period for
which to return availability.
o *utcEnd*: "UTCDate" The end time (exclusive) of the period for
which to return availability.
o *showDetails*: "Boolean" If true, event details will be returned
if the user has permission to view them.
The server will first find all relevant events, expanding any
recurring events. Relevant events are ones where all of the
following is true:
o The principal is subscribed to the calendar.
o Either the calendar belongs to the principal or the "shareesActAs"
property of the calendar is "self".
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o The "includeInAvailability" property of the calendar for the
principal is "all" or "attending".
o The user has the "mayReadFreeBusy" permission for the calendar.
o The event finishes after the "utcStart" argument and starts before
the "utcEnd" argument.
o The event's "privacy" property is not "secret".
o The "freeBusyStatus" property of the event is "busy" (or omitted,
as this is the default).
o The "status" property of the event is not "cancelled".
o If the "includeInAvailability" property of the calendar is
"attending", then the principal is a participant of the event, and
has a "participationStatus" of "accepted" or "tentative".
The server then generates a BusyPeriod object for each of these
events. A *BusyPeriod* object has the following properties:
o *utcStart*: "UTCDate" The start time (inclusive) of the period
this represents.
o *utcEnd*: "UTCDate" The end time (exclusive) of the period this
represents.
o *busyStatus*: "String" (optional, default "unavailable") This MUST
be one of
* "confirmed": The event status is "confirmed".
* "tentative": The event status is "tentative".
* "unavailable": The principal is not available for scheduling at
this time for any other reason.
o *event*: "JSEvent|null" The JSEvent representation of the event,
or null if any of the following are true:
* The "showDetails" argument is false.
* The "privacy" property of the event is "private".
* The user does not have the "mayReadItems" permission for the
calendar.
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The server MAY also generate BusyPeriod objects based on other
information it has about the principal's availability, such as office
hours.
Finally, the server MUST merge and split BusyPeriod objects where the
"event" property is null, such that none of them overlap and either
there is a gap in time between any two objects (the utcEnd of one
does not equal the utcStart of another) or those objects have a
different busyStatus property. If there are overlapping BusyPeriod
time ranges with different "busyStatus" properties the server MUST
choose the value in the following order: confirmed > unavailable >
tentative.
The response has the following argument:
o *list*: "BusyPeriod[]" The list of BusyPeriod objects calculated
as described above.
The following additional errors may be returned instead of the
"CalendarPrincipal/getAvailability" response:
"notFound": No principal with this id exists, or the user does not
have permission to see that this principal exists.
"forbidden": The user does not have permission to query this
principal's availability.
"tooLarge": The duration between utcStart an utcEnd is longer than
the server is willing to calculate availability for.
"rateLimit": Too many availability requests have been made recently
and the user is being rate limited. It may work to try again later.
3. Calendars
A Calendar is a named collection of events. All events are
associated with one, and only one, calendar.
A *Calendar* object has the following properties:
o *id*: "Id" (immutable; server-set) The id of the calendar.
o *role*: "String|null" (default: null) Denotes the calendar has a
special purpose. This MUST be one of the following:
* "inbox": This is the principal's default calendar; when the
principal is invited to an event, this is the calendar to which
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it will be added by the server. There MUST NOT be more than
one calendar with this role in an account.
* "templates": This calendar holds templates for creating new
events. All events in this calendar MUST have the "isDraft"
property set to true. Clients should not show this as a
regular calendar to users, but may offer users to create new
events by copying one of the events in here.
o *name*: "String" The user-visible name of the calendar. This may
be any UTF-8 string of at least 1 character in length and maximum
255 octets in size.
o *description*: "String|null" (default: null) An optional longer-
form description of the calendar, to provide context in shared
environments where users need more than just the name.
o *color*: "String|null" (default: null) The color to be used when
displaying events associated with the calendar.
If not null, the value MUST be a case-insensitive color name taken
from the set of names defined in Section 4.3 of CSS Color Module
Level 3 COLORS [2], or an RGB value in hexadecimal notation, as
defined in Section 4.2.1 of CSS Color Module Level 3.
The color SHOULD have sufficient contrast to be used as text on a white background.
o *sortOrder*: "UnsignedInt" (default: 0) Defines the sort order of
calendars when presented in the client's UI, so it is consistent
between devices. The number MUST be an integer in the range 0 <=
sortOrder < 2^31. A calendar with a lower order should be
displayed before a calendar with a higher order in any list of
calendars in the client's UI. Calendars with equal order SHOULD
be sorted in alphabetical order by name. The sorting should take
into account locale-specific character order convention.
o *isSubscribed*: "Boolean" Has the user indicated they wish to see
this Calendar in their client? This SHOULD default to false for
Calendars in shared accounts the user has access to and true for
any new Calendars created by the user themself. If false, the
calendar should only be displayed when the user explicitly
requests it or to offer it for the user to subscribe to.
o *isVisible*: "Boolean" (default: true) Should the calendar's
events be displayed to the user at the moment? Clients MUST
ignore this property if isSubscribed is false.
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o *includeInAvailability*: "String" (default: all) Should the
calendar's events be used as part of availability calculation?
This MUST be one of:
* "all": all events are considered.
* "attending": events the user is a confirmed or tentative
participant of are considered.
* "none": all events are ignored.
o *defaultAlertsWithTime*: "Alert[]|null" (default: null) The alerts
to apply for events where showWithoutTime is false that have
"useDefaultAlerts" set. See [I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar],
Section 4.5.2 for the definition of an Alert object.
o *defaultAlertsWithoutTime*: "Alert[]|null" (default: null) The
alerts to apply for events where showWithoutTime is true that have
"useDefaultAlerts" set. See [I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar],
Section 4.5.2 for the definition of an Alert object.
o *timeZone*: "String|null" (default: null) The time zone to use for
events without a time zone when the server needs to resolve them
into absolute time, e.g., for reminders, queries, or availability
calculation. The value MUST be a time zone id from the IANA Time
Zone Database TZDB [3]. If "null", the timeZone of the account's
associated CalendarPrincipal will be used. Clients SHOULD use
this as the default for new events in this calendar if set.
o *participantIdentities*: "ParticipantIdentity[]|null" (server-set)
The identities that represent the user in this calendar. The
first item in the array is the default. A *ParticipantIdentity*
object has the following properties:
* *name*: "String" The display name of the participant to use
when adding this participant to an event, e.g. "Joe Bloggs".
* *type*: "String" The method for sending scheduling messages to
this identity, e.g. "imip"
* *uri*: "String" The URI for sending scheduling messages to this
identity, e.g. "mailto:foo@example.com"
The user is an *owner* for an event if the CalendarEvent object
has a "participants" property, and one of the Participant objects
has both: a) The "owner" role. b) A "sendTo" property that has
"type" and "uri" equal to one of the ParticipantIdentity objects
returned with the calendar.
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o *shareWith*: "Id[CalendarRights]|null" (default: null) A map of
CalendarPrincipal id to rights for principals this calendar is
shared with. The pricincipal to which this calendar belongs MUST
NOT be in this set. This is null if the user requesting the
object does not have the mayAdmin right, or if the calendar is not
shared with anyone. May be modified only if the user has the
mayAdmin right.
o *shareesActAs*: "String" (immutable; default server-dependent)
This MUST be one of:
* "secretary"
* "self"
If "self", sharees act as themselves when using this calendar. If
"secretary", they act as the pricincipal to which this calendar
belongs (secretary mode). If omitted, the default is server
dependent. For example, it may be "self" if creating a calendar
in a CalendarPrincipal representing a group, and "secretary" if
creating a calendar for an individual. Users may attempt to set
this on creation, but the server may reject with an
"invalidProperties" error if the value is not permissible.
o *myRights*: "CalendarRights" (server-set) The set of access rights
the user has in relation to this Calendar.
A *CalendarRights* object has the following properties:
o *mayReadFreeBusy*: "Boolean" The user may read the free-busy
information for this calendar as part of a call to
CalendarPrincipal/getAvailability (see Section XXX).
o *mayReadItems*: "Boolean" The user may fetch the events in this
calendar.
o *mayAddItems*: "Boolean" The user may create new events on this
calendar or move events to this calendar. For recurring events,
they may add an override to add an occurrence, or remove an
existing override that is excluding an occurrence.
o *mayUpdatePrivate*: "Boolean" The user may modify the following
properties on all events in the calendar. If shareesActAs is
"self", these properties MUST all be stored per-user, and changes
do not affect any other user of the calendar. If shareesActAs is
"secretary", the values are shared between all users.
* keywords
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* color
* freeBusyStatus
* useDefaultAlerts
* alerts
The user may also modify the above on a per-occurrence basis for
recurring events.
o *mayRSVP*: "Boolean" The user may modify the
"participationStatus", "participationComment", "expectReply",
"scheduleAgent", "scheduleSequence", and "scheduleUpdated"
properties of any Participant object where the sendTo property
matches a ParticipantIdentity of the calendar. If the event has
its "mayInviteSelf" property set to true (see Section XXX), then
the user may also add a new Participant to the event with a sendTo
property that matches a ParticipantIdentity of the calendar. The
roles property of the participant MUST only contain "attendee".
If the event has its "mayInviteOthers" property set to true (see
Section XXX) and there is an existing Participant in the event
where the sendTo property matches a ParticipantIdentity of the
calendar, then the user may also add new participants. The roles
property of any new participant MUST only contain "attendee". The
user may also do all of the above on a per-occurrence basis for
recurring events.
o *mayUpdateOwn*: "Boolean" The user may modify an existing event on
this calendar if either they are the owner of the event or the
event has no owner.
o *mayUpdateAll*: "Boolean" The user may modify all existing events
on this calendar.
o *mayRemoveOwn*: "Boolean" The user may delete an event or move it
to a different calendar if either they are the owner of the event
or the event has no owner. For recurring events, they may add an
override to remove an occurrence.
o *mayRemoveAll*: "Boolean" The user may delete any event or move it
to a different calendar. For recurring events, they may add an
override to remove an occurrence.
o *mayAdmin*: "Boolean" The user may modify sharing for this
calendar.
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o *mayDelete*: "Boolean" (server-set) The user may delete the
calendar itself. This property MUST be false if the account to
which this calendar belongs has the _isReadOnly_ property set to
true.
3.1. Calendar/get
This is a standard "/get" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.1. The _ids_ argument may be "null" to fetch all at once.
If mayReadFreeBusy is the only permission the user has, the calendar
MUST NOT be returned in Calendar/get and Calendar/query; it must
behave as though it did not exist. The data is just used as part of
CalendarPrincipal/getAvailability.
3.2. Calendar/changes
This is a standard "/changes" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.2.
3.3. Calendar/set
This is a standard "/set" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.3 but with the following additional request argument:
o *onDestroyRemoveEvents*: "Boolean" (default: false)
If false, any attempt to destroy a Calendar that still has
CalendarEvents in it will be rejected with a "calendarHasEvent"
SetError. If true, any CalendarEvents that were in the Calendar will
be destroyed. This SHOULD NOT send scheduling messages to
participants or create CalendarEventNotification objects.
The "role" and "shareWith" properties may only be set by users that
have the mayAdmin right. The value is shared across all users,
although users without the mayAdmin right cannot see the value.
Users can subscribe or unsubscribe to a calendar by setting the
"isSubscribed" property. The server MAY forbid users from
subscribing to certain calendars even though they have permission to
see them, rejecting the update with a "forbidden" SetError.
The "timeZone", "includeInAvailability", "defaultAlertsWithoutTime"
and "defaultAlertsWithTime" properties are stored per-user if the
calendar "shareesActAs" value is "self", and may be set by any user
who is subscribed to the calendar. Otherwise, these properties are
shared, and may only be set by users that have the mayAdmin right.
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The following properties may be set by anyone who is subscribed to
the calendar and are all stored per-user:
o name
o color
o sortOrder
o isVisible
These properties are initially inherited from the owner's copy of the
calendar, but if set by a sharee that user gets their own copy of the
property; it does not change for any other principals. If the value
of the property in the owner's calendar changes after this, it does
not overwrite the sharee's value.
The following extra SetError types are defined:
For "destroy":
o *calendarHasEvent*: The Calendar has at least one CalendarEvent
assigned to it, and the "onDestroyRemoveEvents" argument was
false.
4. Calendar Share Notifications
The CalendarShareNotification data type records when the user's
permissions to access a shared calendar changes.
CalendarShareNotification are only created by the server; users
cannot create them explicitly. Notifications are stored in the same
Account as the CalendarPrincipals.
Clients SHOULD present the list of notifications to the user and
allow them to dismiss them. To dismiss a notification you use a
standard "/set" call to destroy it.
The server SHOULD create a CalendarShareNotification whenever the
user's permissions change on a calendar. It SHOULD NOT create a
notification for permission changes to a group principal, even if the
user is in the group.
4.1. Auto-deletion of Notifications
The server MAY limit the maximum number of notifications it will
store for a user. When the limit is reached, any new notification
will cause the previously oldest notification to be automatically
deleted.
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The server MAY coalesce events if appropriate, or remove events that
it deems are no longer relevant or after a certain period of time.
The server SHOULD automatically destroy a notification about a
calendar if the user subscribes to that calendar.
4.2. Object Properties
The *CalendarShareNotification* object has the following properties:
o *id*: "String" The id of the CalendarShareNotification.
o *created*: "UTCDate" The time this notification was created.
o *changedBy*: "Person" Who made the change.
* *name*: "String" The name of the person who made the change.
* *email*: "String|null" The email of the person who made the
change, or null if no email is available.
* *calendarPrincipalId*: "String|null" The id of the
CalendarPrincipal corresponding to the person who made the
change, or null if no associated princiapal.
o *calendarAccountId*: "String" The id of the account where this
Calendar exists.
o *calendarId*: "String" The id of the Calendar that this
notification is about.
o *calendarName*: "String" The name of the Calendar at the time the
notification was made.
o *oldRights*: "CalendarRights|null" The rights the user had before
the change.
o *newRights*: "CalendarRights|null" The rights the user has after
the change.
4.3. CalendarShareNotification/get
This is a standard "/get" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.1.
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4.4. CalendarShareNotification/changes
This is a standard "/changes" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.2.
4.5. CalendarShareNotification/set
This is a standard "/set" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.3.
Only destroy is supported; any attempt to create/update MUST be
rejected with a "forbidden" SetError.
4.6. CalendarShareNotification/query
This is a standard "/query" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.5.
4.6.1. Filtering
A *FilterCondition* object has the following properties:
o *after*: "UTCDate|null" The creation date must be on or after this
date to match the condition.
o *before*: "UTCDate|null" The creation date must be before this
date to match the condition.
4.6.2. Sorting
The "created" property MUST be supported for sorting.
4.7. CalendarShareNotification/queryChanges
This is a standard "/queryChanges" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.6.
5. Calendar Events
A *CalendarEvent* object contains information about an event, or
recurring series of events, that takes place at a particular time.
It is a JSEvent object, as defined in [I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar],
with the following additional properties:
o *id*: "Id" The id of the CalendarEvent. This property is
immutable. The id uniquely identifies a JSEvent with a particular
"uid" and "recurrenceId" within a particular account.
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o *calendarId*: "Id" The id of the Calendar this event belongs to.
o *isDraft*: "Boolean" If true, this event is to be considered a
draft. The server will not send any scheduling messages to
participants or send push notifications for alerts. This may only
be set to true upon creation. Once set to false, the value cannot
be updated to true. This property MUST NOT appear in
"recurrenceOverrides".
o *utcStart*: "UTCDate" For simple clients that do not or cannot
implement time zone support. Clients should only use this if also
asking the server to expand recurrences, as you cannot accurately
expand a recurrence without the original time zone. This property
is calculated at fetch time by the server. Time zones are
political and they can and do change at any time. Fetching
exactly the same property again may return a different results if
the time zone data has been updated on the server. Time zone data
changes are not considered "updates" to the event. If set, server
will convert to the event's current time zone using its current
time zone data and store the local time. This is not included by
default and must be requested explicitly. Floating events will be
interpreted as per calendar's time zone property; or if not set,
the the principal's time zone property. Note that it is not
possible to accurately calculate the expansion of recurrence rules
or recurrence overrides with the utcStart property rather than the
local start time. Even simple recurrences such as "repeat weekly"
may cross a daylight-savings boundary and end up at a different
UTC time. Clients that wish to use "utcStart" are RECOMMENDED to
request the server expand recurrences (see Section XXX).
o *utcEnd*: "UTCDate" The server calculates the end time in UTC from
the start/timeZone/duration properties of the event. This is not
included by default and must be requested explicitly. Like
utcStart, this is calculated at fetch time if requested and may
change due to time zone data changes.
CalendarEvent objects MUST NOT have a "method" property as this is
only used when representing iTIP [RFC5546] scheduling messages, not
events in a data store.
5.1. Additional JSCalendar properties
This document defines three new JSCalendar properties.
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5.1.1. mayInviteSelf
Type: "Boolean" (default: false)
If "true", any user that has access to the event may add themselves
to it as a participant with the "attendee" role. This property MUST
NOT be altered in the recurrenceOverrides; it may only be set on the
master object.
5.1.2. mayInviteOthers
Type: "Boolean" (default: false)
If "true", any current participant with the "attendee" role may add
new participants with the "attendee" role to the event. This
property MUST NOT be altered in the recurrenceOverrides; it may only
be set on the master object.
5.1.3. hideAttendees
Type: "Boolean" (default: false)
If "true", only the owners of the event may see the full set of
participants. Other sharees of the event may only see the owners and
themselves. This property MUST NOT be altered in the
recurrenceOverrides; it may only be set on the master object.
5.2. Attachments
The Link object, as defined in [I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar]
Section 4.2.7, with a "rel" property equal to "enclosure" is used to
represent attachments. Instead of mandating an "href" property,
clients may set a "blobId" property instead to reference a blob of
binary data in the account, as per [RFC8620] Section 6.
The server MUST translate this to an embedded "data:" URL [RFC2397]
when sending the event to a system that cannot access the blob.
Servers that support CalDAV access to the same data are recommended
to expose these files as managed attachments [?@RFC8607].
5.3. Per-user properties
In shared calendars where "shareesActAs" is "self", the following
properties MUST be stored per-user:
o keywords
o color
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o freeBusyStatus
o useDefaultAlerts
o alerts
The user may also modify these properties on a per-occurrence basis
for recurring events; again, these MUST be stored per-user.
When writing only per-user properties, the "updated" property MUST
also be stored just for that user. When fetching the "updated"
property, the value to return is whichever is later of the per-user
updated time or the updated time of the master event.
5.4. Recurring events
Events may recur, in which case they represent multiple occurrences
or instances. The data store will either contain a single master
event, containing a recurrence rule and/or recurrence overrides; or,
a set of individual instances (when invited to specific occurrences
only).
The client may ask the server to expand recurrences within a specific
time range in "CalendarEvent/query". This will generate synthetic
ids representing individual instances in the requested time range.
The client can fetch and update the objects using these ids and the
server will make the appropriate changes to the master event.
Synthetic ids do not appear in "CalendarEvent/changes" responses;
only the ids of events as actually stored on the server.
If the user is invited to specific instances then later added to the
master event, "CalendarEvent/changes" will show the ids of all the
individual instances being destroyed and the id for the master event
being created.
5.5. Updating for "this-and-future"
When editing a recurring event, you can either update the master
event (affecting all instances unless overriden) or update an
override for a specific occurrence. To update all occurrences from a
specific point onwards, there are therefore two options: split the
event, or update the master and override all occurrences before the
split point back to their original values.
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5.5.1. Splitting an event
If the event is not scheduled (has no participants), the simplest
thing to do is to duplicate the event, modifying the recurrence rules
of the original so it finishes before the split point, and the
duplicate so it starts at the split point. As per JSCalendar
[I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar] Section 4.1.3, a "next" and "first"
relation MUST be set on the new objects respectively.
Splitting an event however is problematic in the case of a scheduled
event, because the iTIP messages generated make it appear like two
unrelated changes, which can be confusing.
5.5.2. Updating the master and overriding previous
For scheduled events, a better approach is to avoid splitting and
instead update the master event with the new property value for "this
and future", then create overrides for all occurrences before the
split point to restore the property to its previous value. Indeed,
this may be the only option the user has permission to do if not an
owner of the event.
Clients may choose to skip creating the overrides if the old data is
not important, for example if the "alerts" property is being updated,
it is probably not important to create overrides for events in the
past with the alerts that have already fired.
5.6. CalendarEvent/get
This is a standard "/get" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.1, with three extra arguments:
o *recurrenceOverridesBefore*: "UTCDate|null" If given, only
recurrence overrides with a recurrence id before this date (when
translated into UTC) will be returned.
o *recurrenceOverridesAfter*: "UTCDate|null" If given, only
recurrence overrides with a recurrence id on or after this date
(when translated into UTC) will be returned.
o *reduceParticipants*: "Boolean" (default: false) If true, only
participants with the "owner" role or corresponding to the user's
participant identities will be returned in the "participants"
property of the master event and any recurrence overrides. If
false, all participants will be returned.
A CalendarEvent object is a JSEvent object so may have arbitrary
properties. If the client makes a "CalendarEvent/get" call with a
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null or omitted "properties" argument, all properties defined on the
JSEvent object in the store are returned, along with the "id",
"calendarId", and "isDraft" properties. The "utcStart" and "utcEnd"
computed properties are only returned if explicitly requested. If
either are requested, the "recurrenceOverrides" property MUST NOT be
requested (recurrence overrides cannot be interpreted accurately with
just the UTC times).
If specific properties are requested from the JSEvent and the
property is not present on the object in the server's store, the
server SHOULD return the default value if known for that property.
A requested id may represent a single instance of a recurring event
if the client asked the server to expand recurrences in
"CalendarEvent/query". In such a case, the server will resolve any
overrides and set the appropriate "start" and "recurrenceId"
properties on the CalendarEvent object returned to the client. The
"recurrenceRule" and "recurrenceOverrides" properties MUST be
returned as null if requested for such an event.
An event with the same uid/recurrenceId may appear in different
accounts. Clients may coalesce the view of such events, but must be
aware that the data may be different in the different accounts due to
per-user properties, difference in permissions etc.
The "privacy" property of a JSEvent object allows the owner to
override how sharees of the calendar see the event. If this is set
to "private", when a sharee fetches the event the server MUST only
return the basic time and metadata properties of the JSEvent object
as specified in [I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar], Section 4.4.3. If set
to "secret", the server MUST behave as though the event does not
exist for all users other than the owner.
This "hideAttendees" property of a JSEvent object allows the owner to
reduce the visibility of sharees into the set of participants. If
this is "true", when a non-owner sharee fetches the event, the server
MUST only return participants with the "owner" role or corresponding
to the user's participant identities.
5.7. CalendarEvent/changes
This is a standard "/changes" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.2.
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5.8. CalendarEvent/set
This is a standard "/set" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.3, with the following extra argument:
o *sendSchedulingMessages*: "Boolean" (default: false) If true then
any changes to scheduled events will be sent to all the
participants (if the user is an owner of the event) or back to the
owners (otherwise). If false, the changes only affect this
calendar and no scheduling messages will be sent.
For recurring events, an id may represent the master event or a
specific instance. When the id for a specific instance is given, the
server MUST process an update as an update to the recurrence override
for that instance on the master event, and a destroy as removing just
that instance.
Clients MUST NOT send an update/destroy to both the master event and
a specific instance in a single "/set" request; the result of this is
undefined.
Servers MUST enforce the user's permissions as returned in the
"myRights" property of the Calendar object and reject changes with a
"forbidden" SetError if not allowed.
The "privacy" property MUST NOT be set to anything other than
"public" (the default) for events in a calendar that does not belong
to the user (e.g. a shared team calendar). The server MUST reject
this with an "invalidProperties" SetError.
The server MUST reject attempts to add events with a "participants"
property where none of the participants correspond to one of the
calendar's participant identities with a "forbidden" SetError.
If omitted on create, the server MUST set the following properties to
an appropriate value:
o @type
o uid
o created
The "updated" property MUST be set to the current time by the server
whenever an event is created or updated. If the client tries to set
a value for this property it is not an error, but it MUST be
overridden and replaced with the server's time.
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When updating an event, if all of: * a non per-user property has been
changed; and * the server is the source of the event (see
Section XXX); and * the "sequence" property is not explicitly set in
the update, or the given value is less than or equal to the current
"sequence" value on the server; then the server MUST increment the
"sequence" value by one.
The "created" property MUST NOT be updated after creation. The
"method" property MUST NOT be set. Any attempt to do these is
rejected with a standard "invalidProperties" SetError.
If "utcStart" is set, this is translated into a "start" property
using the server's current time zone information. It MUST NOT be set
in addition to a "start" property and it cannot be set inside
"recurrenceOverrides"; this MUST be rejected with an
"invalidProperties" SetError.
Similarly, the "utcEnd" property is translated into a "duration"
property if set. It MUST NOT be set in addition to a "duration"
property and it cannot be set inside "recurrenceOverrides"; this MUST
be rejected with an "invalidProperties" SetError.
The server does not automatically reset the "partipationStatus" or
"expectReply" properties of a Participant when changing other event
details. Clients should either be intelligent about whether the
change necessitates resending RSVP requests, or ask the user whether
to send them.
The server MAY enforce that all events have an owner, for example in
team calendars. If the user tries to create an event without
participants in such a calendar, the server MUST automatically add a
participant with the "owner" role corresponding to one of the user's
"participantIdentities" for the calendar.
When creating an event with participants, or adding participants to
an event that previously did not have participants, the server MUST
set the "replyTo" property of the event if not present. Clients
SHOULD NOT set the replyTo property for events when the user adds
participants; the server is better positioned to add all the methods
it supports to receive replies.
5.8.1. Patching
The JMAP "/set" method allows you to update an object by sending a
patch, rather than having to supply the whole object. When doing so,
care must be taken if updating a property of a CalendarEvent where
the value is itself a PatchObject, e.g. inside "localizations" or
"recurrenceOverrides". In particular, you cannot add a property with
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value "null" to the CalendarEvent using a direct patch on that
property, as this is interpreted instead as a patch to remove the
property. This is more easily understood with an example. Suppose
you have a CalendarEvent object like so:
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{
"id": "123",
"title": "FooBar team meeting",
"start": "2018-01-08T09:00:00",
"recurrenceRules": [{
"@type": "RecurrenceRule",
"frequency": "weekly"
}],
"replyTo": {
"imip": "mailto:6489-4f14-a57f-c1@schedule.example.com"
},
"participants": {
"dG9tQGZvb2Jhci5xlLmNvbQ": {
"@type": "Participant",
"name": "Tom",
"email": "tom@foobar.example.com",
"sendTo": {
"imip": "mailto:6489-4f14-a57f-c1@calendar.example.com"
},
"participationStatus": "accepted",
"roles": {
"attendee": true
}
},
"em9lQGZvb2GFtcGxlLmNvbQ": {
"@type": "Participant",
"name": "Zoe",
"email": "zoe@foobar.example.com",
"sendTo": {
"imip": "mailto:zoe@foobar.example.com"
},
"participationStatus": "accepted",
"roles": {
"owner": true,
"attendee": true,
"chair": true
}
},
"recurrenceOverrides": {
"2018-03-08T09:00:00": {
"start": "2018-03-08T10:00:00",
"participants/dG9tQGZvb2Jhci5xlLmNvbQ/participationStatus":
"declined"
}
}
}
}
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In this example, Tom is normally going to the weekly meeting but has
declined the occurrence on 2018-03-08, which starts an hour later
than normal. Now, if Zoe too were to decline that meeting, she could
update the event by just sending a patch like so:
[[ "CalendarEvent/set", {
"accountId": "ue150411c",
"update": {
"123": {
"recurrenceOverrides/2018-03-08T09:00:00/
participants~1em9lQGZvb2GFtcGxlLmNvbQ~1participationStatus":
"declined"
}
}
}, "0" ]]
This patches the "2018-03-08T09:00:00" PatchObject in
recurrenceOverrides so that it ends up like this:
"recurrenceOverrides": {
"2018-03-08T09:00:00": {
"start": "2018-03-08T10:00:00",
"participants/dG9tQGZvb2Jhci5xlLmNvbQ/participationStatus":
"declined",
"participants/em9lQGZvb2GFtcGxlLmNvbQ/participationStatus":
"declined"
}
}
Now if Tom were to change his mind and remove his declined status
override (thus meaning he is attending, as inherited from the top-
level event), he might remove his patch from the overrides like so:
[[ "CalendarEvent/set", {
"accountId": "ue150411c",
"update": {
"123": {
"recurrenceOverrides/2018-03-08T09:00:00/
participants~1dG9tQGZvb2Jhci5xlLmNvbQ~1participationStatus": null
}
}
}, "0" ]]
However, if you instead want to remove Tom from this instance
altogether, you could not send this patch:
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[[ "CalendarEvent/set", {
"accountId": "ue150411c",
"update": {
"123": {
"recurrenceOverrides/2018-03-08T09:00:00/
participants~1dG9tQGZvb2Jhci5xlLmNvbQ": null
}
}
}, "0" ]]
This would mean remove the "participants/dG9tQGZvb2Jhci5xlLmNvbQ"
property at path "recurrenceOverrides" -> "2018-03-08T09:00:00"
inside the object; but this doesn't exist. We actually we want to
add this property and make it map to "null". The client must instead
send the full object that contains the property mapping to "null",
like so:
[[ "CalendarEvent/set", {
"accountId": "ue150411c",
"update": {
"123": {
"recurrenceOverrides/2018-03-08T09:00:00": {
"start": "2018-03-08T10:00:00",
"participants/em9lQGZvb2GFtcGxlLmNvbQ/participationStatus":
"declined"
"participants/dG9tQGZvb2Jhci5xlLmNvbQ": null
}
}
}
}, "0" ]]
5.8.2. Sending invitations and responses
If "sendSchedulingMessages" is true, the server MUST send appropriate
iTIP [RFC5546] scheduling messages after successfuly creating,
updating or destroying a calendar event.
When determining which scheduling messages to send, the server must
first establish whether it is the _source_ of the event. The server
is the source if it will receive messages sent to any of the methods
specified in the "replyTo" property of the event.
Messages are only sent to participants with a "scheduleAgent"
property set to "server" or omitted. If the effective
"scheduleAgent" property is changed:
o to "server" from something else: send messages to this participant
as though the event had just been created.
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o from "server" to something else: send messages to this participant
as though the event had just been destroyed.
o any other change: do not send any messages to this participant.
The server may send the scheduling message via any of the methods
defined on the sendTo property of a participant (if the server is the
source) or the replyTo property of the event (otherwise) that it
supports. If no supported methods are available, the server MUST
reject the change with a "noSupportedScheduleMethods" SetError.
If the server is the source of the event it MUST NOT send messages to
any participant corresponding to the participantIdentities of the
calendar it is in.
If sending via iMIP [RFC6047], the server MAY choose to only send
updates it deems "essential" to avoid flooding the recipient's email
with changes they do not care about. For example, changes to the
participationStatus of another participant, or changes to events
solely in the past may be omitted.
5.8.2.1. REQUEST
When the server is the source for the event, a REQUEST message
([RFC5546], Section 3.2.2) is sent to all current participants if:
o The event is being created.
o Any non per-user property (see Section XXX) is updated on the
event (including adding/removing participants), except if just
modifying the recurrenceOverrides such that CANCEL messages are
generated (see the next section).
Note, if the only change is adding an additional instance (not
generated by the event's recurrence rule) to the recurrenceOverrides,
this MAY be handled via sending an ADD message ([RFC5546],
Section 3.2.4) for the single instance rather than a REQUEST message
for the master. However, for interoperability reasons this is not
recommended due to poor support in the wild for this type of message.
The server MUST ensure participants are only sent information about
recurrence instances they are added to when sending scheduling
messages for recurring events. If the participant is not invited to
the master recurring event but only individual instances, scheduling
messages MUST be sent for just those expanded occurrences
individually. If a participant is invited to a recurring event, but
removed via a recurrence override from a particular instance, any
scheduling messages to this participant MUST return the instance as
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"excluded" (if it matches a recurrence rule for the event) or omit
the instance entirely (otherwise).
If the event's "hideAttendees" property is set to "true", the
recipient MUST be the only attendee in the message; all others are
omitted.
5.8.2.2. CANCEL
When the server is the source for the event, a CANCEL message
([RFC5546], Section 3.2.5) is sent if:
o A participant is removed from either the master event or a single
instance (the message is only sent to this participant; remaining
participants will get a REQUEST, as described above).
o The event is destroyed.
o An exclusion is added to recurrenceOverrides to remove an instance
generated by the event's recurrence rule.
o An additional instance (not generated by the event's recurrence
rule) is removed from the recurrenceOverrides.
In each of the latter 3 cases, the message is sent to all
participants.
5.8.2.3. REPLY
When the server is _not_ the source for the event, a REPLY message
([RFC5546], Section 3.2.3) is sent for any participant corresponding
to the participantIdentities of the calendar it is in if:
o The "participationStatus" property of the participant is changed.
o The event is destroyed and the participationStatus was not "needs-
action".
o The event is created and the participationStatus is not "needs-
action".
o An exclusion is added to recurrenceOverrides to remove an instance
generated by the event's recurrence rule.
o An exclusion is removed from recurrenceOverrides (this is presumed
to be the client undoing the deletion of a single instance).
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o An instance not generated by the event's recurrence rule is
removed from the recurrenceOverrides.
o An instance not generated by the event's recurrence rule is added
to the recurrenceOverrides (this is presumed to be the client
undoing the deletion of a single instance).
A reply is not sent when deleting an event where the current status
is "needs-action" as if a junk calendar event gets added by an
automated system, the user MUST be able to delete the event without
sending a reply.
5.9. CalendarEvent/copy
This is a standard "/copy" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.4.
5.10. CalendarEvent/query
This is a standard "/query" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.5, with two extra arguments:
o *expandRecurrences*: "Boolean" (default: false) If true, the
server will expand any recurring event. If true, the filter MUST
be just a FilterCondition (not a FilterOperator) and MUST include
both a before and after property. This ensures the server is not
asked to return an infinite number of results.
o *timeZone*: "String" The time zone for before/after filter
conditions (default: "Etc/UTC")
If expandRecurrences is true, a separate id will be returned for each
instance of a recurring event that matches the query. This synthetic
id is opaque to the client, but allows the server to resolve the id +
recurrence id for "/get" and "/set" operations. Otherwise, a single
id will be returned for matching recurring events that represents the
entire event.
There is no necessary correspondence between the ids of different
instances of the same expanded event.
The following additional error may be returned instead of the
"CalendarEvent/query" response:
"cannotCalculateOccurrences": the server cannot expand a recurrence
required to return the results for this query.
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5.10.1. Filtering
A *FilterCondition* object has the following properties:
o *inCalendars*: "Id[]|null" A list of calendar ids. An event must
be in ANY of these calendars to match the condition.
o *after*: "LocalDate|null" The end of the event, or any recurrence
of the event, in the time zone given as the timeZone argument,
must be after this date to match the condition.
o *before*: "LocalDate|null" The start of the event, or any
recurrence of the event, in the time zone given as the timeZone
argument, must be before this date to match the condition.
o *text*: "String|null" Looks for the text in the _title_,
_description_, _locations_ (matching name/description),
_participants_ (matching name/email) and any other textual
properties of the event or any recurrence of the event.
o *title*: "String|null" Looks for the text in the _title_ property
of the event, or the overridden _title_ property of a recurrence.
o *description*: "String|null" Looks for the text in the
_description_ property of the event, or the overridden
_description_ property of a recurrence.
o *location*: "String|null" Looks for the text in the _locations_
property of the event (matching name/description of a location),
or the overridden _locations_ property of a recurrence.
o *owner*: "String|null" Looks for the text in the name or email
fields of a participant in the _participants_ property of the
event, or the overridden _participants_ property of a recurrence,
where the participant has a role of "owner".
o *attendee*: "String|null" Looks for the text in the name or email
fields of a participant in the _participants_ property of the
event, or the overridden _participants_ property of a recurrence,
where the participant has a role of "attendee".
o *participationStatus*: Must match. If owner/attendee condition,
status must be of that participant. Otherwise any.
o *uid*: "String" The uid of the event is exactly the given string.
If expandRecurrences is true, all conditions must match against the
same instance of a recurring event for the instance to match. If
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expandRecurrences is false, all conditions must match, but they may
each match any instance of the event.
If zero properties are specified on the FilterCondition, the
condition MUST always evaluate to "true". If multiple properties are
specified, ALL must apply for the condition to be "true" (it is
equivalent to splitting the object into one-property conditions and
making them all the child of an AND filter operator).
The exact semantics for matching "String" fields is *deliberately not
defined* to allow for flexibility in indexing implementation, subject
to the following:
o Text SHOULD be matched in a case-insensitive manner.
o Text contained in either (but matched) single or double quotes
SHOULD be treated as a *phrase search*, that is a match is
required for that exact sequence of words, excluding the
surrounding quotation marks. Use "\"", "\'" and "\\" to match a
literal """, "'" and "\" respectively in a phrase.
o Outside of a phrase, white-space SHOULD be treated as dividing
separate tokens that may be searched for separately in the event,
but MUST all be present for the event to match the filter.
o Tokens MAY be matched on a whole-word basis using stemming (so for
example a text search for "bus" would match "buses" but not
"business").
5.10.2. Sorting
The following properties MUST be supported for sorting:
o start
o uid
o recurrenceId
The following properties SHOULD be supported for sorting:
o created
o updated
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5.11. CalendarEvent/queryChanges
This is a standard "/queryChanges" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.6.
5.12. Examples
TODO: Add example of how to get event by uid: query uid=foo and
backref. Return multiple with recurrenceId set (user invited to
specific instances of recurring event).
6. Alerts
Alerts may be specified on events as described in
[I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar], Section 4.5. If the "useDefaultAlerts"
property is true, the alerts are taken from the Calendar
"defaultAlertsWithTime" or "defaultAlertsWithoutTime" property, as
described in Section XXX. Otherwise, the alerts are taken from the
"alerts" property of the CalendarEvent.
Alerts MUST only be triggered for events in calendars where the user
is subscribed and either the user owns the calendar or the calendar's
"shareesActAs" property is "self".
When an alert with an "email" action is triggered, the server MUST
send an email to the user to notify them of the event. The contents
of the email is implementation specific. Clients MUST NOT perform an
action for these alerts.
When an alert with a "display" action is triggered, clients SHOULD
display an alert in a platform-appropriate manner to the user to
remind them of the event. Clients with a full offline cache of
events may choose to calculate when alerts should trigger locally.
Alternatively, they can subscribe to push events from the server.
6.1. Push events
Servers that support the "urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendars" capability
MUST support registering for the pseudo-type "CalendarAlert" in push
subscriptions and event source connections, as described in
[RFC8620], Sections 7.2 and 7.3.
If requested, a CalendarAlert notification will be pushed whenever an
alert is triggered for the user. For Event Source connections, this
notification is pushed as an event called "calendaralert".
A *CalendarAlert* object has the following properties:
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o *@type*: "String" This MUST be the string "CalendarAlert".
o *accountId*: "String" The account id for the calendar in which the
alert triggered.
o *calendarEventId*: "String" The CalendarEvent id for the alert
that triggered.
o *uid*: "String" The uid property of the CalendarEvent for the
alert that triggered.
o *recurrenceId*: "String|null" The recurrenceId for the instance of
the event for which this alert is being triggered, or "null" if
the event is not recurring.
o *alertId*: "String" The id for the alert that triggered.
6.2. Acknowledging an alert
To dismiss an alert, clients set the "acknowledged" property of the
Alert object to the current date-time. When other clients fetch the
CalendarEvent with the updated Alert they SHOULD automatically
dismiss or suppress duplicate alerts (alerts with the same alert id
that triggered on or before this date-time).
Setting the "acknowledged" property MUST NOT create a new recurrence
override. For a recurring calendar object, the "acknowledged"
property of the parent object MUST be updated, unless the alert is
already overridden in the "recurrenceOverrides" property.
6.3. Snoozing an alert
Users may wish to dismiss an alert temporarily and have it come back
after a specific period of time. To do this, clients MUST:
1. Acknowledge the alert as described in Section XXX.
2. Add a new alert with an "AbsoluteTrigger" for the date-time the
alert has been snoozed until. Add a "relatedTo" property to the
new alert, setting the "parent" relation to point to the original
alert. This MUST NOT create a new recurrence override; it is
added to the same "alerts" property that contains the alert being
snoozed.
When acknowledging a snoozed alert (i.e. one with a parent relatedTo
pointing to the original alert), the client SHOULD delete the alert
rather than setting the "acknowledged" property.
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7. Calendar Event Notifications
The CalendarEventNotification data type records changes made by
external entities to events in calendars the user is subscribed to.
Notifications are stored in the same Account as the CalendarEvent
that was changed.
Notifications are only created by the server; users cannot create
them directly. Clients SHOULD present the list of notifications to
the user and allow them to dismiss them. To dismiss a notification
you use a standard "/set" call to destroy it.
The server SHOULD create a CalendarEventNotification whenever an
event is added, updated or destroyed by another user or due to
receiving an iTIP [RFC5546] or other scheduling message in a calendar
this user is subscribed to. The server SHOULD NOT create
notifications for events implicitly deleted due to the containing
calendar being deleted.
7.1. Auto-deletion of Notifications
The server MAY limit the maximum number of notifications it will
store for a user. When the limit is reached, any new notification
will cause the previously oldest notification to be automatically
deleted.
The server MAY coalesce events if appropriate, or remove events that
it deems are no longer relevant or after a certain period of time.
The server SHOULD automatically destroy a notification about an event
if the user updates or destroys that event (e.g. if the user sends an
RSVP for the event).
7.2. Object Properties
The *CalendarEventNotification* object has the following properties:
o *id*: "String" The id of the CalendarEventNotification.
o *created*: "UTCDate" The time this notification was created.
o *changedBy*: "Person" Who made the change.
* *name*: "String" The name of the person who made the change.
* *email*: "String" The email of the person who made the change,
or null if no email is available.
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* *calendarPrincipalId*: "String|null" The id of the calendar
principal corresponding to the person who made the change, if
any. This will be null if the change was due to receving an
iTIP message.
o *comment*: "String|null" Comment sent along with the change by the
user that made it. (e.g. COMMENT property in an iTIP message).
o *type*: "String" This MUST be one of
* created
* updated
* destroyed
o *calendarEventId*: "String" The id of the CalendarEvent that this
notification is about.
o *isDraft*: "Boolean" (created/updated only) Is this event a draft?
o *event*: "JSEvent" The data before the change (if updated or
destroyed), or the data after creation (if created).
o *eventPatch*: "PatchObject" (updated only) A patch encoding the
change between the data in the event property, and the data after
the update.
To reduce data, if the change only affects a single instance of a
recurring event, the server MAY set the event and eventPatch
properties for the instance; the calendarEventId MUST still be for
the master event.
7.3. CalendarEventNotification/get
This is a standard "/get" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.1.
7.4. CalendarEventNotification/changes
This is a standard "/changes" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.2.
7.5. CalendarEventNotification/set
This is a standard "/changes" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.3.
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Only destroy is supported; any attempt to create/update MUST be
rejected with a "forbidden" SetError.
7.6. CalendarEventNotification/query
This is a standard "/query" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.5.
7.6.1. Filtering
A *FilterCondition* object has the following properties:
o *after*: "UTCDate|null" The creation date must be on or after this
date to match the condition.
o *before*: "UTCDate|null" The creation date must be before this
date to match the condition.
o *type*: "String" The type property must be the same to match the
condition.
o *calendarEventIds*: "Id[]|null" A list of event ids. The
calendarEventId property of the notification must be in this list
to match the condition.
7.6.2. Sorting
The "created" property MUST be supported for sorting.
7.7. CalendarEventNotification/queryChanges
This is a standard "/queryChanges" method as described in [RFC8620],
Section 5.6.
8. Security Considerations
All security considerations of JMAP [RFC8620] and JSCalendar
[I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar] apply to this specification. Additional
considerations specific to the data types and functionality
introduced by this document are described in the following
subsections.
8.1. Denial-of-service Expanding Recurrences
Recurrence rules can be crafted to occur as frequently as every
second. Servers MUST be careful to not allow resources to be
exhausted when expanding. Equally, rules can be generated that never
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create any occurrences at all. Servers MUST be careful to limit the
work spent iterating in search of the next occurrence.
8.2. Privacy
TODO.
9. IANA Considerations
9.1. JMAP Capability Registration for "calendars"
IANA will register the "calendars" JMAP Capability as follows:
Capability Name: "urn:ietf:params:jmap:calendars"
Specification document: this document
Intended use: common
Change Controller: IETF
Security and privacy considerations: this document, Section XXX
9.2. JSCalendar Property Registrations
IANA will register the following additional properties in the
JSCalendar Properties Registry.
9.2.1. id
Property Name: id
Property Type: "Id"
Property Context: JSEvent, JSTask
Intended Use: Reserved
9.2.2. calendarId
Property Name: calendarId
Property Type: "Id"
Property Context: JSEvent, JSTask
Intended Use: Reserved
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9.2.3. isDraft
Property Name: isDraft
Property Type: "Boolean"
Property Context: JSEvent, JSTask
Intended Use: Reserved
9.2.4. utcStart
Property Name: utcStart
Property Type: "UTCDateTime"
Property Context: JSEvent, JSTask
Intended Use: Reserved
9.2.5. utcEnd
Property Name: utcEnd
Property Type: "UTCDateTime"
Property Context: JSEvent, JSTask
Intended Use: Reserved
9.2.6. mayInviteSelf
Property Name: mayInviteSelf
Property Type: "Boolean" (default: false)
Property Context: JSEvent, JSTask
Reference: This document, Section XXX.
Intended Use: Common
9.2.7. mayInviteOthers
Property Name: mayInviteOthers
Property Type: "Boolean" (default: false)
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Property Context: JSEvent, JSTask
Reference: This document, Section XXX.
Intended Use: Common
9.2.8. hideAttendees
Property Name: hideAttendees
Property Type: "Boolean" (default: false)
Property Context: JSEvent, JSTask
Reference: This document, Section XXX.
Intended Use: Common
10. References
10.1. Normative References
[I-D.ietf-calext-jscalendar]
Jenkins, N. and R. Stepanek, "JSCalendar: A JSON
representation of calendar data", draft-ietf-calext-
jscalendar-27 (work in progress), June 2020.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
[RFC2397] Masinter, L., "The "data" URL scheme", RFC 2397,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2397, August 1998,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2397>.
[RFC5546] Daboo, C., Ed., "iCalendar Transport-Independent
Interoperability Protocol (iTIP)", RFC 5546,
DOI 10.17487/RFC5546, December 2009,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5546>.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
[RFC8620] Jenkins, N. and C. Newman, "The JSON Meta Application
Protocol (JMAP)", RFC 8620, DOI 10.17487/RFC8620, July
2019, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8620>.
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10.2. Informative References
[RFC4791] Daboo, C., Desruisseaux, B., and L. Dusseault,
"Calendaring Extensions to WebDAV (CalDAV)", RFC 4791,
DOI 10.17487/RFC4791, March 2007,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4791>.
[RFC6047] Melnikov, A., Ed., "iCalendar Message-Based
Interoperability Protocol (iMIP)", RFC 6047,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6047, December 2010,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6047>.
10.3. URIs
[1] https://www.iana.org/time-zones
[2] https://www.w3.org/TR/css-color-3/
[3] https://www.iana.org/time-zones
Authors' Addresses
Neil Jenkins
Fastmail
PO Box 234, Collins St West
Melbourne VIC 8007
Australia
Email: neilj@fastmailteam.com
URI: https://www.fastmail.com
Michael Douglass
Spherical Cow Group
226 3rd Street
Troy NY 12180
United States of America
Email: mdouglass@sphericalcowgroup.com
URI: http://sphericalcowgroup.com
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