parse_due_for_user only matched day-first format ('today at 3pm').
Time-first strings like '3pm today' or '11pm today' — which the tool
schema and tool_index both advertise as valid examples — fell through
all branches, hit dateutil or the legacy _parse_dt fallback, and in
many cases raised ValueError. do_manage_notes then stored the raw
string verbatim, and the ISO-only reminder scanner (action_ping_notes)
never fired the note.
Add a time-first regex branch immediately after the day-first branch
to handle '<time> today|tonight|tomorrow|tmrw|yesterday'. Existing
day-first parsing is unchanged.
Fixes#3302
* feat(calendar): support multiple CalDAV accounts
Replaces the single CalDAV credential slot with a named account list so
users can sync both a personal and work calendar simultaneously.
- Add `account_id` column to `CalendarCal` + startup migration
- `_load_caldav_accounts()` in caldav_sync.py reads `caldav_accounts`
list from prefs, auto-migrating the legacy single `caldav` key on
first use (no user action required)
- `sync_caldav()` iterates all accounts and aggregates counts/errors
- `writeback_event()` resolves credentials via `CalendarCal.account_id`,
falling back to the first account for legacy rows
- New REST endpoints: GET/POST/PUT/DELETE `/api/calendar/config/accounts`
- Legacy GET/POST `/api/calendar/config` preserved for backward compat
- Settings UI: one card per account with Label, URL, Username, Password
fields; Test button works for both unsaved (inline creds) and saved
(by account_id) accounts; delete removes only that account
- Update test_caldav_url_hardening.py mock to include `_save_for_user`
and updated `_sync_blocking` signature
* fix(calendar): restore #2765 PK scoping and #2819 writeback URL validation
Two regressions introduced by the multi-account refactor:
1. PK collision (#2765): _stable_cal_id was back to hashing only the URL,
so two users — or one user with two accounts on the same server — would
collide on the primary key. Restore owner+account_id in the hash key
(format: "{owner}\n{account_id}\n{url}") and thread both values through
_sync_blocking → _writeback_blocking → push_event → find_remote_calendar
so the hash round-trips correctly on write-back.
2. URL validation dropped (#2819): _load_caldav_accounts imported
_save_for_user at function scope, causing an ImportError on test mocks
that only provide _load_for_user, which prevented writeback_event from
reaching the validate_caldav_url call. Move the import inside the
migration branch and wrap in try/except (best-effort save; next call
re-migrates from the still-present legacy key).
Update fake_writeback_blocking in test_caldav_writeback.py to accept the
new owner/account_id optional params.
* fix(calendar): expose source in calendar list and add per-calendar delete
- GET /api/calendar/calendars now includes source field so the frontend
can distinguish CalDAV collections from local calendars
- Add DELETE /api/calendar/calendars/{cal_id} to remove a specific
calendar and its events by owner-scoped ID
* fix(settings): show all CalDAV calendars in integrations list
Previously one card was shown for the CalDAV server connection regardless
of how many calendar collections had been synced. The Calendars page showed
them all; Settings did not.
- Fetch /api/calendar/calendars alongside existing requests and render
one card per source=caldav collection, falling back to the single
server-level card if nothing has synced yet
- Delete now targets the specific calendar by ID rather than clearing
the whole server config
- Confirm dialog shows the calendar name so the user can verify before
removing
_parse_dt documents that it returns naive datetimes (CalendarEvent.dtstart is
naive) and every return path strips tz — except the last-resort dateutil
fallback, which returned dateutil's value verbatim. An offset-bearing non-ISO
input (e.g. RFC-2822 'Mon, 05 Jan 2026 14:00:00 +0900', which fromisoformat
rejects but dateutil parses) leaked a tz-aware datetime into the naive dtstart
column via create_event/update_event -> _parse_dt_pair. On read-back,
_expand_rrule compares ev.dtstart against naive window bounds and raised
'can't compare offset-naive and offset-aware datetimes' (500 / no events).
Normalize the fallback to UTC-naive, mirroring the fromisoformat branch. Naive
inputs are unchanged.
(cherry picked from commit b03b6b91df)
Co-authored-by: ghreprimand <203024559+ghreprimand@users.noreply.github.com>
routes/calendar_routes.py imports several names it never uses (pyflakes):
typing.Tuple, dateutil.rrule.{rruleset,DAILY,WEEKLY,MONTHLY,YEARLY}, and
auth_helpers.get_current_user. Drop them (the whole DAILY/WEEKLY/MONTHLY/
YEARLY line goes; rrulestr and require_user are kept). No behaviour change.
cfg is loaded from prefs and already holds the existing, already-encrypted
password. When the edit form was re-submitted without re-typing the
password, the elif branch called encrypt() on that stored ciphertext,
compounding the encryption on every save and eventually breaking sync with
a decrypt error.
Drop the elif branch: the stored value is preserved as-is, and we only
encrypt when a new password is actually supplied.
Fixes#1915
Co-authored-by: EkaTantra Dev <dev@ekatantra.com>
Events are stored with a naive (UTC) dtstart, but standard .ics exporters
(Google, Apple, Outlook, Fastmail) write the recurrence bound as an absolute
UTC value, e.g. FREQ=DAILY;UNTIL=20240105T090000Z. dateutil refuses to mix a
tz-aware UNTIL with a naive DTSTART ("RRULE UNTIL values must be specified in
UTC when DTSTART is timezone-aware"), so _expand_rrule's except branch swallowed
the ValueError and silently downgraded the event to non-recurring — every
occurrence after the first vanished from the calendar.
When dtstart is naive, strip the trailing Z from UNTIL so it matches the naive
DTSTART before parsing. No effect on tz-aware dtstarts or naive-UNTIL rules.
Adds tests/test_calendar_rrule_until_utc.py — a daily series bounded by a UTC
UNTIL expands to all 5 occurrences (fails before: returns 1, non-recurring).
Co-authored-by: NubsCarson <nubs@nubs.site>
POST /api/calendar/test issues a single PROPFIND with raw httpx
Basic auth. CalDAV servers configured for Digest (Baïkal default,
SabreDAV-based servers, Radicale with htdigest) reject Basic with
401, so the UI "Test connection" button surfaces "Auth failed —
check username/password" even when the URL and credentials are
correct.
src/caldav_sync.py (the real sync path) uses caldav.DAVClient,
which negotiates the scheme via niquests, so production sync
already works against these servers. The test endpoint just
doesn't match. Bring it to parity: keep the cheap Basic first
attempt, and on a 401-with-Digest-challenge retry once with
httpx.DigestAuth before deciding it's an auth failure.
Repro: configure CalDAV against a stock Baïkal install — test
button returns 401, sync succeeds.
Co-authored-by: Shatti2 <codered5678@gmail.com>
* feat: CalDAV write-back — push local event create/update/delete to the remote (#800)
CalDAV sync was pull-only (src/caldav_sync.py), so events created, edited, or
deleted in Odysseus on a CalDAV-backed calendar only changed local SQLite and
never reached the server — they silently vanished on the next pull and never
appeared on the user's phone (iCloud, etc.).
This adds the missing write half:
- src/caldav_writeback.py builds the VEVENT, re-discovers the remote calendar by
the same URL-hash the local id was derived from (the remote URL isn't stored),
and PUTs/DELETEs the event by UID via the caldav lib. The pure pieces
(build_event_ical, find_remote_calendar, push_event) take inputs by argument so
they unit-test against a fake client with no network.
- create/update/delete event handlers (routes/calendar_routes.py) call it
best-effort for caldav-sourced calendars only: the local DB stays the source of
truth, a remote failure is logged, never fatal, and local calendars are untouched.
Tests: tests/test_caldav_writeback.py (9, pure logic incl. iCal serialization,
hash discovery, create/update/delete orchestration) and
tests/test_caldav_writeback_route.py (3, route-level: a caldav calendar pushes,
a local one does not, delete pushes a delete). 12 passed.
Note: write-back re-discovers the remote calendar per write (the URL isn't
persisted locally); a follow-up could cache it. Live-iCloud verification needs a
real account — flagging for a maintainer pass.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
* test: drive #800 route regression without TestClient (fixes local hang)
Same fix as the document route test: the CalDAV write-back route regression used
Starlette TestClient (middleware app + threadpool) which hung in the maintainer's
environment. Rework it to call the async create/delete calendar handlers directly
— extracted from the router — with a minimal fake request, temp-SQLite-patched
SessionLocal, and writeback_event stubbed to record calls. Same coverage (a
caldav calendar pushes, a local one does not, delete pushes a delete), completes
in ~0.3s with no TestClient.
Verified the maintainer's exact batch:
pytest tests/test_caldav_writeback.py tests/test_caldav_writeback_route.py -> 12 passed
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two bugs in the export_ics path:
1. X-WR-CALNAME was written raw: calendar names containing commas,
semicolons or backslashes produced invalid ICS (RFC 5545 §3.3.11
requires those characters to be escaped as \, \; and \\).
Fix: wrap cal.name in the existing _ics_escape() helper, which is
already used for SUMMARY, DESCRIPTION, and LOCATION on the lines
immediately below.
2. DTSTART and DTEND on non-all-day events always emitted the naive
ISO string (e.g. 20260602T100000) regardless of CalendarEvent.is_utc.
Consumers treat a naive datetime as floating/local time, so UTC
events imported into Google Calendar or Apple Calendar shifted by
the user's timezone offset. Fix: append 'Z' when is_utc is True,
matching the pattern already used by the serialise_event() helper
at line 408.
* Fix YEARLY recurring CalDAV events only showing on DTSTART year (#170)
Recurring events with RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY only appeared in the calendar
on the year matching DTSTART, not in subsequent years. The list_events
query filtered by , which excludes
recurring events whose original dtend (e.g. 2019-07-22) falls before
the requested window (e.g. 2026).
Fix: split the query into two branches — non-recurring events still
require window overlap, but recurring events (with non-empty RRULE)
are fetched by dtstart < end_dt alone. A new helper,
_expand_rrule_occurrences(), uses dateutil.rrule to expand each
recurring event into individual occurrence dicts within the requested
date range, so YEARLY/WEEKLY/MONTHLY events render correctly across
all years.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
* recurrence: compound UIDs, frontend fixes, python-dateutil req, tests
- Replace _expand_rrule_occurrences with _expand_rrule that emits stable
compound UIDs ({base_uid}::{date_or_datetime}) so the frontend can
distinguish occurrences from the same series. Non-recurring events
pass through with is_recurrence=false and series_uid=uid.
- Add _resolve_base_uid() to extract the base series UID from compound
UIDs — used by PUT/DELETE /api/calendar/events/{uid} and the
manage_calendar tool so edits/deletes always target the base row.
- Update manage_calendar tool to import and use _resolve_base_uid.
- Frontend _updateEvent / _deleteEvent: detect compound UIDs and
invalidate localStorage cache after success so stale sibling
occurrences aren't shown.
- Add python-dateutil to requirements.txt as an explicit dependency.
- Add 14 regression tests in tests/test_calendar_recurrence.py
covering _resolve_base_uid edge cases, _expand_rrule with
yearly/weekly/monthly/all-day/bad-rrule, unique UIDs, and
metadata inheritance.
- Merge upstream's cleaner SQLAlchemy or_/and_ query pattern.
* recurrence: overlapping malformed-RRULE, exclusive end, multi-day crossings
Fix three edge cases in _expand_rrule:
1. Malformed-RRULE fallback now checks window overlap. list_events
fetches recurring rows with only dtstart < end_dt, so a broken
old recurring event could appear in unrelated future windows.
Now fallback returns [] unless the base event's dtstart/dtend
actually intersect [start, end).
2. Exclusive end boundary. rule.between(start, end, inc=True) was
inclusive on end, but the route contract and non-recurring SQL
filter both use [start, end). Added occ_start >= end guard.
3. Multi-day crossings. A recurring occurrence that starts before
the window but ends inside it was missed (only occ_start was
checked). Now expands from start - duration and filters by
occ_start < end AND occ_end > start, matching non-recurring
overlap behavior.
Tests: +4 tests for these cases (18 total)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>