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KDE Software Compilation 4.4:ssa KAddressBookista tuli ensimmäinen ohjelma, joka käyttää Akonadia. Muutosvaiheen todennäköisissä ongelmatapauksissa apua löytynee vianmääritys-sivulta. Sanastossa kerrotaan lyhyesti, mikä Akonadi on ja annetaan linkkejä yksityiskohtaisempaan kuvaukseen. Jatkokehityksen ja hiomisen jälkeen Akonadi tullaan ottamaan käyttöön myös monissa muissa ohjelmissa.
At the time of writing, the following applications are enabled to use the Akonadi framework to centrally store and access user data. Follow through to each application's page to learn more.
KMail | |
| Mail Client
Uses Akonadi to store emails | |
KAddressBook | |
| Contact Manager
Uses Akonadi to store contact information | |
KOrganizer | |
| Personal Organizer
Uses Akonadi to store calendars, events, journals, etc. | |
KJots | |
| Note Taking Application
Uses Akonadi to store notes | |
KAlarm | |
| Personal alarm scheduler
Uses Akonadi to store alarms | |
In addition to this, plasma widgets like the Digital Clock widget, the Notes widget also use Akonadi to store and retrieve events and notes.
The Akonadi control module in System Settings provides an easy means to starting, stopping, restarting and querying the status of the Akonadi server. You may also accomplish this from the commandline using the command akonadictl. Using this method, you can get additional useful information on the console.
To start the Akonadi server,
akonadictl start
To stop the Akonadi server,
akonadictl stop
To restart a running Akonadi server,
akonadictl restart
To query the status of the Akonadi server,
akonadictl status
| Remember |
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| If you don't want to have Akonadi running on your system, you can not use any of the Akonadi-enabled applications. Such applications will start Akonadi, whenever they need its services even if you have disabled it. See the list of Akonadi-enabled applications. Also note, that some Plasma widgets, such as the Digital Clock uses Akonadi |
The Akonadi server is launched automatically at login whenever any Akonadi-enabled application requests access to it.
To disable the Akonadi subsystem, first, shut down the running Akonadi server from the control module or the command line:
akonadictl stop
Now, edit the file ~/.config/akonadi/akonadiserverrc and change StartServer from true to false:
StartServer=false
The Akonadi server should no longer launch automatically on login.
| Note |
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| The Akonadi server will still be started by any Akonadi-enabled application. Ensure that no Akonadi-enabled application is launched at login or thereafter. Remember to check Plasma widgets as well — the Digital Clock widget in the default panel, for instance uses Akonadi to (optionally) display calendar events and this is enabled in its settings by default. You must remove any widgets that may start it from your start-up, if you wish Akonadi to remain disabled. |
A full explanation of where the data is stored and Akonadi's interaction with it is available in Andras Mantia's blog
Akonadi's Glossary entry has a brief description of its purpose and other useful links. This page explains how Akonadi and KAddressBook work together.
If you are experiencing 100% CPU usage by the virtuoso-t process when using Akonadi and related applications, try this proposed workaround while it is being investigated: In KRunner's configuration page, disable the Nepomuk search plugin and the Contact plugin. Then, log out and back in. For further information and inputs, report back here or on the Forum or on the IRC channel #kontact.
There is often a good deal of confusion about Akonadi and Nepomuk. Why data from Akonadi is indexed in Nepomuk explains exactly why we have both, and what their roles are. Don't miss the additional information from Will Stephenson in the Comments section.
if you aren't able to read some emails and see a message with " please wait ... ", you may logout and login KDE session to reinitialize all processes, might help.