Jump to content

Akonadi

From KDE UserBase Wiki
Revision as of 13:56, 24 August 2011 by Periliocastrol (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Para reiniciar un servidor '''Akonadi''' en ejecución,")

Introducción

La infraestructura Akonadi es la responsable de proporcionar aplicaciones con una base de datos centralizada para almacenar, indexar y recuperar la información personal del usuario. Esto incluye correos electrónicos, contactos, calendarios, eventos, diarios, alarmas, notas,etc. En SC 4.4, KAddressBook se convirtió en la primera aplicación en comenzar a usar el sistema de Akonadi. En SC 4.7, KMail, KOrganizer, KJots, etc. también fueron actualizados para usar Akonadi. Además, varios elementos gráficos de Plasma usan Akonadi para almacenar y recuperar calendarios, eventos, notas, etc.

En el momento de escribir esto, las siguientes aplicaciones están configuradas para usar la infraestructura Akonadi para almacenar y acceder a los datos del usuario de forma centralizada. Visita la página de cada aplicación para aprender más.

KMail

Cliente de correo

Usa Akonadi para almacenar correos electrónicos

KAddressBook

Gestor de contactos

Usa Akonadi para almacenar la información de los contactos

KOrganizer

Organizador personal

Usa Akonadi para almacenar calendarios, eventos, diarios, etc.

KJots

Aplicación para tomar notas

Usa Akonadi para almacenar notas

Además de esto, elementos gráficos de Plasma como el Reloj Digital o las Notas usan Akonadi para almacenar y recuperar eventos y notas.

Control del servidor Akonadi

El módulo de control de Akonadi en Preferencias del sistema es un medio sencillo para iniciar, detener, reiniciar y consultar el estado del servidor Akonadi. Esto también se puede lograr desde la línea de órdenes usando la orden akonadictl.

Para iniciar el servidor Akonadi,

akonadictl start

Para detener el servidor Akonadi,

akonadictl stop

Para reiniciar un servidor Akonadi en ejecución,

akonadictl restart

To query the status of the Akonadi server,

akonadictl status

Disabling the Akonadi subsystem

Remember

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

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.


Frequently Asked Questions

Refer to the Troubleshooting page for resolving glitches during migration. 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.