Log inSkip to main contentSkip to sidebar
IMPORTANT: JAC is a Public system and anyone on the internet will be able to view the data in the created JAC tickets. Please don’t include Customer or Sensitive data in the JAC ticket.
We collect Confluence feedback from various sources, and we evaluate what we've collected when planning our product roadmap. To understand how this piece of feedback will be reviewed, see our
Implementation of New Features Policy.
This should retrieve a remote ical formatted file (via HTTP) and then display it in various formats (weekly, monthly etc) - I'm not sure how these states would be stored, but it would be very cool
Very useful with JRA-2971 and JRA-3465 as another method to get JIRA data into Confluence.
Matt Ryall
added a comment - This functionality is available in the Calendar Plugin, which is available at the link below and via the plugin repository:
http://confluence.atlassian.com/display/CONFEXT/Calendar+Plugin
We won't be reimplementing it in Confluence. Please raise suggestions for improvement in the issue tracker for this plugin:
http://developer.atlassian.com/jira/browse/CAL
Jason Dillon
added a comment - FYI, looks like the Cal Macro (recently added) might be useful for implementing this:
http://confluence.atlassian.com/display/CONFEXT/Cal+Macro
Having full blown calendar support in Confluence would certainly be great. Meanwhile a macro that can display a calendar from an external server would be extremely useful!
Eric Jain
added a comment - Having full blown calendar support in Confluence would certainly be great. Meanwhile a macro that can display a calendar from an external server would be extremely useful!
iCalendar support is a must. My take is that one should be able to:
manage the calendars within confluence,
read (subscribe) and modify the calendars through authenticated WEBDAV using an iCalendar compatible client and your Confluence username/password,
set permissions on calendars like you would for a page; and,
create a super calendar entity which is a melding of other calendars you have access to. It should be possible to include this on a page and subscribe to it (read only) using a WEBDAV iCalendar client.
AmosA
added a comment - Agreed.
iCalendar support is a must. My take is that one should be able to:
manage the calendars within confluence,
read (subscribe) and modify the calendars through authenticated WEBDAV using an iCalendar compatible client and your Confluence username/password,
set permissions on calendars like you would for a page; and,
create a super calendar entity which is a melding of other calendars you have access to. It should be possible to include this on a page and subscribe to it (read only) using a WEBDAV iCalendar client.
This functionality is available in the Calendar Plugin, which is available at the link below and via the plugin repository:
http://confluence.atlassian.com/display/CONFEXT/Calendar+Plugin
We won't be reimplementing it in Confluence. Please raise suggestions for improvement in the issue tracker for this plugin:
http://developer.atlassian.com/jira/browse/CAL