]> The &kalarm; Handbook David Jarvie
&David.Jarvie.mail;
David Jarvie
&David.Jarvie.mail;
Developer
David Jarvie
software@astrojar.org.uk
Translator
20012002200320042005200620072008 David Jarvie &FDLNotice; 2008-01-23 1.05.00 &kalarm; is a personal alarm message, command and email scheduler for &kde;. KDE tdepim kalarm alarm reminder
Introduction &kalarm; lets you schedule the display of personal alarm messages, the playing of sound files, the execution of commands and the sending of emails. In its default graphical mode, &kalarm; displays the list of pending alarms, showing their times and details. You can create new alarms, or you can select existing alarms for modification or deletion. You can also optionally view expired alarms. When configuring an alarm, you may either type in the alarm message text, specify a text or image file to display, specify a command to execute, or enter an email to send. You can also choose the colour of the alarm message, whether to play a sound or speak the message, whether it should repeat, and whether the alarm should be cancelled if it cannot be triggered at its scheduled time. Alarms may also be scheduled from the command line, or via &DCOP; calls from programs. When an alarm message is due, it is displayed on each &kde; desktop to ensure that you don't miss it. The message window shows the time for which the alarm was scheduled. It usually has a defer option to ask for the alarm to be displayed again later. An example of an alarm message: Screenshot of the &kalarm; message window Alarm message When the alarm specifies a command to execute or an email to send, &kalarm; displays nothing. &kalarm; can run in either of two modes: continuous (the default) where it runs from the system tray, or on-demand where it runs as and when required (with the option of displaying an independent system tray icon). This document makes various references to the alarm daemon. This is an application which runs in the background, checking pending alarms and telling &kalarm; to display them when they become due. Using &kalarm; When it is run with no command line parameters, &kalarm; starts in graphical mode, and displays the current list of outstanding alarms. When &kalarm; starts in graphical mode, it checks whether the alarm daemon is running. If it is not already running, &kalarm; starts it. All spin boxes in &kalarm; have an acceleration facility. To make the value change by larger steps, hold down the Shift key while you click on the spin arrow buttons. Alarm list The main &kalarm; window displays the current list of pending alarms, showing their times, repetition intervals, colours, and message texts, names of files to display, commands to execute or email subjects. (For a recurring alarm, the time shown is its next scheduled trigger time. For an alarm with a reminder, the time shown is the time of the alarm proper, not the reminder time.) An icon at the left of each alarm text/file/command/email subject indicates the type of alarm. Screenshot of the &kalarm; main window Main window For a repeated alarm, the list shows its next scheduled trigger time and its basic repetition interval (⪚ 1 Day for a daily recurrence, 3 Weeks for a recurrence which triggers on Monday and Wednesday every third week, Login for a repeat-at-login alarm). The alarms may be ordered by date/time, repeat interval, colour, type or text by clicking on the titlebar for the appropriate column. To reverse the sort order, click the column titlebar again. You can optionally show the remaining time until each alarm is due, together with, or instead of, the alarm's scheduled time. To show or hide the alarm time column, select ViewShow Alarm Times. To show or hide the time-to-alarm column, select ViewShow Time To Alarms. At least one of these columns is always shown. You can use the Preferences dialogue to change the default columns to display. Expired alarms By default, &kalarm; stores alarms for a limited period once they have expired or been deleted. (But note that alarms which you delete are stored only if they have already triggered at least once.) You can control whether &kalarm; stores expired alarms, and for how long, in the Preferences dialogue. Expired alarms may be shown in the alarm list by selecting ViewShow Expired Alarms. To hide them again, repeat the action. You can use the Preferences dialogue to show expired alarms by default. Searching the alarm list You can search through the alarm list to find alarms containing a search text. To invoke this, select EditFind. In the search dialogue, select the alarm types which you wish to search. To continue searching for more alarms which match, use EditFind Next or EditFind Previous . Searching is performed as follows: Text alarms: the message text is searched. File alarms: the file path/URL is searched. Command alarms: the command line or command script is searched. Email alarms: in addition to the subject and body of the email, the recipients and the URLs of attachments are searched. Only alarms currently shown in the alarm list can be selected for searching. So if you want to search expired alarms, you must first display them as described in the section above. Creating and manipulating alarms Creating a new alarm To create a new alarm, do one of the following. This displays the alarm edit dialogue through which you configure the alarm. Select Actions New. Right click on the system tray icon and choose New from the context menu. Click the Middle mouse button on the system tray icon. Right click in the alarm list and choose New from the context menu. Double click on empty space below the last entry in the alarm list. Alternatively, you can create new alarms preconfigured from various sources: To base your new alarm on an alarm template, follow the instructions in the Alarm templates section. To base your new alarm on an existing one, highlight the existing alarm in the list and select ActionsCopy. This opens the alarm edit dialogue already filled in with a copy of the selected alarm's details. To create a new alarm which displays an existing email message, drag the email from &kmail; onto &kalarm;'s main window or system tray icon. This opens the alarm edit dialogue with the entire email message (including sender, recipient etc.) as the alarm text. To create a new email alarm to send a copy of an existing email message, drag the email from &kmail; onto &kalarm;'s main window or system tray icon. Then select the Email option. The alarm edit dialogue is preset with the entire email message except sender. Dragging any piece of text onto &kalarm;'s main window or system tray icon opens the alarm edit dialogue and sets the alarm text. To create a file display alarm, drag a file URL onto &kalarm;'s main window or system tray icon. This opens the alarm edit dialogue and sets the file name. You can automatically create birthday alarms for people in &kaddressbook; as described in Importing birthdays from &kaddressbook;. Modifying an existing alarm To modify an existing pending alarm (expired alarms cannot be amended), do one of the following: Double click on its entry in the alarm list. Select it by clicking on its entry in the alarm list. Then choose Actions Edit. Right click on its entry in the alarm list and choose Edit from the context menu. This displays the alarm edit dialogue. Deleting/reactivating an alarm To delete existing alarms, do one of the following: Select one or more alarms by clicking on their entries in the alarm list. Then choose ActionsDelete . Right click on the desired entries in the alarm list and choose Delete from the context menu. When you delete an active alarm, it is stored as an expired alarm, provided that it has triggered at least once before being deleted, and provided that expired alarms are stored at all. (Use the Preferences dialogue to control whether and for how long expired alarms are stored.) When you delete an expired alarm, or an active alarm which has not yet triggered, it is removed permanently. You can reactivate a deleted alarm from the expired alarms list, provided that it has not yet expired. To do this, first display expired alarms, as described in Expired alarms. Then: Select one or more appropriate expired alarms by clicking on their entries in the alarm list. Then choose ActionsReactivate . Right click on the desired entries in the expired alarm list and choose Reactivate from the context menu. Enabling/disabling an alarm See Enabling and disabling alarms for how to enable and disable alarms, either individually or as a whole. Viewing an alarm To view an existing alarm without the ability to modify it, do one of the following: Select it by clicking on its entry in the alarm list. Then choose ActionsView . Right click on its entry in the alarm list and choose View from the context menu. This displays the alarm edit dialogue in read-only mode. Acknowledging an alarm See Alarm message window for how to acknowledge alarms. Alarm templates If you frequently want to set up similar alarms, you can create an alarm template to avoid having to enter all the details from scratch each time. A template can contain all the details which an alarm can contain, apart from the start date. As an example, you may regularly want to set an alarm to remind you about a television programme whose time varies from week to week. The template would contain all the alarm details (message text, whether to play a sound etc.) except for the time and date. Now, to create the alarm, all you need to do is open the alarm edit dialogue with that template and then enter the time and date. To create an alarm based on a template, open the alarm edit dialogue preset with the template details: Select the ActionsNew From Template menu item, and then select the desired template. Right click on the system tray icon and choose New Alarm From Template from the context menu. Then select the desired template. Open the alarm edit dialogue in the usual way, and click the Load Template... button to select a template to preset the dialogue with. Configuring templates You can create, modify or delete templates using the Alarm Templates dialogue, or you can create a new alarm template based on an existing alarm. To create a new alarm template, do one of the following: Display the Alarm Templates dialogue by selecting the FileTemplates... menu item, and click New. This displays a blank template edit dialogue. Display the Alarm Templates dialogue by selecting the FileTemplates... menu item, select an existing template from the list and click Copy. This opens the template edit dialogue already filled in with a copy of the existing template's details. Highlight an alarm in the alarm list and select ActionsCreate template . This opens the template edit dialogue already filled in with a copy of the selected alarm's details. To modify an existing template, display the Alarm Templates dialogue by selecting the FileTemplates... menu item and click Edit. This displays the template edit dialogue which is described below. To delete existing templates, display the Alarm Templates dialogue by selecting the FileTemplates... menu item, select one or more templates and click Delete. A confirmation prompt is issued to prevent accidental deletions. Template edit dialogue The template edit dialogue is similar to the alarm edit dialogue. The following controls are different: Enter the template's name in Template name. It is the template's name which is displayed in template selection lists, so it is best to choose a name which will remind you of its function. Each template's name must be unique. In the Time group box, select one of: Default time if you do not wish to specify any trigger time. Alarms based on this template will initially use the normal default trigger time for new alarms. Time to enter a time when the alarm is to be triggered. Any time to specify that the alarm should only have a date, not a time. Time from now to enter how long (in hours and minutes) after the alarm is created, that it should be triggered. In the Recurrence Rule group box in the Recurrence tab, no day or month need be selected for weekly or yearly recurrences, respectively. Importing alarms from external calendars You can import alarms from other calendar files into &kalarm;, by File Import Alarms.... The import function scans the selected calendar file for events containing alarms, and copies them (with new unique IDs) into &kalarm;'s calendar. Events without alarms, and calendar entries other than events, are ignored. If you import alarms from calendar files which were created by applications other than &kalarm;, the alarms may be changed by the import process – even alarm times may change. This depends on the data storage conventions used by the other application, and is unavoidable if those conventions differ from what &kalarm; expects. Always check imported alarms for unexpected changes, and adjust them as necessary. Importing birthdays from &kaddressbook; You can set up display alarms for birthdays stored in &kaddressbook;, by File Import Birthdays.... This displays a dialogue which allows you to select which birthdays to create alarms for. In the Alarm Text group box, you can set up the text to be displayed in the birthday alarm messages. The message text is created by combining the Prefix text followed by the person's name followed by the Suffix text. No spaces are added, so remember to include any necessary trailing space in Prefix and leading space in Suffix. If you change the alarm text, the birthday selection list will be re-evaluated. In the Select Birthdays list, select the birthdays which you want to create alarms for. Note that the list shows only those entries in &kaddressbook; which contain a birthday and which do not already have a birthday alarm in the format currently defined in the Alarm Text group box. The remaining controls are the same as for Text alarms in the Alarm Edit dialogue. Undo / redo You can undo and redo the most recent changes which you have made during the current session of &kalarm;. Most actions can be undone, including creation, edit and deletion of alarms and alarm templates, and reactivation of alarms. To prevent excessive resources being used by the undo history, the number of changes stored is limited to the last 12. To undo the last change, select EditUndo. To redo the last change which was undone, select EditRedo . To undo a change other than the last one, click on the Undo button in the toolbar and hold the mouse button down. A list of actions will be displayed from which you can choose the one to undo. If you don't see the action which you are looking for, remember that you may need to undo more recent changes first, which the desired change depends on. For example, if you edited an alarm and then deleted it, you cannot undo the edit until you have first undone the deletion. Redoing a change other than the last one can be done in a similar manner, using the Redo toolbar button. The alarm edit dialogue The alarm edit dialogue enables you to view and edit an alarm. Screenshot of the alarm edit dialogue Alarm edit dialogue Alarm action In the Action group box, select the type of alarm: Text in order to enter an alarm message text (which may include newlines) in the edit box. Set the following options: The Sound option allows you to select whether an audible alarm should sound when the alarm message is displayed. Choose: None to display the alarm silently. Beep to sound a beep. Speak to have the alarm message spoken as well as being displayed. This option is only available if you have KTTSD (from the tdeaccessibility package) installed and configured, together with a compatible speech synthesiser, ⪚ Festival. Sound file to play an audio file. Use the button on the right to display the Sound File dialogue which lets you select a file to play and set volume and repetition options. If you hover the mouse over the selector, a tooltip will display the audio file currently selected. &kalarm; uses the &arts; sound server for repetition and volume control. If &kalarm; has been built without &arts; support, repetition and volume options will not be available and a simple sound file selector will appear in place of the full Sound File dialogue. In the Sound File dialogue: Enter the sound file path, or use the button beside the edit box to display a file selection dialogue. You can listen to the selected file by clicking the play button to the left of the edit field. That button then changes function to allow you to stop playing when you have heard enough. Tick Repeat to continually repeat the audio file for as long as the alarm is displayed. (The alarm message window contains a button to stop playing the sound should you need silence but still want to display the alarm.) Tick Volume and adjust the slider control if you want to adjust the volume at which the audio file is played. If you wish, you can fade the volume. Fading means to start playing the audio file at one volume and gradually change to the final volume, over a specified time interval. The final volume is that entered in Volume above. To enable fade, tick Fade, and then enter the fade period in seconds in the Fade time field, and adjust the Initial volume slider. When possible, &kmix; is used to set volumes. This ensures that the volume at which the alarm is played is unaffected by any changes in the computer's sound level. If &kmix; is not installed (or is older than &kde; 3.1), the volume is set relative to the sound level current at the time the alarm triggers. So in this case, the volume at which the alarm is played will vary depending on any changes in the computer's sound level. You can use the Try button to test out the selected sound levels. Use the Font & Colour... button to select a font, and foreground and background colours, for the alarm message. In the Choose Alarm Font & Colour dialogue, tick Use default font to display the message in whatever font is configured as the default at the time the message is displayed. To choose a specific font for the message, untick Use default font. (The default font, and the colours shown in the colour selection lists, can be set in the Preferences dialogue.) The selected font and colours are shown in a sample text alongside the button. You can edit this text to show special characters. Use the Special Actions... button to specify shell commands to execute before or after displaying the alarm. In the Special Alarm Actions dialogue: In the Pre-alarm action field, enter a shell command to execute before the alarm is displayed. Note that &kalarm; will wait for the command to complete before displaying the alarm. A pre-alarm action is only executed once when the alarm message is initially displayed, including when a reminder message is replaced by the actual alarm message. It is not executed in any of the following circumstances: When a reminder message is displayed. When the message is redisplayed after deferring the alarm. When the message was displaying at the time you logged off and is then restored when you log back in. When a recurring alarm triggers but the alarm message (or a deferred alarm message) from a previous occurrence of the alarm is still visible; in other words, when the previous occurrence of the alarm has not yet been acknowledged. In the Post-alarm action field, enter a shell command to execute when the alarm is acknowledged (whether by clicking Close or by using the close button in the window's titlebar). It is not executed in any of the following circumstances: When a reminder message is closed. When you defer the alarm, except when the deferred alarm is finally acknowledged. When the alarm message is closed due to logging out. See the description of Command alarms below for details of how shell commands are executed. File to enter the path or &URL; of a text or image file whose contents are to be displayed in the alarm message. Use the button beside the edit box to display a file selection dialogue. Set options as for text alarms above, but note that the Speak option is not available. Command to enter a command to execute. This option is not available if &kde; is running in kiosk mode. The Enter a script tickbox lets you choose whether to enter a shell command line or a script. If this option is unticked, you can enter a shell command line to execute. The command is passed straight to the default shell (defined by the SHELL environment variable), and may include whatever options, parameters, piped commands etc. are permitted by the shell in a single line command. If this option is ticked, you can enter the text of a script to execute. Remember to include a first line such as #!/bin/bash to ensure that the correct command interpreter is invoked. Use the Command Output group box to specify what you want to be done with any terminal output which the command produces when it executes. Tick Execute in terminal window to cause the command to be executed in a terminal window. You can choose which type of terminal window should be used in the Preferences dialogue. Tick Log to file to save the command's output in a file. The output, prefixed by a heading showing the time at which the command was scheduled to run, will be appended to any existing contents of the file. Enter the file name in the edit box, or use the button beside the edit box to display a file selection dialogue. Tick Discard to throw away the command's output. Email to enter an email message to send. Fill in the recipients' addresses, the email subject line and the message body in the three edit fields. Use the button beside the addressee edit box to display your &kde; address book from which you can select email recipients. Attachments may be added using the Add... button. Note that attached files must still exist when the alarm is triggered; no copy is stored at the time the alarm is configured. To remove an attachment, highlight it in the drop-down list and click the Remove button. Set the following options: The From combo box allows you to select which &kmail; identity to use as your email address for sending the email. This option only appears if your From email address in the Preferences dialogue is set to Use &kmail; identities. Otherwise your email address is preset in the Preferences dialogue, rendering this option inapplicable. Tick Copy email to self to send a blind copy of the email to yourself when the alarm is triggered. The email address to which the copy will be sent may be set in the Preferences dialogue, the default being your email address set in the &kde; Control Centre. Deferral If the alarm is a recurring alarm and it was deferred after it was last displayed, the Deferred Alarm group box shows the time the alarm was deferred to. Change... displays a dialogue which allows you to change the deferred time or to cancel the deferral. Time In the Time group box, select either At date/time to enter the date and time when the alarm is to be triggered. Tick Any time if you want to specify only a date for the alarm: in this case the alarm will be displayed at the first opportunity on or after the configured start-of-day time, on the specified date. (Configuring &kalarm; describes how to set the start-of-day time.) For a non-recurring alarm, the date/time which you enter must be in the future, or if you enter only a date it must be today or later. For a recurring alarm, there are no such restrictions since the start date/time will be automatically adjusted to the first recurrence due after the current time. Time from now to enter how long after now (in hours and minutes) the alarm should be triggered. Reminder For a display alarm, tick Reminder if you want to display a reminder in advance of the main alarm and of each of its recurrences (if any). Enter how long in advance using the edit controls beside the tickbox. Reminders are not displayed for sub-repetitions within a recurrence. Reminders are only shown before each main recurrence of the alarm. If the alarm recurs, tick Reminder for first recurrence only if you only want a reminder before the alarm's first recurrence. If this is not ticked, the reminder period is limited to being less than the recurrence interval. Cancellation The late-cancellation options determine how an alarm is treated after its scheduled time: The Cancel if late tickbox determines what happens if the alarm cannot be triggered at its scheduled time. Tick this box to cancel the alarm if it cannot be triggered within a specified time period after the right time. The time period is selected using controls which appear when you tick the box. For example, if you enter a time period of 1 hour, the alarm will be triggered at the first opportunity up to an hour after it is due, but if it cannot be triggered within an hour its activation will be cancelled. The lateness of date-only alarms, &ie; ones for which the Any time option is selected, is calculated from the start-of-day time on the alarm's scheduled date. Leave the box unticked to trigger the alarm at the first opportunity starting at the scheduled time, regardless of how late it is. An alarm can only be triggered while you are logged in, and while both X and the alarm daemon are running. Tick Auto-close window after this time if you want the alarm window to be automatically closed if it is still showing at the expiry of the late-cancellation time. Recurrence Specify whether or how the alarm should be repeated using the Recurrence tab. The alarm's basic repetition characteristics are displayed for convenience in the title of the Recurrence tab. The recurrence interval is shown first, followed by any sub-repetition interval set up using the Sub-Repetition button. In the Recurrence Rule group box, set the recurrence type or time period as follows: To trigger the alarm once only, select No recurrence. Select At login to trigger the alarm whenever you log in, until its scheduled end time. Then, at its scheduled end time it will finally be triggered one last time. (Note that an alarm repeated at login will also be triggered any time you enable alarms, or restart or reset the alarm daemon.) To make the alarm recur at regular intervals, select one of the time period types and then enter in the Recur every box how many time periods should elapse between recurrences. For example, to repeat every fortnight, you could select Daily and enter a value of 14, or select Weekly and enter a value of 2. Depending on the time period type selected, you may have further options: For a weekly recurrence, tick each day in the week on which you wish to trigger the alarm. For a monthly recurrence, you may select either a fixed date, or a position (⪚ the second Tuesday). For a yearly recurrence, you may select either a fixed day in the month, or a position in a month (⪚ the last Saturday in May). Tick each month of the year in which you wish to trigger the alarm. To set a daily alarm to occur only on weekdays, use a weekly recurrence and tick each weekday. In the Recurrence End group box, set the overall recurrence time span as follows: Select No end to continue the repetitions indefinitely. Select End after to specify the total number of occurrences of the alarm. Select End by to specify the date/time until which the alarm will be repeated. If you wish to exclude certain date/times from the recurrence which you have set up, specify them in the Exceptions group box. The list of exceptions (&ie; excluded date/times) is shown on the left. To add a new exception, enter a date on the right and press Add. To change an exception, highlight it in the list, enter the new date on the right and press Change. To delete an exception, highlight it in the list and press Delete. Sub-Repetition You can use the Sub-Repetition button to set up a repetition within a repetition. In this case, each time the alarm is due as specified in the main recurrence, instead of being triggered just once it is triggered repeatedly in accordance with your sub-repetition specification. For example, to set up an alarm which repeats every hour from noon to 6 pm each Thursday, you would set up a weekly recurrence on Thursday at 12:00, and use the Sub-Repetition dialogue to specify an interval of 1 hour and either a count of 6 or a duration of 6 hours. In the Sub-Repetition dialogue which is displayed when you click the Sub-Repetition button, tick Repeat every to set up a repetition, or untick it to remove the repetition. If Repeat every is ticked, set up the repetition as follows: Enter the time interval between repetitions in the controls beside Repeat every. Select the desired time units (⪚ days) and then enter the number of units. Specify either the repetition count or its duration: Select Number of times to enter how many times the alarm should be triggered after the main recurrence. So, for example, to make the alarm occur 4 times at each main recurrence, &ie; 3 additional times, you should enter 3 here. Select Duration to enter the total time period during which the alarm should be repeated. This need not be an exact multiple of the repetition interval; it will automatically be rounded down when you click OK. To prevent overlapping sub-repetitions for the same alarm, a sub-repetition's duration is restricted to be less than the longest interval between main recurrences. Each time the alarm recurs as specified in the main recurrence, any still active sub-repetition which started at the previous recurrence is automatically cancelled. Other controls For display alarms, the Confirm acknowledgement tickbox lets you specify whether you will be prompted for confirmation when you close the alarm message window. This may be used as a safeguard against accidental acknowledgement of alarms. Select Show in &korganizer; to add the alarm to &korganizer;'s active calendar, where it will appear as an event without an alarm. This option allows you to track alarms in &korganizer; while still making use of &kalarm;'s functions. If you later modify or delete the alarm in &kalarm;, the &korganizer; event will be modified or deleted correspondingly. But if you change the event in &korganizer;, the alarm in &kalarm; will not be affected. Press the Load Template button to select a template to preset the dialogue with, as described in Creating and manipulating alarms. Press the Try button to test the alarm and check whether it works correctly. The alarm is executed just as if it had been scheduled in the normal way. Press the OK button when all details are correct, to add the alarm to the scheduled list. Alarm message window When an alarm message is due, it is displayed on each &kde; desktop and cannot be covered by ordinary windows, to ensure that you see it. The message window shows the time for which the alarm was scheduled, so that you can see when it popped up if you were away from the computer at the time. (For reminder messages, however, the date/time shown is that for the main alarm or its recurrence, not the reminder message time, and the window title is Reminder). Alarm message windows remain visible until you acknowledge them, unless Auto-close window after late-cancellation time was ticked in the Alarm Edit dialogue. In the case of a recurring alarm, if an unacknowledged message window remains from a previous occurrence of the alarm, the existing window is simply popped up when the alarm recurs. This avoids having to acknowledge multiple copies of the same message should you not wish, or be unable, to acknowledge a message at the time it appears. The alarm message window provides whichever of the following options are applicable to the displayed alarm: Acknowledge the alarm by clicking the Close button. This closes the window (after a prompt for confirmation, if you selected Confirm acknowledgement). Edit the alarm by clicking the Edit... button. This displays the alarm edit dialogue. Display options to defer the alarm until later by clicking the Defer... button. Then select Defer to date/time to enter the date and time when the message is to be redisplayed, or select Defer for time interval to enter how long after now (in hours and minutes) the message should be redisplayed. Then click Defer to defer the alarm message and close its window. The time the alarm is deferred to must be earlier than its next scheduled occurrence or next reminder. For this reason, the Defer... button in the alarm message window and the OK button in the deferral dialogue are disabled one minute before the next occurrence or reminder. The Defer... button is not available for alarms which are displayed at login due to the Repeat at login option having been selected. Stop playing the alarm's sound file by clicking the button showing the stop playing symbol. If the alarm message was created by dragging an email from &kmail;, you can directly access the email in &kmail; by clicking the button showing the &kmail; icon. This will select and highlight the email in &kmail;'s folder list. If &kmail;'s indexes are regenerated, the link to the email in &kmail; will be lost. The button showing the &kalarm; icon provides a convenient way to activate &kalarm;. The alarm message window may be displayed in two different modes, depending on your preferences. You can choose the mode in the Preferences dialogue. As a normal window. In this mode, the keyboard focus is taken by the alarm message window when it appears, so if you are typing at the time your keystrokes will be diverted to it rather than your original application. As a non-modal window. In this mode, the keyboard focus is unaffected when the alarm message window appears, so it will not interfere with your typing. However in this mode the window has no titlebar or frame, so you cannot move it or resize it. System tray operation &kalarm; may be run as an icon in the system tray. This icon allows one-click activation of &kalarm;, and provides both control and status indication of alarm monitoring. A normal &kalarm; icon indicates that alarms are being monitored, while a grey icon indicates that alarms are not being monitored. If you hover the mouse cursor over the system tray icon, a summary of the first few message alarms due in the next 24 hours are displayed as a tooltip. You can switch this feature off, or configure the number of alarms to display and their format, in the Preferences dialogue. Left click on the system tray icon to toggle between displaying and hiding the &kalarm; main window. Right click on the system tray icon to display its context menu: Enable Alarms Enables monitoring of alarms. This option only appears if alarms are currently disabled. See Enabling and disabling alarms for details. Disable Alarms Disables monitoring of alarms. This option only appears if alarms are currently enabled. See Enabling and disabling alarms for details. New Alarm... Opens the alarm edit dialogue to create a new alarm. New Alarm From Template Displays the list of alarm templates in a menu. When you select one, the alarm edit dialogue is opened, preset with that template's details. Configure &kalarm;... Displays the &kalarm; preferences dialogue. The preferences dialogue is described in Configuring &kalarm;. It includes options relating to the &kalarm; system tray icon. Restore / Minimise Restores or minimises the main &kalarm; window. This option is only available if the run mode is continuous. (See Configuring &kalarm; for a description of run modes.) Quit Closes the &kalarm; system tray icon. In continuous run mode only, it also closes all &kalarm; main windows. It has no effect on the monitoring of alarms by the alarm daemon, if you have deselected Disable alarms while not running in the Preferences dialogue. Displaying &kalarm; in the system tray You must be running the &kde; desktop or another suitable window manager in order to display &kalarm; in the system tray. If &kalarm; is running in continuous mode, the system tray icon is always displayed. These instructions apply only to on-demand mode. (See Configuring &kalarm; for a description of run modes.) To display &kalarm; in the system tray, select ViewShow in System Tray . To remove &kalarm; from the system tray, do one of the following: Select View Hide from System Tray. Right click on the system tray icon and choose Quit from the context menu. Refreshing alarms If in the unlikely event that any alarm was not triggered when it should have been, you can refresh the alarm list and trigger any missed alarms by selecting ActionsRefresh Alarms . &kalarm; retriggers missed alarms by resetting the alarm daemon, which is discussed in the Alarm daemon section. Enabling and disabling alarms Alarms may be enabled and disabled either as a whole or individually: Alarm monitoring applies to alarms as a whole. When alarm monitoring is disabled, the alarm daemon ceases to check alarms and therefore no alarms will trigger at all. When alarm monitoring is enabled (the normal situation), all alarms which are not individually disabled will trigger at the appropriate times. Alarms may be individually enabled and disabled, independently of the alarm monitoring status. So the enabled/disabled status of individual alarms will be unchanged by disabling and then re-enabling alarm monitoring. Unlike alarm monitoring which could potentially be disabled due to &kalarm; not running or the alarm daemon not functioning, individual alarms can only be disabled if you use menu commands to do so. An alarm's individual enabled/disabled status is indicated by its colour in the alarm list (the colour being configurable in the Font & Colour tab of the Preferences dialogue). For an alarm to trigger, it must be individually enabled as well as alarm monitoring being enabled. Enabling alarm monitoring If &kalarm;'s run mode is continuous and you have selected Disable alarms while not running in the Preferences dialogue, you must first ensure that &kalarm; is running in order for alarm monitoring to take place. Then if alarm monitoring is currently disabled, do one of the following to enable alarms: Select Actions Enable Alarms. Right click on the system tray icon and choose Enable Alarms from the context menu. The alarm daemon is started if necessary and alarms will be monitored for when they become due. Disabling alarm monitoring There are several ways to disable alarm monitoring, which prevents &kalarm; from displaying any further alarms either until you re-enable alarms, or – assuming that the alarm daemon is configured to start at login – until the next time you log in. To disable alarms without stopping the alarm daemon, do one of the following: Select Actions Disable Alarms. Right click on the system tray icon and choose Disable Alarms from the context menu. If &kalarm;'s run mode is continuous and you have selected Disable alarms while not running in the Preferences dialogue, quit &kalarm;. To disable alarms by stopping the alarm daemon: Select Settings Control Alarm Daemon.... This displays the Service Manager dialogue which enables you to stop the alarm daemon. Enabling and disabling individual alarms To enable individual alarms which are currently disabled, do one of the following: Select one or more alarms by clicking on their entries in the alarm list. Then choose ActionsEnable . Right click on the desired entries in the alarm list and choose Enable from the context menu. To disable individual alarms which are currently enabled, do one of the following: Select one or more alarms by clicking on their entries in the alarm list. Then choose ActionsDisable . Right click on the desired entries in the alarm list and choose Disable from the context menu. Quitting the program Quit &kalarm; by closing all its windows and the system tray icon, or if it is running in continuous mode, by closing any message windows and selecting FileQuit, or Quit in the system tray icon context menu. The effect of File Quit or of the system tray icon context menu item Quit depends on the run mode: in on-demand mode it hides the system tray icon, while in continuous mode it quits the program. If you have deselected Disable alarms while not running in the Preferences dialogue, quitting &kalarm; has no effect on the alarm daemon which if already active will continue to monitor scheduled alarms and request their display when they become due. Configuring &kalarm; To configure &kalarm;'s operation to suit your system and your personal preferences, select Settings Configure &kalarm;.... This displays the configuration dialogue. General The General section lets you control &kalarm;'s overall behaviour: Run Mode group box: These options control &kalarm;'s system tray icon, and also allow some control over &kalarm;'s use of system resources by specifying whether or not to run it continuously. If system performance is of concern, running it on demand without displaying the system tray icon may be desirable; running it continuously in the system tray uses more system resources but gives the benefits of displaying an alarm-enabled indication and making the application more accessible. Running &kalarm; on demand does not affect the execution of alarms, since it is the alarm daemon and not &kalarm; which monitors the alarm list and triggers alarms. Run only on demand: &kalarm; is run only when an alarm is triggered, if you run it manually, or while its system tray icon is displayed. In this mode the system tray icon can still be displayed, but closing the system tray icon has no effect on any &kalarm; windows. Run continuously in system tray: &kalarm; runs continuously and the system tray icon is always displayed while it is running. In this mode, closing the system tray icon closes all &kalarm; main windows, and if no message windows are visible, quits the application. The options available in this mode are: Disable alarms while not running: Selecting this option has the effect that alarms will be disabled whenever &kalarm;'s system tray icon is not visible. Warn before quitting: When alarms are disabled while &kalarm; is not running, selecting this option prompts you for confirmation if you attempt to terminate &kalarm; using the system tray icon's Quit option. This prevents accidental disabling of alarms. For safety, this option is automatically re-enabled by default whenever you change run mode. Autostart at login: In continuous mode, this starts &kalarm; at &kde; session login, ensuring that &kalarm; runs at all times unless you manually quit. Autostart system tray icon at login: In on-demand mode, this displays &kalarm;'s system tray icon at login. &kalarm; will run until the system tray icon is closed. Start alarm monitoring at login: This starts alarm monitoring at KDE session login, by starting the alarm daemon. Note that in order for alarms to be activated, you also need to select appropriate options in the Run Mode group box. This option should always be ticked unless you intend to discontinue use of &kalarm;. This option is automatically reselected whenever &kalarm; is run. So if you have unticked this option and want to continue to prevent the alarm daemon from running at login, you need to untick this option again each time you run &kalarm;. Start of day for date-only alarms: Set the start-of-day time for the purposes of triggering date-only alarms, &ie; ones for which the Any time option was selected. On the date when they are due, such alarms will be output at the earliest opportunity during the 24 hours starting from the start-of-day time. If you set up yearly recurrences for February 29th, specify how these are to be handled in non-leap years by selecting one of the following options: February 28th: the alarm will occur on February 29th in leap years, and on February 28th in non-leap years. March 1st: the alarm will occur on February 29th in leap years, and on March 1st in non-leap years. Do not repeat: the alarm will occur on February 29th in leap years, but will be suppressed in non-leap years. Changing this option will not cause the next scheduled recurrence of any existing alarms to be re-evaluated. It will only affect new alarms, or existing alarms after they are next triggered. Confirm alarm deletions: Specify whether you should be prompted for confirmation each time you delete an alarm. Expired Alarms group box: These options control the storage of expired alarms. Keep alarms after expiry: Select this option to store expired and deleted alarms. Deselect it to keep no record of alarms once they cease to be active. Note that deleted alarms are only stored if they have previously been triggered. If you delete an alarm before it ever triggers, it is discarded. Discard expired alarms after: Set the number of days to store expired and deleted alarms, after which they are permanently deleted. Clear expired alarms: This button discards all currently stored expired alarms. This has no effect on alarms which subsequently expire; they will continue to be stored according to the selected options. Terminal for Command Alarms: Here, you can select which type of terminal window should be used for command alarms which are executed in a terminal window. Some of the most common terminal window applications are preconfigured, ⪚ xterm, &konsole;, although only those which are installed on your system will be shown here. You can view the actual command options used for each application by displaying the context help for its radio button. If you want to use another application, or want to use one of those listed but with different command options, select Other and enter the command to invoke the terminal window. By default, the alarm's command string will be appended to what you specify. Alternatively, you may specify where the alarm's command string should be inserted, by use of the following codes: %c The alarm's command string will be substituted. %w The alarm's command string will be substituted, with a sleep appended. %C A temporary command file containing the alarm's command string will be created, and the command to execute the file will be substituted. %W A temporary command file containing the alarm's command string will be created with a sleep appended, and the command to execute the file will be substituted. When the command alarm is triggered, its command string will be quoted before being inserted into the terminal window command. Email The Email section lets you choose options for sending and addressing email alarms: Email client: Specify the email client to be used to send email alarms: KMail: When an email alarm is triggered, the email is sent using &kmail; (which is started first if necessary) as follows: If &kmail; is version 1.7 or later, the email is sent automatically. If &kmail; is an older version, the email is added to &kmail;'s outbox folder for later transmission. Sendmail: When an email alarm is triggered, the email is sent automatically using sendmail. This option will only work if your system is configured to use sendmail, or a sendmail compatible mail transport agent such as postfix or qmail. Copy sent emails into &kmail;'s sent-items folder: Select this option if, every time an email alarm is triggered, you want a copy of the transmitted email to be stored in &kmail;'s sent-items folder. This option is not available when &kmail; is selected as the email client, since &kmail; automatically does this. Select your email address to be used as the sender's address in email alarms: Select From to enter an email address. Select Use address from Control Centre to use the email address which is configured in the &kde; Control Centre. Select Use &kmail; identities to be able to choose at the time you configure an email alarm which of &kmail;'s email identities to use. &kmail;'s default identity will be used for alarms which were already configured before you selected this option. Select your email address to be used for sending blind copies of email alarms to yourself when the Copy email to self option is selected: Select Bcc to enter an email address. If blind copies are to be sent to your account on the computer which &kalarm; runs on, you could simply enter your user login name here. Select Use address from Control Centre to use the email address which is configured in the &kde; Control Centre. Notify when remote emails are queued: Select this option to display a notification whenever an email alarm queues an email for sending to a remote system. This may be useful if, for example, you have a dial-up connection, or email is queued in &kmail;'s outbox folder, so that you can ensure that you do whatever is needed to actually transmit the email. View The View section lets you control some aspects of &kalarm;'s appearance: System Tray Tooltip group box: These options control what information is shown in the tooltip which appears when the mouse cursor hovers over &kalarm;'s system tray icon. Show next 24 hours' alarms: When selected, a summary of the first few alarms due in the next 24 hours is displayed. Maximum number of alarms to show: Deselect this option to display all of the next 24 hours' alarms. Select it to set the maximum number of alarms which will be displayed. Show alarm time: Select this option to show the time at which each alarm is scheduled. Show time until alarm: Select this option to show the length of time remaining before each alarm's next scheduled occurrence. The length of time is shown in hours and minutes. Prefix: Specify a symbol or text to show in front of the length of time until the alarm, to distinguish it from the time at which the alarm is scheduled. Message windows have a title bar and take keyboard focus: This option controls whether alarm message windows are modal or not, &ie; whether they grab the keyboard focus when they appear. See the Alarm message window section for details. System tray icon update interval: Set the frequency at which the &kalarm; system tray icon is updated to reflect whether alarms are currently being monitored. This involves checking whether the alarm daemon is running. Font & Colour The Font & Colour section lets you set the default appearance of alarm messages, and the colours to be used in the alarm list: Select the default font and background colour to use for alarm message display. Edit the colour selection list which is displayed when you click on the background colour combo box: Add colour...: Displays a colour selection dialogue which lets you choose a colour to add to the list. Remove colour: Removes the colour currently displayed in the Background colour combo box from the list. The Custom colour item cannot be removed from the list, and when it is displayed, this button is disabled. Select the colour to be used in the alarm list to show disabled alarms. Select the colour to be used in the alarm list to show expired alarms. Edit The Edit section lets you choose default values for the options in the alarm edit dialogue: For display alarms: Set the default states for the Cancel if late, Auto-close window after this time and Confirm acknowledgement tickboxes. Set the default reminder period units. Set the default special display alarm actions. Set the default sound options. Note that a default sound file may be specified even if the sound type is not set to Sound file. For command alarms: Set the default states for the Enter a script and Execute in terminal window tickboxes. For email alarms: Set the default state for the Copy email to self tickbox. For all alarm types: Set the default recurrence type. Command line operation When command line parameters are supplied, &kalarm; does not display the list of scheduled alarms as described in Using &kalarm; above. Command line options specific to &kalarm; may be used to perform the following operations: schedule a new alarm control the alarm daemon control &kalarm;'s display mode obtain help Additional command line options are provided primarily to enable other programs to interface to &kalarm;. They are described in the chapter Developer's Guide to &kalarm;. The command line must only contain options applicable to one &kalarm; operation. If you want to perform multiple operations, you must invoke &kalarm; multiple times with a single set of options each time. Schedule a new alarm The following options are used to schedule a new alarm: Option Description , Prompt for confirmation when the alarm message is acknowledged. , Specify the path or &URL; of a file which is to be attached to the email. This option may be repeated as necessary. must be specified with this option. Automatically close the alarm window after the expiry of the period. must be specified with this option. , Make an audible beep when the message is displayed. , and cannot be specified with this option. Blind copy the email to yourself. must be specified with this option. , , Set the message background colour to the specified &Qt; colour name or hex code 0xRRGGBB. , , Set the message foreground colour to the specified &Qt; colour name or hex code 0xRRGGBB. , Disable the alarm. It will not trigger until it has been manually enabled. , Specify a shell command to execute. If specified, this option must be the last &kalarm; option in &kalarm;'s command line. All subsequent command parameters and options are interpreted as forming the command line to execute. and cannot be specified with this option. , , and are ignored with this option. , Specify the path or &URL; of a text or image file whose contents are to form the alarm message. and cannot be specified, and message must not be present with this option. , Use the specified &kmail; identity as the sender of the email. must be specified with this option. , Set the interval between repetitions of the alarm. Hours/minutes are specified in the format nHnM, where n is a number, ⪚ 3H30M. Other time periods are specified in the format nX, where n is a number and X is one of the following letters: Y (years), M (months), W (weeks), D (days). If is also specified, Y (years) and M (months) are not allowed. Mandatory if or is specified. , Show the alarm as an event in &korganizer;'s active calendar. , Cancel the alarm if it cannot be triggered within the specified period after the correct time. The period period is specified in the same format as described for . The default value of period is 1 minute. , Trigger the alarm every time you log in. , and cannot be specified with this option. , Send an email to the specified address. This option may be repeated as necessary. and cannot be specified with this option. , , and are ignored with this option. , Specify the path or &URL; of an audio file to be played once when the alarm message is displayed. , and cannot be specified with this option. , Specify the path or &URL; of an audio file to be played repeatedly for as long as the alarm message is displayed. , and cannot be specified with this option. Set the alarm to recur. Specify the recurrence using iCalendar syntax (defined in RFC2445), ⪚ FREQ=MONTHLY;COUNT=4;INTERVAL=3;BYDAY=-1MO. cannot be specified with this option. , Set the number of times the alarm should be triggered, or if a recurrence is specified with , the number of times the alarm should be triggered each time activates it (&ie; a repetition within a recurrence). If is not present, specify -1 to repeat the alarm indefinitely. must be, and cannot be, specified with this option. , Output a reminder alarm the specified length of time before the main alarm and each of its recurrences (if any). Hours/minutes are specified in the format nHnM, where n is a number, ⪚ 3H30M. Other time periods are specified in the format nX, where n is a number and X is one of the following letters: W (weeks), D (days). This option cannot be specified with , or . Output a reminder alarm once, the specified length of time before the first recurrence of the alarm. No reminder will be displayed before subsequent recurrences (if any). This option cannot be specified with , or . , Speak the message when it is displayed. This option requires KTTSD to be installed and configured, together with a compatible speech synthesiser. , and cannot be specified with this option. , The subject line of the email. must be specified with this option. , Trigger alarm on the date or at the date/time specified. Specify a date without a time in the format yyyy-mm-dd; specify a date and time by [[[yyyy-]mm-]dd-]hh:mm (where omitted, date fields default to the values for today). , Set the audio volume for playing the audio file. This option can only be used when or is specified. , Repeat the alarm until the date or date/time specified. Specify a date without a time in the same format as for . must be, and and cannot be, specified with this option. message Message text to display or, if is specified, the body of the email message. Either a message text, or must be specified; except as noted above, all the options are optional. Two alternative examples which display a multi-line message with a red background at 10 p.m. on the 27th of this month are: % kalarm % kalarm Other options The following options are used to reset or halt the alarm daemon, to display the alarm edit dialogue, or to control &kalarm;'s display mode. See the Alarm daemon section for a discussion about resetting and stopping the alarm daemon. Option Description Display the alarm edit dialogue to edit the alarm with the specified event ID. , Display the alarm edit dialogue, in order to edit a new alarm. Display the alarm edit dialogue, preset with the alarm template of the specified name, in order to edit a new alarm. Reset the alarm daemon. Stop the alarm daemon. Display &kalarm; as an icon in the system tray. For example, to reset the alarm daemon: % kalarm Help options The following help options are common to all &kde; programs: Option Description Shows a brief options help text. Shows numerous generic &Qt;-specific options. Shows numerous generic &kde;-specific options. Shows all options. Shows the names and email addresses of &kalarm; authors. , Shows the running versions of the &Qt; library , &kde; and &kalarm;. Show licence information. Alarm daemon The alarm daemon, &kalarmd;, monitors &kalarm;'s calendar file for alarms becoming due. When it determines that an alarm is due, it tells &kalarm; to display or execute it, or to cancel it if it is late and late trigger was not selected for that alarm. The alarm daemon runs in the background, with no user interface. It may be controlled as described below. Starting, resetting and stopping the <application>alarm daemon</application> The alarm daemon is normally started at &kde; session login (unless you disable auto start in the Preferences dialogue and then cease to use &kalarm;), and runs continuously until logout. If for any reason it is not running, alarm monitoring will not occur and &kalarm; will not display or execute any alarms. Starting the <application>alarm daemon</application> To start the alarm daemon, you can either run &kalarm; in its default graphical mode (&ie; without any command line parameters other than ), enable alarms using &kalarm;'s system tray icon menu, reset the daemon as described below, or you can run the alarm daemon directly from the command line: % kalarmd Resetting the <application>alarm daemon</application> It is also possible to reset the alarm daemon without stopping it. Resetting causes the alarm daemon to re-read the list of scheduled messages from the calendar file and re-initialise its &kalarm;-related data. Why might you want to reset the alarm daemon? It isn't a very likely occurrence, but if for any reason &kalarm; was not able to run when the alarm daemon told it to trigger an alarm, that alarm will never be displayed or executed until the alarm daemon is either reset or restarted. Resetting starts the alarm daemon if it is not currently running. To reset the alarm daemon, either use the menu command ActionsRefresh Alarms or type the following command: % kalarm Stopping the <application>alarm daemon</application> Stopping the alarm daemon will prevent any further monitoring of scheduled alarm messages until the daemon is restarted. To stop the alarm daemon, type the following command: % kalarm Developer's Guide to &kalarm; &kalarm; provides an interface to allow other applications to request the following functions: schedule a new alarm trigger or cancel an already scheduled alarm cancel an already scheduled alarm trigger an already scheduled alarm display the alarm edit dialogue Each of the above functions is implemented both by a &DCOP; call and by the command line. &DCOP; calls should be used in preference if &kalarm; is already running. &DCOP; interface The DCOP calls described in this document are all implemented in &kalarm;'s request DCOP object. The interface is defined in the file kalarmiface.h. In &kalarm; version 1.2, the DCOP interface was completely revised to allow easier calling of functions, and to conform better to the standard &kde; DCOP configuration. The old DCOP interface is currently still usable for compatibility purposes, but will be removed at some future date. cancelEvent cancelEvent cancel an already scheduled alarm. void cancelEvent(const TQString& calendarFile, const TQString& eventID) Parameters calendarFile Specifies the &URL; (not path) of the calendar file containing the event to be cancelled. eventID Specifies the unique ID of the event to be cancelled, as stored in calendarFile. Description cancelEvent() is a &DCOP; call to cancel the specified alarm. &kalarm; deletes the alarm from the calendar file without displaying or executing it. The calendarFile parameter is only used for integrity checking: if the &URL; does not specify &kalarm;'s current default calendar file, the request will be ignored. triggerEvent triggerEvent trigger an already scheduled alarm. void triggerEvent(const TQString& calendarFile, const TQString& eventID) Parameters calendarFile Specifies the &URL; (not path) of the calendar file containing the event to be triggered. eventID Specifies the unique ID of the event to be triggered, as stored in calendarFile. Description triggerEvent() is a &DCOP; call to trigger the immediate display or execution of the specified alarm (regardless of what time it is scheduled for). &kalarm; retrieves the alarm from the calendar file and then displays or executes it. If the alarm is already due, &kalarm; then deletes all scheduled occurrences of the alarm up to the current time, and if no repetitions of the alarm still remain, the alarm is deleted from the calendar file. If the alarm is not due yet, its scheduled occurrences are left unchanged. The calendarFile parameter is only used for integrity checking: if the &URL; does not specify &kalarm;'s current default calendar file, the request will be ignored. handleEvent handleEvent trigger or cancel an already scheduled alarm. void handleEvent(const TQString& calendarFile, const TQString& eventID) Parameters calendarFile Specifies the &URL; (not path) of the calendar file containing the event to be displayed/executed or cancelled. eventID Specifies the unique ID of the event to be displayed/executed or cancelled, as stored in calendarFile. Description handleEvent() is a &DCOP; call to display/execute or cancel the specified alarm. &kalarm; retrieves the alarm from the calendar file and then determines what action to take depending on when the alarm is due. If the alarm is not yet due, nothing happens. If the alarm is due, it acts as follows. If a late-cancel value is set and the alarm is too late, &ie; the scheduled trigger time was longer than late-cancel minutes ago, &kalarm; does not display or execute the alarm; otherwise, &kalarm; displays or executes the alarm. If no repetitions of the alarm are still scheduled, &kalarm; then deletes the alarm from the calendar file. The calendarFile parameter is only used for integrity checking: if the &URL; does not specify &kalarm;'s current default calendar file, the request will be ignored. scheduleMessage scheduleMessage schedule a new alarm message. bool scheduleMessage(const TQString& message, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, const TQString& bgColour, const TQString& fgColour, const TQString& font, const KURL& audioURL, int reminder, const TQString& recurrence, int subRepeatInterval, int subRepeatCount) bool scheduleMessage(const TQString& message, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, const TQString& bgColour, const TQString& fgColour, const TQString& font, const KURL& audioURL, int reminder, int recurType, int recurInterval, int recurCount) bool scheduleMessage(const TQString& message, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, const TQString& bgColour, const TQString& fgColour, const TQString& font, const KURL& audioURL, int reminder, int recurType, int recurInterval, const TQString& endDateTime) Parameters message Specifies the text of the message to be scheduled. dateTime Specifies the scheduled date, or date and time, at which the message should be displayed. For a date-only alarm, the string should be in the format YYYY-MM-DD (as returned by QDate::toString(TQt::ISODate)). For an alarm with a date and time, the string should be in the format YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM[:SS] (as returned by QDateTime::toString(TQt::ISODate)) or HH:MM[:SS] (as returned by QTime::toString(TQt::ISODate)). If no date is specified, today's date is used. Note that any seconds value is ignored. lateCancel Causes the alarm to be cancelled if it cannot be triggered within the specified number of minutes after the alarm's scheduled time. If the value is 0, the alarm will not be cancelled no matter how late it is triggered. flags Specifies the logical OR of the desired alarm flags. The flag bits are those defined in class KAlarmIface in kalarmiface.h. Note that not all flag bits are applicable to message alarms. bgColour Specifies the background colour for displaying the message. The string may be in the format #RRGGBB (as returned by TQColor::name()) where RR, GG and BB are two-digit hexadecimal values for red, green and blue. Alternatively the string may be in any of the other formats accepted by TQColor::setNamedColour(), such as a name from the X colour database (⪚ red or steelblue). Set the string to null to specify the current default background colour. fgColour Specifies the foreground colour for displaying the message. The format of the string is the same as for bgColour, or alternatively set the string to null to specify the current default foreground colour. font Specifies the font for displaying the message. The format of the string is that output by QFont::toString(). Set the string to null to use the default message font current at the time the message is displayed. audioURL Specifies the audio file which is to be played when the message is displayed. Set the value to null if no audio file is to be played. reminder Specifies the number of minutes in advance of the main alarm and of each of its recurrences (if any) at which a reminder alarm should be displayed. Specify 0 if no reminder is required. recurrence Specifies a regular recurrence for the alarm, using iCalendar syntax as defined in RFC2445. For example, FREQ=MONTHLY;COUNT=4;INTERVAL=3;BYDAY=-1MO would specify 4 repetitions at 3-monthly intervals on the last Monday of the month. For a non-recurring alarm, specify an empty string. recurType Specifies the recurrence type for the alarm. The permissible values are MINUTELY, DAILY, WEEKLY, MONTHLY, YEARLY. These are defined in class KAlarmIface in kalarmiface.h. Monthly recurrences are of the day of the month type, and yearly recurrences are of the date in the year type, with the date in both cases taken from the dateTime parameter. recurInterval Specifies the number of periods (minutes/days/weeks/months/years as specified by recurType) between recurrences of the alarm. recurCount Specifies the number of times that the alarm should be repeated. Specify -1 to repeat the alarm indefinitely. endDateTime Specifies the end date, or date and time, for recurrences of the alarm. If dateTime includes a time, this parameter must also include a time; if dateTime contains only a date, this parameter must also contain only a date. subRepeatInterval Specifies the number of minutes between sub-repetitions of the alarm. Specify 0 for no sub-repetition. Ignored if no recurrence is specified. subRepeatCount Specifies the number of sub-repetitions of the alarm, including the initial occurrence. Description scheduleMessage() is a &DCOP; call to schedule the specified alarm message for display at the specified date and time. It has three forms. The most general form allows an arbitrary recurrence to be specified – use this also for non-repeating alarms. The other forms provide convenient access to a restricted set of alarm recurrence types, one specifying a repetition count and the other an end time. If the scheduled time (including any repetitions) has already passed, &kalarm; immediately displays the message (unless the lateCancel value indicates that it is now too late to display the alarm, in which case &kalarm; ignores the request). If the scheduled time (or a repetition) is in the future, &kalarm; adds the alarm message to the calendar file for later display. scheduleFile scheduleFile schedule a new alarm which displays the contents of a text or image file. bool scheduleFile(const KURL& URL, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, const TQString& bgColour, const KURL& audioURL, int reminder, const TQString& recurrence, int subRepeatInterval, int subRepeatCount) bool scheduleFile(const KURL& URL, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, const TQString& bgColour, const KURL& audioURL, int reminder, int recurType, int recurInterval, int recurCount) bool scheduleFile(const KURL& URL, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, const TQString& bgColour, const KURL& audioURL, int reminder, int recurType, int recurInterval, const TQString& endDateTime) Parameters URL Specifies the text or image file whose contents are to be displayed in the message to be scheduled. dateTime Specifies the scheduled date, or date and time, at which the file should be displayed. For a date-only alarm, the string should be in the format YYYY-MM-DD (as returned by QDate::toString(TQt::ISODate)). For an alarm with a date and time, the string should be in the format YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM[:SS] (as returned by QDateTime::toString(TQt::ISODate)) or HH:MM[:SS] (as returned by QTime::toString(TQt::ISODate)). If no date is specified, today's date is used. Note that any seconds value is ignored. lateCancel Causes the alarm to be cancelled if it cannot be triggered within the specified number of minutes after the alarm's scheduled time. If the value is 0, the alarm will not be cancelled no matter how late it is triggered. flags Specifies the logical OR of the desired alarm flags. The flag bits are those defined in class KAlarmIface in kalarmiface.h. Note that not all flag bits are applicable to file alarms. bgColour Specifies the background colour for displaying the file. The string may be in the format #RRGGBB (as returned by TQColor::name()) where RR, GG and BB are two-digit hexadecimal values for red, green and blue. Alternatively the string may be in any of the other formats accepted by TQColor::setNamedColour(), such as a name from the X colour database (⪚ red or steelblue). Set the string to null to specify the current default background colour. audioURL Specifies the audio file which is to be played when the message is displayed. Set the value to null if no audio file is to be played. reminder Specifies the number of minutes in advance of the main alarm and of each of its recurrences (if any) at which a reminder alarm should be displayed. Specify 0 if no reminder is required. recurrence Specifies a regular recurrence for the alarm, using iCalendar syntax as defined in RFC2445. For example, FREQ=MONTHLY;COUNT=4;INTERVAL=3;BYDAY=-1MO would specify 4 repetitions at 3-monthly intervals on the last Monday of the month. For a non-recurring alarm, specify an empty string. recurType Specifies the recurrence type for the alarm. The permissible values are MINUTELY, DAILY, WEEKLY, MONTHLY, YEARLY. These are defined in class KAlarmIface in kalarmiface.h. Monthly recurrences are of the day of the month type, and yearly recurrences are of the date in the year type, with the date in both cases taken from the dateTime parameter. recurInterval Specifies the number of periods (minutes/days/weeks/months/years as specified by recurType) between recurrences of the alarm. recurCount Specifies the number of times that the alarm should be repeated. Specify -1 to repeat the alarm indefinitely. endDateTime Specifies the end date, or date and time, for recurrences of the alarm. If dateTime includes a time, this parameter must also include a time; if dateTime contains only a date, this parameter must also contain only a date. subRepeatInterval Specifies the number of minutes between sub-repetitions of the alarm. Specify 0 for no sub-repetition. Ignored if no recurrence is specified. subRepeatCount Specifies the number of sub-repetitions of the alarm, including the initial occurrence. Description scheduleFile() is a &DCOP; call to schedule the specified text or image file for display at the specified date and time. Apart from specifying a file path or &URL; and omitting the foreground colour and font, its usage is identical to scheduleMessage - see the description of that function for further details. scheduleCommand scheduleCommand schedule a new alarm which executes a shell command. bool scheduleCommand(const TQString& commandLine, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, const TQString& recurrence, int subRepeatInterval, int subRepeatCount) bool scheduleCommand(const TQString& commandLine, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, int recurType, int recurInterval, int recurCount) bool scheduleCommand(const TQString& commandLine, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, int recurType, int recurInterval, const TQString& endDateTime) Parameters commandLine Specifies the command whose execution is to be scheduled. The flags parameter indicates whether this parameter contains a shell command line or a command script. dateTime Specifies the scheduled date, or date and time, at which the command should be executed. For a date-only alarm, the string should be in the format YYYY-MM-DD (as returned by QDate::toString(TQt::ISODate)). For an alarm with a date and time, the string should be in the format YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM[:SS] (as returned by QDateTime::toString(TQt::ISODate)) or HH:MM[:SS] (as returned by QTime::toString(TQt::ISODate)). If no date is specified, today's date is used. Note that any seconds value is ignored. lateCancel Causes the alarm to be cancelled if it cannot be triggered within the specified number of minutes after the alarm's scheduled time. If the value is 0, the alarm will not be cancelled no matter how late it is triggered. flags Specifies the logical OR of the desired alarm flags. The flag bits are those defined in class KAlarmIface in kalarmiface.h. Note that not all flag bits are applicable to command alarms. recurrence Specifies a regular recurrence for the alarm, using iCalendar syntax as defined in RFC2445. For example, FREQ=MONTHLY;COUNT=4;INTERVAL=3;BYDAY=-1MO would specify 4 repetitions at 3-monthly intervals on the last Monday of the month. For a non-recurring alarm, specify an empty string. recurType Specifies the recurrence type for the alarm. The permissible values are MINUTELY, DAILY, WEEKLY, MONTHLY, YEARLY. These are defined in class KAlarmIface in kalarmiface.h. Monthly recurrences are of the day of the month type, and yearly recurrences are of the date in the year type, with the date in both cases taken from the dateTime parameter. recurInterval Specifies the number of periods (minutes/days/weeks/months/years as specified by recurType) between recurrences of the alarm. recurCount Specifies the number of times that the alarm should be repeated. Specify -1 to repeat the alarm indefinitely. endDateTime Specifies the end date, or date and time, for recurrences of the alarm. If dateTime includes a time, this parameter must also include a time; if dateTime contains only a date, this parameter must also contain only a date. subRepeatInterval Specifies the number of minutes between sub-repetitions of the alarm. Specify 0 for no sub-repetition. Ignored if no recurrence is specified. subRepeatCount Specifies the number of sub-repetitions of the alarm, including the initial occurrence. Description scheduleCommand() is a &DCOP; call to schedule the specified shell command line, or command script, for execution at the specified date and time. Apart from specifying a command and omitting the message colour, font and audio file parameters, its usage is identical to scheduleMessage - see the description of that function for further details. scheduleEmail scheduleEmail schedule a new alarm which sends an email. bool scheduleEmail(const TQString& fromID, const TQString& addresses, const TQString& subject, const TQString& message, const TQString& attachments, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, const TQString& recurrence, int subRepeatInterval, int subRepeatCount) bool scheduleEmail(const TQString& fromID, const TQString& addresses, const TQString& subject, const TQString& message, const TQString& attachments, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, int flags, int recurType, int recurInterval, int recurCount) bool scheduleEmail(const TQString& fromID, const TQString& addresses, const TQString& subject, const TQString& message, const TQString& attachments, const TQString& dateTime, int lateCancel, nt flags, int recurType, int recurInterval, const TQString& endTime) Parameters fromID The &kmail; identity to use as the sender of the email. If empty, the sender's email address will be that configured in &kalarm;'s Email preferences. addresses A comma separated list of recipients' email addresses. subject Specifies the subject line of the email. message Specifies the email message body. attachments A comma-separated list of paths or &URL;s of files to send as email attachments. dateTime Specifies the scheduled date, or date and time, at which the email should be sent. For a date-only alarm, the string should be in the format YYYY-MM-DD (as returned by QDate::toString(TQt::ISODate)). For an alarm with a date and time, the string should be in the format YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM[:SS] (as returned by QDateTime::toString(TQt::ISODate)) or HH:MM[:SS] (as returned by QTime::toString(TQt::ISODate)). If no date is specified, today's date is used. Note that any seconds value is ignored. lateCancel Causes the alarm to be cancelled if it cannot be triggered within the specified number of minutes after the alarm's scheduled time. If the value is 0, the alarm will not be cancelled no matter how late it is triggered. flags Specifies the logical OR of the desired alarm flags. The flag bits are those defined in class KAlarmIface in kalarmiface.h. Note that not all flag bits are applicable to email alarms. recurrence Specifies a regular recurrence for the alarm, using iCalendar syntax as defined in RFC2445. For example, FREQ=MONTHLY;COUNT=4;INTERVAL=3;BYDAY=-1MO would specify 4 repetitions at 3-monthly intervals on the last Monday of the month. For a non-recurring alarm, specify an empty string. recurType Specifies the recurrence type for the alarm. The permissible values are MINUTELY, DAILY, WEEKLY, MONTHLY, YEARLY. These are defined in class KAlarmIface in kalarmiface.h. Monthly recurrences are of the day of the month type, and yearly recurrences are of the date in the year type, with the date in both cases taken from the dateTime parameter. recurInterval Specifies the number of periods (minutes/days/weeks/months/years as specified by recurType) between recurrences of the alarm. recurCount Specifies the number of times that the alarm should be repeated. Specify -1 to repeat the alarm indefinitely. endDateTime Specifies the end date, or date and time, for recurrences of the alarm. If dateTime includes a time, this parameter must also include a time; if dateTime contains only a date, this parameter must also contain only a date. subRepeatInterval Specifies the number of minutes between sub-repetitions of the alarm. Specify 0 for no sub-repetition. Ignored if no recurrence is specified. subRepeatCount Specifies the number of sub-repetitions of the alarm, including the initial occurrence. Description scheduleEmail() is a &DCOP; call to schedule the specified email for sending at the specified date and time. Apart from specifying the email header and contents and omitting the message colour, font and audio file parameters, its usage is identical to scheduleMessage - see the description of that function for further details. edit edit Display the alarm edit dialogue to edit an alarm. bool edit(const TQString& eventID) Parameters eventID Specifies the unique ID of the event to be edited. Return value false if the specified alarm could not be found or is read-only, true otherwise. Description edit() is a &DCOP; call to display the alarm edit dialogue to edit the specified alarm. editNew editNew Display the alarm edit dialogue to edit a new alarm. bool editNew(const TQString& templateName) Parameters templateName Specifies the name of an alarm template to base the new alarm on, or empty if no template should be used. Return value false if templateName is non-empty but a template of that name cannot be found, true otherwise. Description editNew() is a &DCOP; call to display the alarm edit dialogue to edit a new alarm. If an alarm template name is specified as a parameter, the dialogue is preset with details from the template. If the specified template cannot be found, the alarm edit dialogue is still displayed but is (obviously) not preset with the template. Command line interface Command line options are provided to enable other programs (such as the alarm daemon) to start up &kalarm; if it is not already running, in order to trigger or cancel scheduled alarms, or schedule new alarms. The reason for using command line options for this purpose is that if &kalarm; were started without any command line parameters and then sent &DCOP; requests, it would start in its default graphical mode, which is clearly undesirable for an inter-program request. Programs should first check whether &kalarm; is already running; if it is, they should instead use &DCOP; calls to request these operations. The command line options for scheduling a new alarm are as described in the chapter Command line operation. The options for triggering and cancelling scheduled alarms are as follows: Normal users may also if they wish use these command line options (assuming that they can supply the necessary parameter information). Option Description Use the calendar file with the specified &URL;. This option is only used for integrity checking: if the &URL; doesn't specify &kalarm;'s current default calendar file, the request will be ignored. Cancel the alarm with the specified event ID. Trigger the alarm with the specified event ID. The action taken is the same as for the triggerEvent() &DCOP; call. Trigger or cancel the alarm with the specified event ID. &kalarm; determines which action to take in the same way as for the handleEvent() &DCOP; call. , and are mutually exclusive. is optional, but can only be used with one of the other three options. Examples are: % kalarm % kalarm Questions and Answers &reporting.bugs; &updating.documentation; What is the alarm daemon? The alarm daemon is an application which runs in the background, monitoring alarms and telling &kalarm; to trigger them when they become due. What configuration files does &kalarm; use? The file $TDEHOME/share/config/kalarmrc holds your &kalarm; preferences. The calendar file which stores your pending alarms is $TDEHOME/share/apps/kalarm/calendar.ics, unless a different calendar file is specified in the preferences file by a Calendar entry in the General section. The calendar file which stores your expired alarms is $TDEHOME/share/apps/kalarm/expired.ics, unless a different calendar file is specified in the preferences file by an ExpiredCalendar entry in the General section. The calendar file which stores your alarm templates is $TDEHOME/share/apps/kalarm/template.ics, unless a different calendar file is specified in the preferences file by a TemplateCalendar entry in the General section. Details of alarms currently being displayed are stored in the calendar file $TDEHOME/share/apps/kalarm/displaying.ics. What configuration files does the alarm daemon use? The file $TDEHOME/share/config/kalarmdrc holds your alarm daemon preferences, together with details of the &kalarm; client application. What format are alarms stored in? The calendar files in which &kalarm; stores its alarms are text files whose format is defined by the document RFC2445 - Internet Calendaring and Scheduling Core Object Specification (iCalendar). This is the standard format used by all tdepim applications. &kalarm; uses certain non-standard properties in the Alarm component, in conformance with RFC2445: X-TDE-KALARM-NEXTRECUR, X-TDE-KALARM-REPEAT, X-TDE-KALARM-TYPE, X-TDE-KALARM-NEXTREPEAT, X-TDE-KALARM-FONTCOLOUR, X-TDE-KALARM-VOLUME, X-TDE-KALARM-SPEAK, X-TDE-KALARM-EMAILID. What are the application names of &kalarm; and the alarm daemon? &kalarm;'s application name is kalarm, and the alarm daemon's application name is kalarmd. Credits and Licence &kalarm; Program copyright 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 David Jarvie &David.Jarvie.mail; Alarm daemon authors: Preston Brown pbrown@kde.org David Jarvie &David.Jarvie.mail; Cornelius Schumacher schumacher@kde.org Documentation copyright 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 David Jarvie &David.Jarvie.mail; &underFDL; &underGPL; Thanks go to the author of the &kde; 1 KAlarm application, Stefan Nikolaus stefan.nikolaus@stuco.uni-oldenburg.de, who kindly agreed to allow the name &kalarm; to be used by this &kde; 2 / &kde; 3 application. Installation How to obtain &kalarm; &install.intro.documentation; &kalarm; is available for &kde; 2 and as a standalone package for &kde;3 from http://www.astrojar.org.uk/kalarm Requirements &kalarm; requires the standard &kde; libraries to be installed (the tdelibs package). To compile from source, you also need the &Qt; and tdelibs development packages. The X11 development package, if present, is used to improve &kalarm;'s ability to function under &kde; without a system tray. The following optional packages enhance &kalarm; at runtime if they are installed: &kmix; (from tdemultimedia package): if installed, it allows &kalarm; to set the absolute sound volume when playing audio files. KTTSD (from tdeaccessibility package): if installed and configured, together with a compatible speech synthesiser package, it allows &kalarm; to speak alarm messages when they are displayed. &kalarm; uses about 12 Mb and the alarm daemon uses about 2.5 Mb of memory to run, but this may vary depending on your platform and configuration. You can find a list of changes in the ChangeLog file, or at http://www.astrojar.org.uk/kalarm. Compilation and installation If you cannot obtain a suitable precompiled binary package, you need to compile &kalarm; yourself from source files. Get the source package file tdepim-x.x.tar.bz2 or kalarm-x.x.tar.bz2 (or similar), depending on whether you want to install &package; or just &kalarm;. Unpack it in a new folder using a command similar to tar , and change to the folder which has been created. &install.compile.documentation; If you have more than one version of &kde; installed (e.g. &kde; 2 and &kde; 3), this may possibly install &kalarm; into the wrong &kde; folder. If necessary, you can give the &kde; folder as a parameter to ./configure . For example, if your &kde; is installed in /opt/kde2: ./configure --prefix=/opt/kde2 If you install &kalarm; into a folder different from where &kde; is installed, it will not run correctly unless you make its location known to &kde;. To do this, you must prefix the TDEDIRS environment variable with &kalarm;'s location, each time before you start &kde;. For example, if &kde; is installed in /opt/kde, TDEDIRS might normally be set to /etc/opt/kde:/opt/kde. If you install &kalarm; into /usr/local, you would need to set TDEDIRS to /usr/local:/etc/opt/kde:/opt/kde before starting &kde;. The standalone version of &kalarm; has a special configuration option which allows you to select which languages documentation is to be installed for by specifying a language code, or a list of language codes, as a parameter to ./configure. By default, documentation in all available languages is installed. A list of documentation languages included in the package, together with their codes, is in the DOC-LANGUAGES file. For example, to install only French and British English documentation: ./configure --enable-doc-language="fr en_GB" Note that this option has no effect on which user interface translations are installed. Configuration No special configuration is required to set up &kalarm; to run on the &kde; desktop. Once you have run &kalarm; for the first time, the alarm daemon will start every time you log in, in order to monitor scheduled alarms. To run &kalarm; on a non-&kde; desktop, the main requirement is to ensure that the alarm daemon is run automatically whenever you log in. More detailed instructions are contained in the INSTALL file which is distributed with &kalarm;. &documentation.index;