> > Andre thanks for the very good note > You can read and edit evolution's data by using evolution. > > Who can answer competently, complete and detailed these questions? >
I thought it was a complete and competent answer - he told you where to find out the file locations and how to read the files, as you asked. Wh at was wrong with it? > Now I need to know which files belong together. > * .local / * .config and dconf and the name of the directory > I WANT to make a backup from scratch File -> Backup Evolution Data > with this files/topics > notes, signatures, calendar, birthday, e-mail > > where ist the file stored = system-address-book > where ist the file stored = system-calendar It's easy enough to find given that you have been told where to find out the data locations > > I must compare the files in a shell Editor > cause there are two partitions on a PC Some of the files will not be text files - so I don't know how a "shell Editor" will help. > Therefore, the second partition is newly installed > that everything is original. > > I learned how I can edit the HOME/.config/dconf. > With alt + f2 + dconf-Editor. > > Dconf-editor > org \ gnome \ evolution > default-address-book = system-address-book > default-calendar = system-calendar The bottom line is that you should not be messing around with Evolution's internal data files - especially, as seems the case, you don't really know what you are doing. You *will* break something. P. _______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list evolution-list@gnome.org To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list