> > Why did you not want it to use OAuth2? It works perfectly fine with > > Evolution and is Google's preferred method - in fact I would say > > that Evo is "correct" to insist that you use OAuth2, it is what you > > should be doing. > > I'd never heard of OAuth2 before and all it didn't was throw an error - > can't remember exactly what it said but I was in a rush and one of the > options in the authentication was password, so surely it should have > worked??
You need to setup your gmail account specifically to allow password login. Your older version of Evolution couldn't deal with OAuth2 and the advice then was to provision gmail accounts via Gnome-online- Accounts (aka GoA). Recent versions of Evolution know how to do it now. > > > > Are you using the same home filesystem for both versions? (If so, > > things are going to get problematic - the Evolution configuration > > store > > would have been upgraded to the 3.28 version and it isn't backward > > compatible.) > > Yeah that makes sense. I have Evo 3.28 in a flatpack now but I haven't > configured the accounts yet. I was going to export a backup from my old > version but it was taking too long so I thought I would see if I could > get it to use the same folders directories but haven't done that yet. > As has been said before, the Flatpack version of Evolution is sandboxed so it's not trivial to get it to see your home file store. 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