NAME EWS::Calendar::Viewer - View Your MS Exchange Calendar as a Standalone Web App VERSION version 1.111980 SYNOPSIS I recommend you use something like App::BundleDeps to deploy this under a fastcgi server environment. Configure the application like so: privacy_level = limited start_of_week = 1 server = myserver.example.com username = oliver password = s3kr1t # or in EWS_PASS environment variable And then start the Catalyst application, perhaps using one of the bundled server scripts. CONFIGURATION privacy_level This can be set to "public" to show only your free/busy status, "limited" to show the title of the event as well, or "private" to show all details of the event in a tooltip. start_of_week Set this to a number from 0 to 6 representing Sunday through to Saturday respectively. EWS Client You'll need to set the server fully qualified domain name, and username for the calendar's account. The password can be set in the file using the "password" option or via the environment variable "EWS_PASS". If the Exchange server uses NTLM Negotiated Auth then also pass the following: use_negotiated_auth = 1 Obviously, this setting is in addition to the other "args" mentioned above. If you're unsure whether NTLM is required, try it without and if you get an "Error: Unauthorised" response then you probably need the setting. QUICK START SCRIPT This application brings with it a lightweight web server environment, so you can get up and running quickly. First, install the module and its dependencies. Then create a configuration file as in the "SYNOPSIS" section, above, and save it in your current directory as "ews_calendar_viewer_local.conf". Finally, run the "ews_calendar_viewer_server.pl" script. It listens on port 3000 by default but you can change that (see "--help"): $> EWS_PASS=s3kr1t ews_calendar_viewer_server.pl [info] EWS::Calendar::Viewer powered by Catalyst 5.80032 You can connect to your server at http://localhost:3000 AUTHOR Oliver Gorwits COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2011 by Oliver Gorwits. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.