Easy management of your Google Apps email configuration.
At Stripe, we've long had many more Google Group mailing lists than employees. As the number of lists grew, so too did the complexity of managing your email setup: which lists were you on? Why are you receiving email for this list you're not subscribed to? How do you set up your filters to usually archive email to a list, but only if you're not present on the CC?
Gaps is the main tool we've used to help make these questions manageable. The core functionality is surprisingly simple: a single list of all your Google Groups in one place, which lets you view your subscriptions (including whether you're receiving mail from a list being subscribed to another list), and subscribe or unsubscribe by the click of a button.
More recently, we've also added filter generation and maintenance. Unfortunately Google's email settings API only allows you to create new filters, so it's up to the user to delete their old ones.
Create a site.yaml
with your local settings: cp site.yaml.sample site.yaml
. You'll need:
- A Google application. See instructions below, and then update
site.yaml
. - A running MongoDB instance. Gaps stores some soft state (cache of
what it gets out of the API), but also has some hard state (the
categorization of your groups, people's filter settings). Update
site.yaml
appropriately. - (At runtime) an admin account on your Google Apps domain.
- Make sure you have API access enabled for your Google Apps domain.
- Create a new project.
- Under the "APIs & auth" accordian for that project, select the "APIs" tab. Enable the Google+ API, Admin SDK, and Group Settings API.
- Under the same accordian, select the "Credentials" tab. Create a
new "Web application" Client ID. Add your desired redirect URI and
authorized origins. (In development that'll probably be
http://localhost:3500
andhttp://localhost:3500/oauth2callback
, respectively.) - Copy your client ID and client secret into your
site.yaml
file.
You can run Gaps directly or under Docker.
Run bundle install
to install your dependencies. Gaps should run on
Ruby 1.9 and up. Then execute bin/gaps_server.rb
(or
bin/dev-runner
if you want auto-reloading upon code changes).
Because there are a lot of settings, running under Docker requires a
configuration file. Clone this repository and execute
bin/docker-runner
to run the Docker image we've published with your
site.yaml
bind-mounted inside.
Gaps uses your domain admin's credentials to perform most actions (listing all groups, joining a group). So permissions are entrusted to Gaps's business logic rather than your Google settings directly.
Gaps currrently comes with two schemes to mark a list as private. Any private lists are currently completely omitted from Gaps: they'll be left out of the directory listing, their creation won't be emailed about, and users won't be able to join them.
The first is the Gaps-custom scheme, which grew out of Stripe's desire for a very lightweight private-group creation. It's probably a reasonable place to start if you are starting with very few private lists:
- Prefixing the name with
private-
. - Prefixing the name with the less-cumbersome but more-obscure
acl-
. - Adding a JSON tag as the last line of the group description with a
"display" setting as follows:
{"display": "none"}
The second is using the Google Groups Settings API. This checks that the group is set to be shown in the group directory, that anyone in the domain can join, and that anyone in the domain can view it.
Choose your privacy schemes using the Configatron keys under
permissions.privacy_settings
.
Patches welcome! There are many features that would be useful that Gaps doesn't yet support. For example:
- Managing your group settings: generally you probably want all of your lists to have a standard set of configuration (such as Public posting, etc). Gaps could ensure that all lists in your domain have the appropriate settings.
- Persisting your group categorization settings back to the Group (as part of its description tag).
- More flexible filter generation, or better story for clearing filters.
- Displaying your private lists.
- Fully AJAX-ify the UI. As you can tell, there's still a lot of low-hanging fruit on the UI.
- Amber Feng
- Andreas Fuchs
- Brian Krausz
- Carl Jackson
- Evan Broder
- Greg Brockman