/org-gcal.el

Org sync with Google Calendar. (active maintained project as of 2019-11-06)

Primary LanguageEmacs Lisp

Org-Gcal https://melpa.org/packages/org-gcal-badge.svg https://github.com/kidd/org-gcal.el/actions/workflows/main.yml/badge.svg

org-gcal offers

  • Fetch google calendar event
  • Post/edit org element
  • Sync between Org and Gcal

Data will be UTF-8 encoded for sync.

Getting Started

Follow the instructions at Installation, and then run org-gcal-fetch to download Google Calendar events into your Org-mode files using the Google Calendar API. Run org-gcal-fetch to retrieve new events and update events already retrieved, and run org-gcal-post-at-point on an Org-mode headline corresponding to a downloaded event to push updates to the events on the Google Calendar API server.

First time setup: on the initial run, in order to obtain the initial OAuth authorization, org-gcal will open a link in the browser to obtain authorization for the OAuth credentials generated in Installation. You will probably see a screen that says “This app isn’t verified”. You will need to click on the “Advanced” link to authorize the application:

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/44981227/71685532-d892ce00-2d98-11ea-8981-1adce23e8678.png

Requirements

  • tkf/emacs-request
  • jwiegley/alert
  • ~persist~

    org-gcal is now available in the famous emacs package repo MELPA, so the recommended way is to install it through Emacs package management system.

    NOTE: persist lives in GNU ELPA. If you’re running Emacs 26.x with x < 3, you may need to add (setq gnutls-algorithm-priority "NORMAL:-VERS-TLS1.3") to your init.el to work around Emacs bug https://debbugs.gnu.org/34341 (more info).

Installation

  1. Go to Google Developers Console
  2. Create a project (with any name)
  3. Click on the project
  4. Click on the hamburger menu at the upper-left, then APIs & Services, then Credentials.
  5. Set up a consent screen. Give the application a name and set it up as type “external application”, and accept the defaults for everything else. You should not need to verify the application, because only your user will be using it.
  6. Once you’ve set up a consent screen (this is required), click on Create Credentials and Oauth client ID with Application type Other.
  7. Click on Create Client ID
  8. Record the Client ID and Client secret for setup.
  9. Under the same APIs & Services menu section, select Library
  10. Scroll down to Calendar API. Click the Enable button to enable calendar API access to the app you created in steps 5 & 6.

    Go to Google setting page to check the calendar ID.

  11. Go to Google setting page and click the gear-shaped settings icon in the upper right, then select “Settings” from the drop down list.
  12. Select the “Setting for my Calendars” tab on the left, which will display a list of your calendars.
  13. Select the calendar you would like to synchronize with. This will take you to the “Calendar Settings” page for that calendar. Near the end is a section titled “Integrate Calendar”. Following the XML, ICAL, and HTML tags, you will see your Calendar ID.
  14. Copy the Calendar ID for use in the settings below, where you will use it as the first element in the org-gcal-file-alist for associating calendars with specific org files. You can associate different calendars with different org files, so repeat this for each calendar you want to use.

Setting example

(require 'org-gcal)
(setq org-gcal-client-id "your-id-foo.apps.googleusercontent.com"
      org-gcal-client-secret "your-secret"
      org-gcal-fetch-file-alist '(("your-mail@gmail.com" .  "~/schedule.org")
                                  ("another-mail@gmail.com" .  "~/task.org")))

Multiple accounts

There’s no support for multiple accounts. If you want to use org-gcal with calendars from different accounts, you can give permissions to the account you configured via the calendar’s settings interface.

To get more detailed information you can check this link.

Different timezone

If you local timezone is different from the Calendar. You can use your local timezone to fetch events. Event will be fetched using timezone defined in org-gcal-local-timezone. Timezone string can be found from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones.

Testing

To execute compile and regression tests, run make.

This will use your existing Emacs installation to generate a value of load-path that allows org-gcal to find all its dependencies, and save it to .load-path.el in this directory. To delete this and other temporary files, run make clean.

Usage

Getting started

Once you’ve set up the basic settings (see Setting example), you can run org-gcal-fetch to fetch events into the files configured in org-gcal-fetch-file-alist. After the initial fetch, running org-gcal-fetch will retrieve newly-created events and update already-fetched events.

To create a Google Calendar event from an Org-mode event, it’s enough to run the org-gcal-post-at-point command on a simple headline:

* Event title

This will prompt you for the calendar ID, start time, and end time of the event. Therefore, if you’d like to create an event without user interaction (from a template, for example), you should set these fields before running org-gcal-post-at-point:

* Event title
:PROPERTIES:
:calendar-id: jjjjjjjjjjjfuuuk842fdok134@group.calendar.google.com
:END:
:org-gcal:
<2020-07-15 wed 09:15-09:30>

Event details

(can be multiple paragraphs).
:END:

After the event has been created, some Google Calendar API-specific fields will be set for future updates to the event:

* Event title
:PROPERTIES:
:calendar-id: jjjjjjjjjjjfuuuk842fdok134@group.calendar.google.com
:ETag:     "7777777777980000"
:ID:       xxxxxxxxxxa4jlcj0v998f4u18/jjjjjjjjjjjfuuuk842fdok134@group.calendar.google.com
:END:
:org-gcal:
<2020-07-15 wed 09:15-09:30>

Event details

(can be multiple paragraphs).
:END:

If you want to schedule the event in your Org Agenda, you can use the SCHEDULED property (set by org-schedule) instead of storing the date in the :org-gcal: drawer. The drawer will still be present to contain event details:

* Event title
SCHEDULED: <2020-07-15 wed 09:15-09:30>
:PROPERTIES:
:calendar-id: jjjjjjjjjjjfuuuk842fdok134@group.calendar.google.com
:ETag:     "7777777777980000"
:ID:       xxxxxxxxxxa4jlcj0v998f4u18/jjjjjjjjjjjfuuuk842fdok134@group.calendar.google.com
:END:
:org-gcal:
Event details

(can be multiple paragraphs).
:END:

After editing an event in Org mode, you can also run org-gcal-post-at-point to update the event on Google Calendar. The command org-gcal-sync does what org-gcal-fetch does, but also runs org-gcal-post-at-point on all events that you’ve edited in Org mode to update the corresponding events in Google Calendar.

Event structure

org-gcal modifies the following Org-mode properties and drawers when updating an event from the Google Calendar API:

Title
contains the event summary (minus any TODO keywords or tags).
  • Timestamps:
    SCHEDULED
    if the SCHEDULED attribute of a headline is present, org-gcal will maintain the start and end times of an event there rather than in a timestamp in the org-gcal drawer (see below).
  • Properties:
    • calendar-id (can be modified using the =org-gcal-calendar-id-property= variable) :: contains the calendar ID of the calendar on which the event is maintained.
    • ETag (can be modified using the =org-gcal-etag-property= variable) :: contains the most recent ETag retrieved from the Google Calendar API for the event (see the Google Calendar API documentation). Used to support automatically updating the headline using the most recent event data from the API if it has changed on the server since it was last retrieved.

      **NOTE**: If the ETag property is present on a headline (even if empty ("")) and not equal to the value stored by the Calendar API, your event will be **overwritten** with the data from the server. In this case, you’ll see a notification for a HTTP 512. This is intended behavior. If your event is being overwritten when you don’t want it, remove the ETag property from your headline.

    ID
    contains <event_id>/<calendar_id> of the event, as provided by the Google Calendar API. Don’t change the ID manually, or else the event won’t be able to retrieved or updated from the headline.
  • Drawers:
    org-gcal (can be modified using the =org-gcal-drawer-name= variable)
    contains the event description. Unless the timestamp is maintained using SCHEDULED, the initial line of this drawer contains the event start and end time, with the event description starting in the next paragraph.

Apart from these, all other attributes are preserved when an event is updated in any way.

Commands

org-gcal-fetch

Fetch Google calendar events for all calendar IDs in org-gcal-file-alist occurring between org-gcal-up-days before today and org-gcal-down-days after today. If the events have already been retrieved and can be located using their Org-mode headline IDs, update the event in place. Otherwise, insert it at the end of the file corresponding to the event’s calendar ID in org-gcal-file-alist. Does not update events on the server.

org-gcal-sync

Like org-gcal-fetch, but also update events on the server if they have changed locally.

org-gcal-fetch-buffer

Fetch changes to Google calendar events to update entries in the current buffer, but don’t update events on server.

org-gcal-sync-buffer

Sync entries in the current buffer with Google Calendar.

org-gcal-post-at-point

Update the event represented by the Org-mode headline at POINT on the server using the Google Calendar API.

If the event has changed on the server since it was last retrieved (detected using the ETag property), automatically update the headline using the event data from the server instead of updating the event on the server.

org-gcal-delete-at-point

Delete the event represented by the Org-mode headline at POINT on the server using the Google Calendar API. This will not delete the Org-mode headline.

If the event has changed on the server since it was last retrieved (detected using the ETag property), automatically update the headline using the event data from the server instead of updating the event on the server.

org-gcal-request-token

Request new OAuth access and refresh tokens. You should not need to call this function in normal use, since it is called automatically on the first run. However, you can call it again if for some reason the tokens stop working. This should be rare - org-gcal will automatically refresh the OAuth access token when it expires (every 3600 seconds).

Deleting events

If an event is deleted on the server, then updating an event (via org-gcal-post-at-point, org-gcal-sync, etc.) will optionally cancel and delete the corresponding Org mode headlines:

  • org-gcal-update-cancelled-events-with-todo: if set (the default), mark all cancelled events with the org-gcal-cancelled-todo-keyword (default: CANCELLED). This keyword must be one defined in org-todo-keywords or it will be ignored.
  • org-gcal-remove-api-cancelled-events: if set, delete Org headlines of cancelled events. The default value is 'ask, which means to prompt for deletion.
  • org-gcal-remove-events-with-cancelled-todo: by default, avoid deleting Org headlines of events that are marked with org-gcal-cancelled-todo-keyword beforehand, to allow preserving a headline for a cancelled event from being deleted. Setting this to t always deletes headlines, even already cancelled ones.

Other features

Minimize alerts

Modify org-gcal-notify-p from t to nil

Collect instances of recurring events under parent event

By default, org-gcal-recurring-events-mode is set to 'top-level, which means that new fetched events that are instances of recurring events will be inserted at the top level of the file for the calendar ID configured in org-gcal-fetch-file-alist:

* Meeting
SCHEDULED: <2020-08-07 Fri 11:00>
* Meeting
SCHEDULED: <2020-08-14 Fri 11:00>
* Meeting
SCHEDULED: <2020-08-21 Fri 11:00>
* Meeting
SCHEDULED: <2020-08-28 Fri 11:00>

If org-gcal-recurring-events-mode is instead set to 'nested, such events will be inserted as Org-mode child headlines under the headline for the parent event:

* Meeting
SCHEDULED: <2017-02-17 Fri 11:00>
** Meeting
SCHEDULED: <2020-08-07 Fri 11:00>
** Meeting
SCHEDULED: <2020-08-14 Fri 11:00>
** Meeting
SCHEDULED: <2020-08-21 Fri 11:00>
** Meeting
SCHEDULED: <2020-08-28 Fri 11:00>

Here the parent meeting has been running for several years, but only the instances of the meeting in the range given by org-gcal-down-days and org-gcal-up-days are fetched.

Troubleshooting

Debugging

Because we used the deferred.el to perform asynchronous operations like calling request (via ~request-deferred~), normal Emacs debugging and stack traces tend not to be as useful as usual. The best way to debug is to run M-x org-gcal-toggle-debug, which sets a variety of debugging variables to ease debugging. The old values of the variables are saved so they can be restored by another call to M-x org-gcal-toggle-debug.

One of the most useful things this enables is logging of HTTP requests. Open the *request-log* buffer to see all requests issued by this library.

Errors

Duplicate ID

You get an error like this:

Duplicate ID "FOO", also in file BAR

Most likely, this means some calendar events were mistakenly retrieved twice (for example, if you ran org-gcal-fetch on different computers). Search your Org-mode files for the duplicate ID “FOO” and delete one of the headlines with duplicate IDs (or just change the ID property on one of the events to something else).

Similar applications

dengste/org-caldav