Google Directory provide API to get all organizational units from domain.
I'm able to get OU inside "/" but I want to get all child OU.
There is function with some arguments:
AdminDirectory.Orgunits.list(String costumerId, Object optionalArg)
This function accept "type" argument as mentioned in official documentation, but when I put argument "orgUnitPath" it will respond with "Bad request"
Here is my full code
var page = AdminDirectory.Orgunits.list('my_costumer',{
orgUnithPath: '/Kiosks',
type: 'all'});
var units = page.organizationUnits;
if (units) {
for (var i = 0; i < units.length; i++) {
var unit = units[i];
Logger.log(unit);
}
} else {
Logger.log('No units found.');
}
Thank you very much
You mistyped 'my_customer' and orgUnitPath. Also, organizationalUnits is going to be an array of objects that you will want to get specific properties of such as orgUnit.name, not log directly.
function listSubOUs() {
var page = AdminDirectory.Orgunits.list('my_customer', {
orgUnitPath: '/',
type: 'all'
});
var orgUnits = page.organizationUnits;
if (orgUnits) {
for (var i = 0; i < orgUnits.length; i++) {
var orgUnit = orgUnits[i];
Logger.log('%s (%s)', orgUnit.name, orgUnit.orgUnitPath, orgUnit.description);
}
} else {
Logger.log('No OUs found.');
}
}
Related
I hope everyone is in good health health and condition.
Recently, I have been working on Google Docs hyperlinks using app scripts and learning along the way. I was trying to get all hyperlink and edit them and for that I found an amazing code from this post. I have read the code multiple times and now I have a good understanding of how it works.
My confusion
My confusion is the recursive process happening in this code, although I am familiar with the concept of Recursive functions but when I try to modify to code to get only the first hyperlink from the document, I could not understand it how could I achieve that without breaking the recursive function.
Here is the code that I am trying ;
/**
* Get an array of all LinkUrls in the document. The function is
* recursive, and if no element is provided, it will default to
* the active document's Body element.
*
* #param {Element} element The document element to operate on.
* .
* #returns {Array} Array of objects, vis
* {element,
* startOffset,
* endOffsetInclusive,
* url}
*/
function getAllLinks(element) {
var links = [];
element = element || DocumentApp.getActiveDocument().getBody();
if (element.getType() === DocumentApp.ElementType.TEXT) {
var textObj = element.editAsText();
var text = element.getText();
var inUrl = false;
for (var ch=0; ch < text.length; ch++) {
var url = textObj.getLinkUrl(ch);
if (url != null) {
if (!inUrl) {
// We are now!
inUrl = true;
var curUrl = {};
curUrl.element = element;
curUrl.url = String( url ); // grab a copy
curUrl.startOffset = ch;
}
else {
curUrl.endOffsetInclusive = ch;
}
}
else {
if (inUrl) {
// Not any more, we're not.
inUrl = false;
links.push(curUrl); // add to links
curUrl = {};
}
}
}
if (inUrl) {
// in case the link ends on the same char that the element does
links.push(curUrl);
}
}
else {
var numChildren = element.getNumChildren();
for (var i=0; i<numChildren; i++) {
links = links.concat(getAllLinks(element.getChild(i)));
}
}
return links;
}
I tried adding
if (links.length > 0){
return links;
}
but it does not stop the function as it is recursive and it return back to its previous calls and continue running.
Here is the test document along with its script that I am working on.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1eRvnR2NCdsO94C5nqly4nRXCttNziGhwgR99jElcJ_I/edit?usp=sharing
I hope you will understand what I am trying to convey, Thanks for giving a look at my post. Stay happy :D
I believe your goal as follows.
You want to retrieve the 1st link and the text of link from the shared Document using Google Apps Script.
You want to stop the recursive loop when the 1st element is retrieved.
Modification points:
I tried adding
if (links.length > 0){
return links;
}
but it does not stop the function as it is recursive and it return back to its previous calls and continue running.
About this, unfortunately, I couldn't understand where you put the script in your script. In this case, I think that it is required to stop the loop when links has the value. And also, it is required to also retrieve the text. So, how about modifying as follows? I modified 3 parts in your script.
Modified script:
function getAllLinks(element) {
var links = [];
element = element || DocumentApp.getActiveDocument().getBody();
if (element.getType() === DocumentApp.ElementType.TEXT) {
var textObj = element.editAsText();
var text = element.getText();
var inUrl = false;
for (var ch=0; ch < text.length; ch++) {
if (links.length > 0) break; // <--- Added
var url = textObj.getLinkUrl(ch);
if (url != null) {
if (!inUrl) {
// We are now!
inUrl = true;
var curUrl = {};
curUrl.element = element;
curUrl.url = String( url ); // grab a copy
curUrl.startOffset = ch;
}
else {
curUrl.endOffsetInclusive = ch;
}
}
else {
if (inUrl) {
// Not any more, we're not.
inUrl = false;
curUrl.text = text.slice(curUrl.startOffset, curUrl.endOffsetInclusive + 1); // <--- Added
links.push(curUrl); // add to links
curUrl = {};
}
}
}
if (inUrl) {
// in case the link ends on the same char that the element does
links.push(curUrl);
}
}
else {
var numChildren = element.getNumChildren();
for (var i=0; i<numChildren; i++) {
if (links.length > 0) { // <--- Added or if (links.length > 0) break;
return links;
}
links = links.concat(getAllLinks(element.getChild(i)));
}
}
return links;
}
In this case, I think that if (links.length > 0) {return links;} can be modified to if (links.length > 0) break;.
Note:
By the way, when Google Docs API is used, both the links and the text can be also retrieved by a simple script as follows. When you use this, please enable Google Docs API at Advanced Google services.
function myFunction() {
const doc = DocumentApp.getActiveDocument();
const res = Docs.Documents.get(doc.getId()).body.content.reduce((ar, {paragraph}) => {
if (paragraph && paragraph.elements) {
paragraph.elements.forEach(({textRun}) => {
if (textRun && textRun.textStyle && textRun.textStyle.link) {
ar.push({text: textRun.content, url: textRun.textStyle.link.url});
}
});
}
return ar;
}, []);
console.log(res) // You can retrieve 1st link and test by console.log(res[0]).
}
I'm trying to create a list of files stored in my Google Drive and also a list of their current and previous permissions. Specifically, I want to create a list of files in my Google Drive which at any point in the past have had the 'Anyone with a link can view/edit (etc)' permission set.
I have created a Google Apps Script to do this and I can iterate through all the files OK and I can get files which currently have that permission set, but I can't see a way to get the history of the file's permissions.
I have found and activated the revisions list API: https://developers.google.com/drive/api/v2/reference/revisions/list
This gets revisions but I can't see anywhere that it lists the sharing history of a revision.
Is what I'm attempting to do possible?
It's definitely possible using the Drive Activity API. You can use the Quickstart for Google Apps Script to view all the activity of an item (file or folder) or done by a User. In this case I modified the Quickstart to show the Permissions changes of a given Drive Id.
function listDriveActivity() {
var request = {
itemName: "items/1bFQvSJ8pMdss4jInrrg7bxdae3dKgu-tJqC1A2TktMs", //Id of the file
pageSize: 10};
var response = DriveActivity.Activity.query(request);
var activities = response.activities;
if (activities && activities.length > 0) {
Logger.log('Recent activity:');
for (var i = 0; i < activities.length; i++) {
var activity = activities[i];
var time = getTimeInfo(activity);
var action = getActionInfo(activity.primaryActionDetail);
var actors = activity.actors.map(getActorInfo);
var targets = activity.targets.map(getTargetInfo);
if (action == "permissionChange"){ //Only show permissionChange activity
Logger.log(
'%s: %s, %s, %s', time, truncated(actors), action,
truncated(targets));
}
}
} else {
Logger.log('No activity.');
}
}
/** Returns a string representation of the first elements in a list. */
function truncated(array, opt_limit) {
var limit = opt_limit || 2;
var contents = array.slice(0, limit).join(', ');
var more = array.length > limit ? ', ...' : '';
return '[' + contents + more + ']';
}
/** Returns the name of a set property in an object, or else "unknown". */
function getOneOf(object) {
for (var key in object) {
return key;
}
return 'unknown';
}
/** Returns a time associated with an activity. */
function getTimeInfo(activity) {
if ('timestamp' in activity) {
return activity.timestamp;
}
if ('timeRange' in activity) {
return activity.timeRange.endTime;
}
return 'unknown';
}
/** Returns the type of action. */
function getActionInfo(actionDetail) {
return getOneOf(actionDetail);
}
/** Returns user information, or the type of user if not a known user. */
function getUserInfo(user) {
if ('knownUser' in user) {
var knownUser = user.knownUser;
var isMe = knownUser.isCurrentUser || false;
return isMe ? 'people/me' : knownUser.personName;
}
return getOneOf(user);
}
/** Returns actor information, or the type of actor if not a user. */
function getActorInfo(actor) {
if ('user' in actor) {
return getUserInfo(actor.user)
}
return getOneOf(actor);
}
/** Returns the type of a target and an associated title. */
function getTargetInfo(target) {
if ('driveItem' in target) {
var title = target.driveItem.title || 'unknown';
return 'driveItem:"' + title + '"';
}
if ('drive' in target) {
var title = target.drive.title || 'unknown';
return 'drive:"' + title + '"';
}
if ('fileComment' in target) {
var parent = target.fileComment.parent || {};
var title = parent.title || 'unknown';
return 'fileComment:"' + title + '"';
}
return getOneOf(target) + ':unknown';
}
Remember to enable the Drive Activity API in Resources > Advanced Google Services
In my example this returns the logs:
You can also look deeper into the Permissions by using the permissionChange Parameters in the query.
If you have a business/enterprise/edu account the admin audit logs will tell you this for 6 months of data. Or it will at least tell you when a permission was changed from x to y.
Can't think of a method for personal.
Is it possible to search to messages with the label 'Apps script queue' and give just these specific messages (not the whole thread) a new label?
When I use GmailApp.search('label:Apps script queue') I get the requested messages but when I assign a new label to these messages, all the other messages of the thread (on other places in the mailbox) will get the same label. And that is not what I want.
This code does not return an error while adding a label to a specific message in a thread and if you use thread list method you'll see that it is only placed in the specific messageID(treated separately). But once your UI(Gmail site) is in conversation mode, it will be viewable in both labels.
function searchMail(){
var threads = GmailApp.search("SOME SEARCH");
Logger.log(threads.length);
listLabel('me');
for (var i = 0; i < threads.length; i++) {
var messages = threads[i].getMessages();
Logger.log(messages.length);
for (var j = 0; j < messages.length; j++){
if (messages[j].isInInbox()){
Logger.log('me' + 'id msg: ' + messages[j].getId());
//Add label to the first reply
addLabel('me',messages[1].getId());
}
else{
Logger.log('me' + 'id msg: ' + messages[j].getId() +" not in inbox");
}
}
}
}
function addLabel(userId, messageId){
var resource = {addLabelIds: ["Label_6"]}
Gmail.Users.Messages.modify(resource, userId, messageId);
}
In Gmail, labels are applied to a thread and cannot be applied to a single email message of a thread.
You can however apply stars / colors to individual messages.
This is an old thread, but for anybody who might be reading it like me, maybe this will save you some time:
function getLabelMap() {
var allLabels = Gmail.Users.Labels.list('me');
var labelMap = [];
for (var label of allLabels.labels) {
labelMap[label.name] = label.id;
}
return labelMap;
}
var labelMap = getLabelMap();
function getLabel(labelName) {
return labelMap[labelName];
}
function labelMessage(messageID, labelName) {
var labelID = getLabel(labelName);
var labelRequest = {addLabelIds: [labelID]};
var subject = GmailApp.getMessageById(messageID).getSubject();
if (labelID != null) {
Logger.log("Labelling as %s: %s", labelName, subject);
Gmail.Users.Messages.modify(labelRequest, 'me', messageID);
} else {
Logger.log("Label not found: %s", labelName);
}
}
function unlabelMessage(messageID, labelName) {
var labelID = getLabel(labelName);
var labelRequest = {removeLabelIds: [labelID]};
var subject = GmailApp.getMessageById(messageID).getSubject();
if (labelID != null) {
Logger.log("Removing label %s: %s", labelName, subject);
Gmail.Users.Messages.modify(labelRequest, 'me', messageID);
} else {
Logger.log("Label not found: %s", labelName);
}
}
function reLabel () {
var messagesToRelabel = Gmail.Users.Messages.list('me', {'q':'label:Apps-script-queue'}).messages || [];
// Loop through each message (not by thread), using the Advanced Gmail Service (full GMail API in a Google Script).
messagesToRelabel.forEach(function (messageToRelabel){
unlabelMessage(messageToRelabel.id, "Apps script queue");
labelMessage(messageToRelabel.id, "New label");
});
}
Not asked for by the OP, but may be helpful for others who are trying to do "advanced filtering / labeling" using the GMail API:
function getMessageHeader(messageID, headerField) {
var messageInfo = Gmail.Users.Messages.get('me', messageID, {'format':'METADATA', 'metadataHeaders':[headerField]});
if (messageInfo.payload.headers) {
return messageInfo.payload.headers[0].value;
} else {
return null;
}
}
The above lets you filter on header info, e.g. I use it to check whether X-Uniform-Type-Identifier is equal to com.apple.mail-note to automatically flag old Apple Notes for deletion.
I have a button on page - when clicked, it passes all the data to the servlet that could update each row data. My question is how to pass the whole store to the servlet as json data? Is there any easy way? Thanks
Here is some code I wrote to get the store to an object. Then it can be converted to JSON using dojo.toJson(obj);. I learned about this from the dojotoolkit website originally. (Give credit where credit is due). I realize this code is huge and nasty. When I looked for a better way about a year back I could not find one.
JsonHelper.storeToObject = function(store) {
var object = [];
var index = -1;
store.fetch({
onItem : function(item, request) {
object[++index] = JsonHelper.itemToObject(store, item);
}
});
return object;
};
JsonHelper.itemToObject = function(store, item) {
// store:
// The datastore the item came from.
// item:
// The item in question.
var obj = {};
if (item && store) {
// Determine the attributes we need to process.
var attributes = store.getAttributes(item);
if (attributes && attributes.length > 0) {
var i;
for (i = 0; i < attributes.length; i++) {
var values = store.getValues(item, attributes[i]);
if (values) {
// Handle multivalued and single-valued attributes.
if (values.length > 1) {
var j;
obj[attributes[i]] = [];
for (j = 0; j < values.length; j++) {
var value = values[j];
// Check that the value isn't another item. If
// it is, process it as an item.
if (store.isItem(value)) {
obj[attributes[i]].push(itemToObject(store,
value));
} else {
obj[attributes[i]].push(value);
}
}
} else {
if (store.isItem(values[0])) {
obj[attributes[i]] = itemToObject(store,
values[0]);
} else {
obj[attributes[i]] = values[0];
}
}
}
}
}
}
return obj;
};
So basically I would like to create a function that when alerted, returns the URL from an array (in this case the array is declared as 'websites'). The function has two parameters 'websites' and 'searchTerm'.
I'm struggling to make the function behave, so that when i type yahoo or google or bing in the searchTerm parameter for the function; I want it to return the corresponding URL.
Any help or support would be greatly appreciated.
Sorry if I have not made myself clear in my explanation, if this is the case, let me know and I will try and be clearer in my explanation.
Thanks in advance!
Try something more like:
var websites = {google: 'www.google.com', yahoo: 'www.yahoo.com'};
function filterURL(websites,searchTerm)
{
return websites[searchTerm] || 'www.defaultsearchwebstirehere.com';
}
** Update following comment **
Build up your websites object like so (where input is your array of key values seperated by pipe characters):
var websites = {};
for (var i = 0; i < input.length; i++) {
var siteToSearchTerm = input[i].split('|');
websites[siteToSearchTerm[1]] = siteToSearchTerm[0];
}
Here is how:
var websites = ["www.google.com|Google" , "www.yahoo.com|Yahoo" , "www.bing.com|Bing"];
function filterURL(websites,searchTerm)
{
for (var i = 0; i < websites.length; i++) {
if (websites[i].split('|')[1] === searchTerm) {
return websites[i].split('|')[0];
}
}
}
Working Example
You can also validate and improve function:
function filterURL(websites,searchTerm)
{
if (typeof websites != 'Array' || ! searchTerm) return false;
for (var i = 0; i < websites.length; i++) {
if (websites[i].split('|')[1] === searchTerm) {
return websites[i].split('|')[0];
}
}
return false;
}
Why not just use an object?
var websites = {
Google: 'www.google.com',
Yahoo: 'www.yahoo.com'
};
function filterURL(sites, searchTerm) {
if (sites[searchTerm]) {
return sites[searchTerm];
} else {
// What do you want to do when it can't be found?
}
}
alert(filterURL(websites, 'Google')); // alerts 'www.google.com'
You should really be using a hash-table like structure so that you don't have to search through the whole array every time. Something like this:
var websites = {
"Google": "www.google.com",
"Yahoo": "www.yahoo.com",
"Bing": "www.bing.com"
};
function filterURL(websites, searchTerm) {
if (websites[searchTerm] !== undefined)
return websites[searchTerm];
else
return null;
}
I'm not sure why you want to use an array for this, as what you're really doing fits a key-value pair better; however, here's how I'd do it:
function filterURL(websites, searchTerm) {
var i = 0,
parts;
for (i = 0; i < websites.length; i++) {
parts = websites[i].split("|");
if (parts[1].toLowerCase() === searchTerm) {
return parts[0];
}
}
}
But consider if you used a proper JavaScript Object instead:
var websites = {
Google: "www.google.com",
Yahoo: "www.yahoo.com",
Bing: "www.bing.com"
}
// Now it's much simpler:
function filterURL(websites, searchTerm) {
// key has first letter capitalized…
return websites[searchTerm.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + searchTerm.slice(1).toLowerCase()];
}