Take back control of your GitHub Notifications
If you manage more than one active project on GitHub, you probably find GitHub Notifications pretty lacking.
Notifications are marked as read and disappear from the list as soon as you load the page or view the email of the notification. This makes it very hard to keep on top of which notifications you still need to follow up on.
Most open source maintainers and GitHub staff end up using a complex combination of filters and labels in Gmail to manage their notifications from their inbox. If, like me, you try to avoid email, then you might want something else.
Octobox adds an extra "archived" state to each notification so you can mark it as "done". If new activity happens on the thread/issue/pr, the next time you sync the app the relevant item will be unarchived and moved back into your inbox.
Octobox is like a little baby. You have to host it yourself and it only works for one user at a time.
Check out the open issues for a glimpse of the future: https://github.com/andrew/octobox/issues.
You can host your own instance of Octobox using Heroku. Heroku will ask you to provide a 'personal access token' which you can create on GitHub. When creating it, make sure you enable the notifications scope on it.
Running Octobox for GitHub Enterprise
In order to setup Octobox for your GitHub Enterprise instance all you need you do is add your enterprise domain to the .env
file / deployed environment.
Example:
GITHUB_DOMAIN=https://github.foobar.com
And that's it ✨
The source code is hosted at GitHub. You can report issues/feature requests on GitHub Issues. For other updates, follow me on Twitter: @teabass.
New to Ruby? No worries! You can follow these instructions to install a local server, or you can use the included Vagrant setup.
First things first, you'll need to install Ruby 2.3.3. I recommend using the excellent rbenv, and ruby-build:
brew install rbenv ruby-build
rbenv install 2.3.3
rbenv global 2.3.3
Next, you'll need to make sure that you have PostgreSQL installed. This can be done easily on OSX using Homebrew or by using http://postgresapp.com. Please see these further instructions for installing Postgres via Homebrew.
brew install postgres
On Debian-based Linux distributions you can use apt-get to install Postgres:
sudo apt-get install postgresql postgresql-contrib libpq-dev
Now, let's install the gems from the Gemfile
("Gems" are synonymous with libraries in other
languages):
gem install bundler && rbenv rehash
bundle install
Once all the gems are installed, we'll need to create the databases and tables. Rails makes this easy through the use of "Rake" tasks:
bundle exec rake db:create db:migrate
Now go and register a new GitHub OAuth Application, your development configuration should look something like this:
If you're deploying this to production, just replace http://localhost:3000
with your applications URL.
Once you've created your application you can then then add the following to your .env
:
GITHUB_CLIENT_ID=yourclientidhere
GITHUB_CLIENT_SECRET=yourclientsecrethere
Finally you can boot the rails app:
rails s
If you're familiar with Docker and Docker Compose, the included docker-compose.yml
configuration allows you to spin up the application locally.
First, launch an instance of PostgreSQL and wait for it to fully initialize:
docker-compose up database
Once the PostgreSQL initialization process is complete, launch the application using another terminal session:
GITHUB_CLIENT_ID=yourclientid GITHUB_CLIENT_SECRET=yourclientsecret docker-compose up app
Note: You can add GITHUB_TOKEN
to .env
instead of supplying it directly on the command-line.
You can use keyboard shortcuts to navigate and perform certain actions:
r
or.
- refresh listj
- move down the listk
- move up the lists
- star current notificationy
- archive current notificationEnter
- open current notification in a new window
Press ?
for the help menu.
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so we don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Send a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.
Copyright (c) 2016 Andrew Nesbitt. See LICENSE for details.