Your friendly neighborhood Coffee & Bagel meeting generator
This bot was created to post 1 on 1 (or more) random pairs for meetings where users can talk about life and things while enjoying some coffee or breakfast pastry. It tries to avoid the same match up over the past nCr
meeting generations. Slack users included in these meetings are filtered by EMAIL_DOMAIN
which can be configured - that way single channel guests or what have you are not included.
bagelbot is a Slack bot written in python that connects to slack via the RTM API. To generate a meeting and post it to Slack, you'll need a Slack API token. Add @bagelbot
as a bot to your custom integrations at https://slack.com/apps/manage/ under Custom Integrations then Bots.
Meeting Pairings posted to Slack Channel
Checking for Attendance
There are a couple ways to run this project. First way, you can just check out the code and install a local virtualenv and run the scripts. The other is to use the provided Dockerfile to run commands.
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Download the bagelbot code
$ git clone [email protected]:beardedprojamz/bagelbot.git $ cd bagelbot
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Configure bagelbot by editing the
config.py
file accordingly (use your email domain, slack token, etc.)
Install dependencies (virtualenv is recommended.)
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
$ docker build -t bagelbot .
You can generate a meeting at any time, using generate_meeting.py
.
./generate_meeting.py
Use the -h
option for optional arguments. If you want to schedule this job in say a crontab somewhere, it would look like this:
-
Run
check_attendance.py
ahead of your meeting (the default time limit on the attendance check is 15 minutes). This script will run for the entirety of that time limit listed inconfig.py
or as soon as all Slack users have responded. -
After that time limit, say 15 minutes later, schedule
generate_meeting.py
to run. If there's anupcoming
meeting in the shelf storage, and the--force-create
option is passed, a meeting will be generated, sent out to the configured slack channel, and stored into thehistory
key (a list of past meetings) of the shelf.
You can run the individual scripts locally like above, or using a docker image such as:
$ docker run -e AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID -e AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY -it bagelbot python check_attendance.py --s3-sync --users ben
If you want to run Bagelbot as a Service (BaaS), you can use service.py
to do so. This script checks to see if attendance should be checked at a certain time and the same with meeting generation. See config.py
for an example of meeting times and frequencies. If S3_BUCKET
is set, the SHELVE_FILE
will be uploaded to S3 upon every operation that would change the state of the file.
$ docker run -e AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID -e AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY -it bagelbot
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There is a Makefile provided that uses pyenv-virtualenv to manage a python 3.6.5 virtual environment. If you have pyenv & pyenv-virtualenv installed properly (refer to their respective readme's), then you just need to run:
make install-dev