For fruux, we’ve decided to implement syncing with Google Contacts some time ago, allowing people to do bi-directional sync between their fruux and Google Contacts address book.

Bi-directional sync is not particularly easy, but since Google implemented CardDAV support some time ago, and I’m pretty well versed at that protocol, I thought it was doable.

I was wrong.

I’m writing this blog post as a general warning to not use Google’s CardDAV server for well, pretty much anything. It’s a huge mistake, and until they fix the massive mistakes in their interpretation of the protocol, you are much better off using their proprietary Contacts API.

Data-loss

Lets start with the most glaring issue, the loss of data. The primary data-format that’s being used in CardDAV is vCard, in particular version 3.0.

There are certain things that you can expect when you use vCards with CardDAV. In particular, if you add some information to your vCard and send it to the server, with a PUT request, you also expect that information back with GET .

Google’s CardDAV server silently wipes out all kinds of data it doesn’t care about. Both the very important stuff, such as properties, but also other relevant meta-data such as parameters and groups that influence how a vCard may be interpreted.

The effect for the end-user is that a user may create vCards and add a bunch of information to a contact, which gets discarded by Google, and upon the next sync, also gets removed from the users local version.

We’ve sent hundreds of thousands of valid vCards to Google’s CardDAV server. The server rejects a whopping 15% of all the vCards we send it. Note that these are not vCards we produce. We receive them from other CardDAV clients, and since we get millions of them, this is statistically a decent source on what kind of vCards appear in the wild.

The biggest issue we’re having with this though, is that we’re not getting any feedback.

No, this isn’t just a 400 Bad Request we’re getting back, we’re not actually receiving any TCP packets back, at all. Any (valid) vCard that the CardDAV server does not understand, will result in our HTTP requests timing out.

There’s no clear pattern to what they do and do not support. We’ve noticed that almost every vCard with an attachment is rejected, and after dropping the attachments, things will start working… but there’s also a large amount of cards that get rejected for certain Google accounts, but work fine in other accounts.

Slowness

Nearly any write operation you do on Google’s CardDAV server will take 10-20 seconds to complete. This may not seem like a big deal, but many of our users have address books with well over 2000 contacts.

Given that our HTTP requests time out after 1 minute, we retry HTTP requests 2 times before failing, and 15% of requests fail by timing out, this means that for an address book with 2000 contacts, this would take over 22 hours to complete.

UID and urls

When syncing with a CardDAV system, especially with one that discards data whenever it feels like it, you’ll need to keep some kind of reference to the vCard you’re sending, so you can keep the important data local.

CardDAV provides two identifiers that are unique and stable id’s.

Google’s CardDAV server discards both, and replaces them with their own. From the perspective of any CardDAV client, Google makes it appear as if a new contact is sent. That contact is deleted on the server, and a new contact appears on the server that’s similar, but not entirely (see Data-loss).

For very simple clients that may be sufficient, but even for example Apple’s Contacts app on OS X, which uses ID’s to group contacts together, loses this relationship as soon as the card is sent to Google.

Lack of documentation

The official documentation for the server conveniently just refers to the open standards, but since Google’s system couldn’t be further from being a CardDAV-compliant server, there’s little to no information about why they do the things they do.

For instance, if they only choose to support an extremely limited subset of vCards, ignoring many often-used features, it would have been great if that was documented.

The response

Normally, when running into bugs like this, I’m quite forgiving. I wrote a reasonably popular server myself, I know that standards are hard and it’s not easy to write a well behaving server from scratch.

So the first thing I did was to try to contact the relevant developers.

Out of respect and privacy I will withold their response, but I was met with disinterest, and kind of got the impression I was overstepping my boundaries by even suggesting that there may be one or two bugs in their system.

This was in August 2013, and nothing has changed since.

In conclusion

The fact that Google advertises their servers as supporting CardDAV is an insult to anyone who does try to be standards compliant.

The Google CardDAV server has similarities to what we call CardDAV. For very simple, controlled stuff, it may be possible to pretend it is.

For anything advanced, avoid it at all cost. I’ve made the mistake of trying to work around various issues, when in reality that time could have been better spent porting our code to the Google Contacts API. Which is much simpler, but it’s predictable and behaves sanely.

If you are a CardDAV client developer and you’re thinking of syncing with Google, keep the following in mind:

Google only supports a very small subset of vCards and will silently discard or mangle any of your user’s data that it doesn’t support. About 15% of normal vCards will be rejected by Google without telling you why. Their system will just time out your http request. It’s extremely slow, which can be problematic for mobile clients and when you have to handle sync for many users. You’ll need to add additional heuristics to maintain referential integrity to your contacts.

Furthermore, if you’re writing an actual vCard sync service that targets Google, I think the only sane way to implement this is to:

Maintain an additional database, as Google’s can’t be trusted. After sending vCards, immediately also retrieve it to find out how Google mangled it. After a change was made on the Google contacts side, retrieve the updated vCard, compare it to the last version you received, and apply the differences to the correct copy of the vCards.