ohmyzsh/plugins/jira
Robby Russell 046f0ca557
fix(jira): Update README examples to a table format
2023-01-09 20:25:08 +00:00
..
README.md fix(jira): Update README examples to a table format 2023-01-09 20:25:08 +00:00
_jira refactor(jira)!: rename myissues to mine and add completion (#10931) 2023-01-09 19:43:42 +00:00
jira.plugin.zsh feat(jira): support rapid view on rapid board mode (#9459) 2023-01-09 19:53:32 +00:00

README.md

Jira plugin

CLI support for JIRA interaction

Description

This plugin provides command line tools for interacting with Atlassian's JIRA bug tracking software.

The interaction is all done through the web. No local installation of JIRA is necessary.

In this document, "JIRA" refers to the JIRA issue tracking server, and jira refers to the command this plugin supplies.

Usage

This plugin supplies one command, jira, through which all its features are exposed. Most forms of this command open a JIRA page in your web browser.

Commands

Command Description
jira Performs the default action
jira new Opens a new Jira issue dialogue
jira ABC-123 Opens an existing issue
jira ABC-123 m Opens an existing issue for adding a comment
jira dashboard [rapid_view] # opens your JIRA dashboard
jira mine Queries for your own issues
jira tempo Opens your JIRA Tempo
jira reported [username] Queries for issues reported by a user
jira assigned [username] Queries for issues assigned to a user
jira branch Opens an existing issue matching the current branch name

Jira Branch usage notes

The branch name may have prefixes ending in "/": "feature/MP-1234", and also suffixes starting with "_": "MP-1234_fix_dashboard". In both these cases, the issue opened will be "MP-1234"

This is also checks if the prefix is in the name, and adds it if not, so: "MP-1234" opens the issue "MP-1234", "mp-1234" opens the issue "mp-1234", and "1234" opens the issue "MP-1234".

Debugging usage

These calling forms are for developers' use, and may change at any time.

jira dumpconfig   # displays the effective configuration

Setup

The URL for your JIRA instance is set by $JIRA_URL or a .jira_url file.

Add a .jira-url file in the base of your project. You can also set $JIRA_URL in your ~/.zshrc or put a .jira-url in your home directory. A .jira-url in the current directory takes precedence, so you can make per-project customizations.

The same goes with .jira-prefix and $JIRA_PREFIX. These control the prefix added to all issue IDs, which differentiates projects within a JIRA instance.

For example:

cd to/my/project
echo "https://jira.atlassian.com" >> .jira-url

(Note: The current implementation only looks in the current directory for .jira-url and .jira-prefix, not up the path, so if you are in a subdirectory of your project, it will fall back to your default JIRA URL. This will probably change in the future though.)

Variables

  • $JIRA_URL - Your JIRA instance's URL
  • $JIRA_NAME - Your JIRA username; used as the default user for assigned/reported searches
  • $JIRA_PREFIX - Prefix added to issue ID arguments
  • $JIRA_RAPID_BOARD - Set to true if you use Rapid Board
  • $JIRA_RAPID_VIEW - Set the default rapid view; it doesn't work if $JIRA_RAPID_BOARD is set to false
  • $JIRA_DEFAULT_ACTION - Action to do when jira is called with no arguments; defaults to "new"
  • $JIRA_TEMPO_PATH - Your JIRA tempo url path; defaults to "/secure/Tempo.jspa"

Browser

Your default web browser, as determined by how open_command handles http:// URLs, is used for interacting with the JIRA instance. If you change your system's URL handler associations, it will change the browser that jira uses.