Changes between Initial Version and Version 1 of TracWorkflow
- Timestamp:
- 03/02/09 17:14:09 (18 months ago)
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TracWorkflow
v1 v1 1 = The Trac Ticket Workflow System = 2 [[TracGuideToc]] 3 4 The Trac issue database provides a configurable workflow. 5 6 == The Default Ticket Workflow == 7 === Environments upgraded from 0.10 === 8 When you run `trac-admin <env> upgrade`, your `trac.ini` will be modified to include a `[ticket-workflow]` section. 9 The workflow configured in this case is the original workflow, so that ticket actions will behave like they did in 0.10. 10 11 Graphically, that looks like this: 12 13 [[Image(htdocs:../common/guide/original-workflow.png)]] 14 15 There are some significant "warts" in this; such as accepting a ticket sets it to 'assigned' state, and assigning a ticket sets it to 'new' state. Perfectly obvious, right? 16 So you will probably want to migrate to "basic" workflow; `contrib/workflow/migrate_original_to_basic.py` may be helpful. 17 18 === Environments created with 0.11 === 19 When a new environment is created, a default workflow is configured in your trac.ini. This workflow is the basic workflow (described in `basic-workflow.ini`), which is somewhat different from the workflow of the 0.10 releases. 20 21 Graphically, it looks like this: 22 23 [[Image(htdocs:../common/guide/basic-workflow.png)]] 24 25 == Additional Ticket Workflows == 26 27 There are several example workflows provided in the Trac source tree; look in `contrib/workflow` for `.ini` config sections. One of those may be a good match for what you want. They can be pasted into the `[ticket-workflow]` section of your `trac.ini` file. 28 29 == Basic Ticket Workflow Customization == 30 31 Create a `[ticket-workflow]` section in `trac.ini`. 32 Within this section, each entry is an action that may be taken on a ticket. 33 For example, consider the `accept` action from `simple-workflow.ini`: 34 {{{ 35 accept = new,accepted -> accepted 36 accept.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY 37 accept.operations = set_owner_to_self 38 }}} 39 The first line in this example defines the `accept` action, along with the states the action is valid in (`new` and `accepted`), and the new state of the ticket when the action is taken (`accepted`). 40 The `accept.permissions` line specifies what permissions the user must have to use this action. 41 The `accept.operations` line specifies changes that will be made to the ticket in addition to the status change when this action is taken. In this case, when a user clicks on `accept`, the ticket owner field is updated to the logged in user. Multiple operations may be specified in a comma separated list. 42 43 The available operations are: 44 - del_owner -- Clear the owner field. 45 - set_owner -- Sets the owner to the selected or entered owner. 46 - ''actionname''`.set_owner` may optionally be set to a comma delimited list or a single value. 47 - set_owner_to_self -- Sets the owner to the logged in user. 48 - del_resolution -- Clears the resolution field 49 - set_resolution -- Sets the resolution to the selected value. 50 - ''actionname''`.set_resolution` may optionally be set to a comma delimited list or a single value. 51 {{{ 52 Example: 53 54 resolve_new = new -> closed 55 resolve_new.name = resolve 56 resolve_new.operations = set_resolution 57 resolve_new.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY 58 resolve_new.set_resolution = invalid,wontfix 59 }}} 60 - leave_status -- Displays "leave as <current status>" and makes no change to the ticket. 61 '''Note:''' Specifying conflicting operations (such as `set_owner` and `del_owner`) has unspecified results. 62 63 {{{ 64 resolve_accepted = accepted -> closed 65 resolve_accepted.name = resolve 66 resolve_accepted.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY 67 resolve_accepted.operations = set_resolution 68 }}} 69 70 In this example, we see the `.name` attribute used. The action here is `resolve_accepted`, but it will be presented to the user as `resolve`. 71 72 For actions that should be available in all states, `*` may be used in place of the state. The obvious example is the `leave` action: 73 {{{ 74 leave = * -> * 75 leave.operations = leave_status 76 leave.default = 1 77 }}} 78 This also shows the use of the `.default` attribute. This value is expected to be an integer, and the order in which the actions are displayed is determined by this value. The action with the highest `.default` value is listed first, and is selected by default. The rest of the actions are listed in order of decreasing `.default` values. 79 If not specified for an action, `.default` is 0. The value may be negative. 80 81 There are a couple of hard-coded constraints to the workflow. In particular, tickets are created with status `new`, and tickets are expected to have a `closed` state. Further, the default reports/queries treat any state other than `closed` as an open state. 82 83 While creating or modifying a ticket workfow, `contrib/workflow/workflow_parser.py` may be useful. It can create `.dot` files that [http://www.graphviz.org GraphViz] understands to provide a visual description of the workflow. 84 85 This can be done as follows (your install path may be different). 86 {{{ 87 cd /var/local/trac_devel/contrib/workflow/ 88 sudo ./showworkflow /srv/trac/PlannerSuite/conf/trac.ini 89 }}} 90 And then open up the resulting `trac.pdf` file created by the script (it will be in the same directory as the `trac.ini` file). 91 92 After you have changed a workflow, you need to restart apache for the changes to take effect. This is important, because the changes will still show up when you run your script, but all the old workflow steps will still be there until the server is restarted. 93 94 == Example: Adding optional Testing with Workflow == 95 96 By adding the following to your [ticket-workflow] section of trac.ini you get optional testing. When the ticket is in new, accepted or needs_work status you can choose to submit it for testing. When it's in the testing status the user gets the option to reject it and send it back to needs_work, or pass the testing and send it along to closed. If they accept it then it gets automatically marked as closed and the resolution is set to fixed. Since all the old work flow remains, a ticket can skip this entire section. 97 98 {{{ 99 testing = new,accepted,needs_work -> testing 100 testing.name = Submit to reporter for testing 101 testing.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY 102 103 reject = testing -> needs_work 104 reject.name = Failed testing, return to developer 105 106 pass = testing -> closed 107 pass.name = Passes Testing 108 pass.operations = set_resolution 109 pass.set_resolution = fixed 110 }}} 111 112 == Example: Limit the resolution options for a new ticket == 113 114 The above resolve_new operation allows you to set the possible resolutions for a new ticket. By modifying the existing resolve action and removing the new status from before the `->` we then get two resolve actions. One with limited resolutions for new tickets, and then the regular one once a ticket is accepted. 115 116 {{{ 117 resolve_new = new -> closed 118 resolve_new.name = resolve 119 resolve_new.operations = set_resolution 120 resolve_new.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY 121 resolve_new.set_resolution = invalid,wontfix,duplicate 122 123 resolve = assigned,accepted,reopened -> closed 124 resolve.operations = set_resolution 125 resolve.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY 126 }}} 127 128 == Advanced Ticket Workflow Customization == 129 130 If the customization above is not extensive enough for your needs, you can extend the workflow using plugins. These plugins can provide additional operations for the workflow (like code_review), or implement side-effects for an action (such as triggering a build) that may not be merely simple state changes. Look at [trac:source:trunk/sample-plugins/workflow sample-plugins/workflow] for a few simple examples to get started. 131 132 But if even that is not enough, you can disable the !ConfigurableTicketWorkflow component and create a plugin that completely replaces it. 133 134 == some ideas for next steps == 135 136 New enhancement ideas for the workflow system should be filed as enhancement tickets against the `ticket system` component. If desired, add a single-line link to that ticket here. 137 138 If you have a response to the comments below, create an enhancement ticket, and replace the description below with a link to the ticket. 139 140 * the "operation" could be on the nodes, possible operations are: 141 * '''preops''': automatic, before entering the state/activity 142 * '''postops''': automatic, when leaving the state/activity 143 * '''actions''': can be chosen by the owner in the list at the bottom, and/or drop-down/pop-up together with the default actions of leaving the node on one of the arrows. 144 This appears to add complexity without adding functionality; please provide a detailed example where these additions allow something currently impossible to implement. 145 146 * operations could be anything: sum up the time used for the activity, or just write some statistical fields like 147 A workflow plugin can add an arbitrary workflow operation, so this is already possible. 148 149 * set_actor should be an operation allowing to set the owner, e.g. as a "preop": 150 * either to a role, a person 151 * entered fix at define time, or at run time, e.g. out of a field, or select. 152 This is either duplicating the existing `set_owner` operation, or needs to be clarified. 153 154 * Actions should be selectable based on the ticket type (different Workflows for different tickets) 155 This is becoming a frequent request, with clear usecases. The closest the current implementation will allow is to have a plugin provide a `triage` action that sets the next state based on the ticket type, so a `new` ticket would move to `new_task`, `new_defect`, etc., and the workflow graph would separate at that point.
