bugwarrior
is a command line utility for updating your local taskwarrior database from your forge issue trackers.
It currently supports the following remote resources:
Create a ~/.bugwarriorrc
file with the following contents.
# Example ~/.bugwarriorrc # # General stuff. [general] # Here you define a comma separated list of targets. Each of them must have a # section below determining their properties, how to query them, etc. The name # is just a symbol, and doesn't have any functional importance. targets = my_github, my_bitbucket, paj_bitbucket, moksha_trac, bz.redhat # log.level specifices the verbosity. The default is DEBUG. # log.level can be one of DEBUG, INFO, WARNING, ERROR, CRITICAL, DISABLED #log.level = DEBUG # If log.file is specified, output will be redirected there. If it remains # unspecified, output is sent to sys.stderr #log.file = /var/log/bugwarrior.log # The bitly username and api key are used to shorten URLs to the issues for your # task list. If you leave these options commented out, then the full URLs # will be used in your task list. #bitly.api_user = YOUR_USERNAME #bitly.api_key = YOUR_API_KEY # This is a github example. It says, "scrape every issue from every repository # on http://github.com/ralphbean. It doesn't matter if ralphbean owns the issue # or not." [my_github] service = github username = ralphbean default_priority = H # Note that login and username can be different. I can login as me, but # scrape issues from an organization's repos. login = ralphbean passw = OMG_LULZ # This is the same thing, but for bitbucket. Each target entry must have a # 'service' attribute which must be one of the supported services (like # 'github', 'bitbucket', 'trac', etc...). [my_bitbucket] service = bitbucket username = ralphbean default_priority = M # Here's another bitbucket one. Here we want to scrape the issues from repos of # another user, but only include them in the taskwarrior db if they're assigned # to me. [paj_bitbucket] service = bitbucket username = paj only_if_assigned = ralphbean default_priority = L # Here's an example of a trac target. Scrape every ticket and only include them # if 1) they're owned by me or 2) they're currently unassigned. # Note -- You must have the trac XML-RPC plugin installed and configured to work # over HTTP. [moksha_trac] service = trac trac.base_uri = fedorahosted.org/moksha trac.username = ralph trac.password = OMG_LULZ only_if_assigned = ralph also_unassigned = True default_priority = H # Here's an example of a bugzilla target. This will scrape every ticket # 1) that is not closed and 2) that [email protected] is either the # owner or reporter or is cc'd on. Bugzilla instances can be quite different # from one another so use this with caution and please report bugs so we can # make bugwarrior support more robust! [bz.redhat] service = bugzilla bugzilla.base_uri = bugzilla.redhat.com bugzilla.username = [email protected] bugzilla.password = OMG_LULZ # Here's an example of a megaplan target. [my_megaplan] service = megaplan hostname = example.megaplan.ru login = alice password = secret default_priority = H project_name = example # Here's an example of a jira project. The ``jira-python`` module is # a bit particular, and jira deployments, like Bugzilla, tend to be # reasonably customized. So YMMV. The ``base_uri`` must not have a # have a trailing slash. This will fetch comments and cases from # jira assigned to ``username`` where the status is not closed or # resolved. [jira.project] service = jira jira.base_uri = https://jira.example.org jira.username = ralph jira.password = OMG_LULZ # Here's an example of a teamlab target. [my_teamlab] service = teamlab hostname = teamlab.example.com login = alice password = secret project_name = example_teamlab # Here's an example of a redmine target. [my_redmine] service = redmine url = http://redmine.example.org/ key = c0c4c014cafebabe user_id = 7 project_name = redmine # Here's an example of an activecollab2 target. Note that this will only work # with ActiveCollab 2.x and *not* with ActiveCollab 3.x. # # You can obtain your user ID and API url by logging into ActiveCollab and # clicking on "Profile" and then "API Settings". When on that page, look # at the URL. The integer that appears after "/user/" is your user ID. # # Projects should be entered in a comma-separated list, with the project # id as the key and the name you'd like to use for the project in Taskwarrior # entered as the value. For example, if the project ID is 8 and the project's # name in ActiveCollab is "Amazing Website" then you might enter 8:amazing_website # # Note that due to limitations in the ActiveCollab API, there is no simple way # to get a list of all tasks you are responsible for in AC. Instead you need to # look at each ticket that you are subscribed to and check to see if your # user ID is responsible for the ticket/task. What this means is that if you # have 5 projects you want to query and each project has 20 tickets, you'll # make 100 API requests each time you run `bugwarrior-pull` [activecollab2] service = activecollab2 url = http://ac.example.org/api.php key = your-api-key user_id = 15 projects = 1:first_project, 5:another_project
Just run bugwarrior-pull
.
It's ideal to create a cron task like:
*/15 * * * * /usr/bin/bugwarrior-pull
Installing it from http://pypi.python.org/pypi/bugwarrior is easy with pip
:
$ pip install bugwarrior
Alternatively, you can use easy_install
if you prefer:
$ easy_install bugwarrior
You can find the source on github at http://github.com/ralphbean/bugwarrior. Either fork/clone if you plan to do development on bugwarrior, or you can simply download the latest tarball:
$ wget https://github.com/ralphbean/bugwarrior/tarball/master -O bugwarrior-latest.tar.gz $ tar -xzvf bugwarrior-latest.tar.gz $ cd ralphbean-bugwarrior-* $ python setup.py install
- Ralph Bean (primary author)
- Justin Forest (contributed support for RedMine, TeamLab, and MegaPlan, as well as some unicode help)
- Tycho Garen (contributed support for Jira)
- Kosta Harlan (contributed support for ActiveCollab2)
- Luke Macken (contributed some code cleaning)
- James Rowe (contributed to the docs)