go-jira-ui is an ncurses command line tool for accessing JIRA.
It is built around the excellent go-jira and termui libraries.
It aims to be similar to familiar tools like vim, tig, and less.
In order to use this, you should configure an 'endpoint' as per the go-jira documentation:
$ cat ~/.jira.d/config.yml
---
endpoint: https://jira.example.com/
user: bob # if not same as $USER
This should be all that's needed to get going.
# Make sure you have GOPATH and GOBIN set appropriately first:
# eg:
# export GOPATH=$HOME/go
# export GOBIN=$GOPATH/bin
# mkdir -p $GOPATH
# export PATH=$PATH:$GOBIN
go get -v github.com/mikepea/go-jira-ui/jira-ui
- Supply your own JQL queries to view
- Label view of a given query, to see categorisations easily
- Sorting of queries; supply your own custom sorts
- View tickets from the query
- Drill into sub/blocker/related/mentioned tickets in details view
- Show open tickets in an Epic.
- Basic compatibility with go-jira commandline and options loading
- Label adding/removing
- Comment, watch, assign and take implemented via :-mode commands
At present, edit will exit after the update. This is a workaround to an implementation issue, being tracked in #8
jira-ui
is intended to mirror the options of go-jira's jira
tool, where
useful:
jira-ui # opens up in Query List page. Default interface.
jira-ui ISSUE # opens up Ticket Show page, with ISSUE loaded
jira-ui ls -q JQL # opens up Ticket List page, with results of JQL loaded.
jira-ui -h # help page
Actions:
<enter> - select query/ticket
r - mark ticket for ranking (use naviation to change rank, <enter> to submit)
L - Label view (query results page only)
E - Edit ticket
S - Select sort order (query results page only)
w - Watch the selected ticket
W - Unwatch the selected ticket
v - Vote for the selected ticket
V - Remove vote on the selected ticket
N - Next ticket in results
P - Previous ticket in results
h - show help page
Commands (like vim/tig/less):
:comment {single-line-comment} - add a short comment to ticket
:label {labels} - add labels to selected ticket
:label add/remove {labels} - add/remove labels to selected ticket
:take - assign ticket to self
:assign {user} - assign ticket to {user}
:unassign - unassign ticket
:watch [add/remove] [watcher] - watch ticket (optionally as a different user)
:vote - vote for the selected ticket
:unvote - remove vote for the selected ticket
:view {ticket} - display {ticket}
:query {JQL} - display results of JQL
:search|so {text} - quick search for {text} in open tickets
:search-all|sa {text} - quick search for {text} in all tickets
:spo {project} {text} - quick search for {text} in open {project} tickets
:spa {project} {text} - quick search for {text} in all {project} tickets
:help - show help page
:<up> - select previous command
:quit or :q - quit
Searching:
/{regex} - search down
?{regex} - search up
Navigation:
up/k - previous line
down/j - next line
C-f/<space> - next page
C-b - previous page
} - next paragraph/section/fast-move
{ - previous paragraph/section/fast-move
n - next search match
g - go to top of page
G - go to bottom of page
q - go back / quit
C-c/Q - quit
It is very much recommended to read the go-jira documentation, particularly surrounding the .jira.d configuration directories. go-jira-ui uses this same mechanism, so can be used to load per-project defaults. It also leverages the templating engine, so you can customise the view of both the query output (use 'jira_ui_list' template), and the issue 'view' template.
go-jira-ui reads its own jira-ui-config.yml
file in these jira.d
directories, as not to pollute the go-jira config. You can add additional
queries & sort orderings to the top-level Query page:
$ cat ~/jira.d/jira-ui-config.yml:
sorts:
- name: "sort by vote count"
jql: "ORDER BY votes DESC"
queries:
- name: "alice assigned"
jql: "assignee = alice AND resolution = Unresolved"
- name: "bob assigned"
jql: "assignee = bob AND resolution = Unresolved"
- name: "unresolved must-do"
jql: "labels = 'must-do' AND resolution = Unresolved AND ( project = 'OPS' OR project = 'INFRA')"
Learning JQL is highly recommended, the Atlassian Advanced Searching page is a good place to start.