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Template engine for (currently) Jira and Email. Uses yaml and jinja2. It helps you create multiple (possibly cross-liked) jira issues and emails from a template.

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m-khvoinitsky/workflow-templater

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Intro

Template engine for (currently) Jira and Email. Uses yaml and jinja2. It helps you create multiple (possibly cross-linked) jira issues and emails from a template.

Table of Contents

Installation

Windows

  1. Download Workflow_Templater_${version}.exe from the latest release on Releases page.
  2. Install it.
  3. Now workflow-templater executable should be available from Windows Command Prompt (cmd.exe) and from Powershell.
  4. (Optional, recommended) Install Windows Terminal and use it instead of default console.

macOS

  1. Install python ≥ 3.10.
    • Using official Python installer:
      1. Install python ≥ 3.10 from https://python.org/ ("macOS 64-bit installer")
      2. Install CA certificates for python, execute in Terminal:
        /Applications/Python\ 3.7/Install\ Certificates.command
        
        Alternatively, you can double-click on Install Certificates.command in Finder
    • Or using Homebrew:
      brew install python
  2. pip3 install workflow-templater

Anything else (GNU/Linux, Cygwin, *nix, etc)

Using pip

  1. Make sure that python ≥ 3.10 is installed
  2. pip3 install workflow-templater

Using pipx

  1. pipx run workflow-templater

From source

  1. Clone this repo
  2. Install dependencies if required
    pip3 install -r requirements.txt
  3. You can execute the script directly:
    cd workflow_templater
    ./workflow_templater/__init__.py --help
    
    Or install/build/whatever it with
    python3 setup.py
    

Usage

See

workflow-templater --help

Configuration

To avoid typing same command line arguments each time, it is possible to specify them in configuration file. Configuration file location is OS-specific, to find out correct location for your os, execute workflow-templater --help, you'll see message "--config CONFIG overwrite config file path, default is ${location}" where ${location} is the location of configuration file on your OS. You can create this file and specify values of command-line arguments omitting -- and replacing - with _, for example, --jira-user j_wayne becomes jira_user: j_wayne, --dry-run becomes dry_run: true and so on. You can also use jinja2 in configuration file which evaluates using variables from itself.

Example ~/.config/workflow-templater/config.yaml:

dry_run: true
verbose: true
user: j_wayne
jira: https://jira.example.com/
jira_user: '{{ user }}'
email_user: '{{ user }}'
email_from: '{{ user }}@example.com'
email_smtp: 'smtp.example.com:587'
# avoid typing in the same password for jira and email
jira_keyring_service_name: 'MyCorp LDAP'
email_keyring_service_name: 'MyCorp LDAP'

Template description

Overview

  • Whole workflow template is a directory.

  • There should be one file with variables named 0_common.yaml, 00_common.yaml or common.yaml. Alternatively, you can name this file as you wish and specify its name with --vars argument.

  • There may be any amount of "issue" files:

    • ending with ".jira.yaml" for jira issue
      • All fields in each jira.issue file are send as is to Jira via API in fields fileld with the exception of following fields:
        • watchers: it's impossible to add watchers during create so it handled separately via this API method.
        • update: its content is sent in update via API
        • global special fields (see below)
    • ending with ".email.yaml" for email.
  • There may be optional file named mutate.py with function mutate which accepts variables, modifies them and returns the result wich can be used in templates.

    Basic example:

    def mutate(variables):
        variables['new_variable'] = f'{variables["old_var1"]} and {variables["old_var2"]}'
        return variables

    Security note: if you concerned that this feature introduces an ability to execute arbitrary code from the templates, that's correct. However, this is also possible with bare jinja templates (see pallets/jinja#549), so you should make sure that your templates come from trusted sources anyway.

  • Each "issue" file is yaml file where each string value is rendered with Jinja2 using variables from *common.yaml file.

  • Special variables available for use in jinja:

    • issuekey_self: Jira issue key or Message-ID of current issue or email.
    • issuekey_<name>: Jira issue key or Message-ID of issue or email named <name>. For example, for issue in filename something.jira.yaml this variable name would be issuekey_something and it can be used in all templates.
  • Global special fields:

    • foreach: list, create one issue per item in this list. List items should be strings or dicts (in case of dicts you must specify foreach_namevar too, see below). In case of strings, issuekey_ variable would be named issuekey_<name>_<list_value> Example:
      foreach:
      - Android
      - iOS
      summary: 'Release application for {{ item }}'
      ...
      would finally evaluate to following issues:
      summary: 'Release application for Android'
      ...
      summary: 'Release application for iOS'
      ...
    • foreach_fromvar: if content for foreach variable is shared between several templates, it's better to specify it in *common.yaml file and specify here the name of the variable in this file. Example: common.yaml:
      OSes:
      - Android
      - iOS
      ...
      build.jira.yaml:
      foreach_fromvar: OSes
      summary: 'Build clients for {{ item }}'
      ...
      release.jira.yaml:
      foreach_fromvar: OSes
      summary: 'Release application for {{ item }}'
      ...
    • foreach_key: if you don't like default variable name (item) for each item in foreach list, you may specify it here. Example
      foreach:
      - Android
      - iOS
      foreach_key: os
      summary: 'Release application for {{ os }}'
      ...
      would finally evaluate to following issues:
      summary: 'Release application for Android'
      ...
      summary: 'Release application for iOS'
      ...
    • foreach_namevar: when foreach is in use, workflow-templater would generate issuekey_ variable name as follows: issuekey_<name>_<list_value>. If you use dicts as foreach values, you need to specify key name in this dicts which will be appended to the end of this variable name. Example release.jira.yaml file:
      foreach:
      - name: Android
        date: !!timestamp 2019-10-24 06:30:00.0
      - name: iOS
        date: !!timestamp 2019-10-24 10:50:00.0
      foreach_namevar: name
      summary: 'Release application for {{ item.name }}'
      ...
      Now in any other (or the same) issue you can link to this issues as follows:
      summary: 'Notify community'
      description: |
        Android release task: {{ issuekey_release_Android }}
        iOS release task: {{ issuekey_release_iOS }}
    • if: if this variable value evaluates to empty string (''), false or no, this template will be completely ignored. Note: value for this variable is calculated for each item separately when foreach or foreach_fromvar is in use. Example:
      foreach:
      - Android
      - iOS
      foreach_key: os
      if: '{{ os in ["Android", "GNU/Linux"] }}'
      summary: 'Release application for {{ os }}'
      ...
      would finally evaluate to following issue (only one, obviously):
      summary: 'Release application for Android'
      ...

Examples

See basic release example for basic example.

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Template engine for (currently) Jira and Email. Uses yaml and jinja2. It helps you create multiple (possibly cross-liked) jira issues and emails from a template.

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