Fetch your open issues from your Jira board and quickly create a new branch with the issue number
MIT License
pip install jirator
jirator will look in ~/.jirator/config
for a configuration file, which will specify server to use, credentials for the server and what issue statuses jirator should consider as "open" issues (i.e. the ones that will be shown for you).
Parts of the configuration file is meant to be used by you as a user, and parts of it should only be modified by the application itself. The example config shows the fields that you can change without affecting the inner workings of the application.
{
"server": "http://localhost:2990/jira",
"username": "fredsusername",
"password": "fredspassword",
"status": ["TO DO","IN PROGRESS","ON HOLD", "IN REVIEW", "OPEN"]
}
All commands require that you are standing in your project root and have intialized a git repository, otherwise no git actions will be performed.
Usage: jirator [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Options:
-v, --verbose enable debug logging
--version Show the version and exit.
--help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
assign
work
jirator work
, and then select the issue you wish to work on. jirator
will call git checkout -b [issue]
for you automatically.
jirator assign [issue]
If you haven't configured which transition group / workflow id to use as an "in progress" status, jirator
will fetch a list of available transitions to use, and you can select a default id to use in the future. jirator
will then checkout a new branch for you automatically.
Contributions are welcome. Note that all contributions are subject to the license of this project.
atlas-run
Run the following command in the root path:
python setup.py sdist
install locally:
pip install (--user) /path/to/tarfile