wiki:TracWorkflow

Version 3 (modified by trac, 8 years ago) (diff)

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The Trac Ticket Workflow System

The Trac ticket system provides a configurable workflow.

The Default Ticket Workflow

Environments upgraded from 0.10

When you run trac-admin <env> upgrade, your trac.ini will be modified to include a [ticket-workflow] section. The workflow configured in this case is the original workflow, so that ticket actions will behave like they did in 0.10:

There are some significant caveats in this, such as accepting a ticket sets it to 'assigned' state, and assigning a ticket sets it to 'new' state. So you will probably want to migrate to "basic" workflow, see contrib/workflow/migrate_original_to_basic.py.

Environments created with 0.11

When a new environment is created, a default workflow is configured in your trac.ini. This workflow is the basic workflow, such as specified in basic-workflow.ini, which is somewhat different from the workflow of the 0.10 releases:

Additional Ticket Workflows

There are example workflows provided in the Trac source tree, see 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. However, if you have existing tickets then there may be issues if those tickets have states that are not in the new workflow.

Here are some diagrams of the above examples.

Basic Ticket Workflow Customization

Note: Ticket "statuses" or "states" are not separately defined. The states a ticket can be in are automatically generated by the transitions defined in a workflow. Therefore, creating a new ticket state simply requires defining a state transition in the workflow that starts or ends with that state.

Create a [ticket-workflow] section in trac.ini. Within this section, each entry is an action that may be taken on a ticket. For example, consider the accept action from simple-workflow.ini:

accept = new,accepted -> accepted
accept.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY
accept.operations = set_owner_to_self

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). The accept.permissions line specifies what permissions the user must have to use this action. 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.

The available operations are:

  • del_owner -- Clear the owner field.
  • set_owner -- Sets the owner to the selected or entered owner. Defaults to the current user. When [ticket] restrict_owner = true, the select will be populated with users that have TICKET_MODIFY permission and an authenticated session.
    • actionname.set_owner may optionally be set to a comma delimited list of users that will be used to populate the select, or a single user.
  • set_owner_to_self -- Sets the owner to the logged in user.
  • del_resolution -- Clears the resolution field.
  • set_resolution -- Sets the resolution to the selected value.
    • actionname.set_resolution may optionally be set to a comma delimited list or a single value. Example:
      resolve_new = new -> closed
      resolve_new.name = resolve
      resolve_new.operations = set_resolution
      resolve_new.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY
      resolve_new.set_resolution = invalid,wontfix
      
  • leave_status -- Displays "leave as <current status>" and makes no change to the ticket.
  • reset_workflow -- Resets the status of tickets that are in states no longer defined.

Note: Specifying conflicting operations, such as set_owner and del_owner, has unspecified results.

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:

resolve_accepted = accepted -> closed
resolve_accepted.name = resolve
resolve_accepted.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY
resolve_accepted.operations = set_resolution

For actions that should be available in all states, * may be used in place of the state. The obvious example is the leave action:

leave = * -> *
leave.operations = leave_status
leave.default = 1

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. If not specified for an action, .default is 0. The value may be negative.

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.

The special _reset action is added by default for tickets that are in states that are no longer defined. This allows tickets to be individually "repaired" after the workflow is changed, although it's recommended that the administrator perform the action by batch modifying the affected tickets. By default the _reset action is available to users with the TICKET_ADMIN permission and reset tickets are put in the new state. The default _reset action is equivalent to the following [ticket-workflow] action definition:

_reset = -> new
_reset.name = reset
_reset.operations = reset_workflow
_reset.permissions = TICKET_ADMIN
_reset.default = 0

Since milestone:1.0.3 the _reset action can be customized by redefining the implicit action. For example, to allow anyone with TICKET_MODIFY to perform the _reset action, the workflow action would need to be defined:

_reset = -> new
_reset.name = reset
_reset.operations = reset_workflow
_reset.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY
_reset.default = 0

Workflow Visualization

Workflows can be visualized by rendering them on the wiki using the Workflow macro.

Workflows can also be visualized using the contrib/workflow/workflow_parser.py script. The script outputs .dot files that GraphViz understands. The script can be used as follows (your install path may be different):

cd /var/local/trac_devel/contrib/workflow/
sudo ./showworkflow /srv/trac/PlannerSuite/conf/trac.ini

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.

After you have changed a workflow, you need to restart your webserver for the changes to take effect.

Example: Adding optional Testing with Workflow

By adding the following to your [ticket-workflow] section of trac.ini you get optional testing. When the ticket has status new, accepted or needs_work, 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 is 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.

testing = new,accepted,needs_work,assigned,reopened -> testing
testing.name = Submit to reporter for testing
testing.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY

reject = testing -> needs_work
reject.name = Failed testing, return to developer

pass = testing -> closed
pass.name = Passes Testing
pass.operations = set_resolution
pass.set_resolution = fixed

How to combine the tracopt.ticket.commit_updater with the testing workflow

The tracopt.ticket.commit_updater is the optional component that replaces the old trac-post-commit-hook, in Trac 0.12.

By default it reacts on some keywords found in changeset message logs like close, fix etc. and performs the corresponding workflow action.

If you have a more complex workflow, like the testing stage described above and you want the closes keyword to move the ticket to the testing status instead of the closed status, you need to adapt the code a bit.

Have a look at the Trac 0.11 recipe for the trac-post-commit-hook, this will give you some ideas about how to modify the component.

Example: Add simple optional generic review state

Sometimes Trac is used in situations where "testing" can mean different things to different people so you may want to create an optional workflow state that is between the default workflow's assigned and closed states, but does not impose implementation-specific details. The only new state you need to add for this is a reviewing state. A ticket may then be "submitted for review" from any state that it can be reassigned. If a review passes, you can re-use the resolve action to close the ticket, and if it fails you can re-use the reassign action to push it back into the normal workflow.

The new reviewing state along with its associated review action looks like this:

review = new,assigned,reopened -> reviewing
review.operations = set_owner
review.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY

Then, to integrate this with the default Trac 0.11 workflow, you also need to add the reviewing state to the accept and resolve actions:

accept = new,reviewing -> assigned
[…]
resolve = new,assigned,reopened,reviewing -> closed

Optionally, you can also add a new action that allows you to change the ticket's owner without moving the ticket out of the reviewing state. This enables you to reassign review work without pushing the ticket back to the new status:

reassign_reviewing = reviewing -> *
reassign_reviewing.name = reassign review
reassign_reviewing.operations = set_owner
reassign_reviewing.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY

The full [ticket-workflow] configuration will thus look like this:

[ticket-workflow]
accept = new,reviewing -> assigned
accept.operations = set_owner_to_self
accept.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY
leave = * -> *
leave.default = 1
leave.operations = leave_status
reassign = new,assigned,accepted,reopened -> assigned
reassign.operations = set_owner
reassign.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY
reopen = closed -> reopened
reopen.operations = del_resolution
reopen.permissions = TICKET_CREATE
resolve = new,assigned,reopened,reviewing -> closed
resolve.operations = set_resolution
resolve.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY
review = new,assigned,reopened -> reviewing
review.operations = set_owner
review.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY
reassign_reviewing = reviewing -> *
reassign_reviewing.operations = set_owner
reassign_reviewing.name = reassign review
reassign_reviewing.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY

Example: Limit the resolution options for a new ticket

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.

resolve_new = new -> closed
resolve_new.name = resolve
resolve_new.operations = set_resolution
resolve_new.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY
resolve_new.set_resolution = invalid,wontfix,duplicate

resolve = assigned,accepted,reopened -> closed
resolve.operations = set_resolution
resolve.permissions = TICKET_MODIFY

Advanced Ticket Workflow Customization

If the customizations above do not meet your needs, you can extend the workflow with plugins. 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 sample-plugins/workflow for a few examples to get started.

But if even that is not enough, you can disable the ConfigurableTicketWorkflow component and create a plugin that completely replaces it.

Adding Workflow States to Milestone Progress Bars

If you add additional states to your workflow, you may want to customize your milestone progress bars as well. See TracIni.

Ideas for next steps

New enhancement ideas for the workflow system should be filed as enhancement tickets against the ticket system component. You can also document ideas on the TracIdeas/TracWorkflow page. Also look at the AdvancedTicketWorkflowPlugin as it provides experimental operations.

Some of the ideas described here are originally proposed in NewWorkflow.