Provided by: librt-client-rest-perl_0.50-1_all bug

NAME

       RT::Client::REST::Ticket -- this object represents a ticket.

SYNOPSIS

         my $rt = RT::Client::REST->new(server => $ENV{RTSERVER});

         # Create a new ticket:
         my $ticket = RT::Client::REST::Ticket->new(
           rt => $rt,
           queue => "General",
           subject => $subject,
         )->store(text => "This is the initial text of the ticket");
         print "Created a new ticket, ID ", $ticket->id, "\n";

         # Update
         my $ticket = RT::Client::REST::Ticket->new(
           rt  => $rt,
           id  => $id,
           priority => 10,
         )->store;

         # Retrieve
         my $ticket => RT::Client::REST::Ticket->new(
           rt => $rt,
           id => $id,
         )->retrieve;

         unless ($ticket->owner eq $me) {
           $ticket->steal;     # Give me more work!
         }

DESCRIPTION

       RT::Client::REST::Ticket is based on RT::Client::REST::Object.  The representation allows
       one to retrieve, edit, comment on, and create tickets in RT.

ATTRIBUTES

       id
         This is the numeric ID of the ticket.

       queue
         This is the name of the queue (not numeric id).

       owner
         Username of the owner.

       creator
         Username of RT user who created the ticket.

       subject
         Subject of the ticket.

       status
         The status is usually one of the following: "new", "open", "resolved", "stalled",
         "rejected", and "deleted".  However, custom RT installations sometimes add their own
         statuses.

       priority
         Ticket priority.  Usually a numeric value.

       initial_priority
       final_priority
       requestor
         This is the attribute for setting the requestor on ticket creation.  If you use
         requestors to do this in 3.8, the recipient may not receive an autoreply from RT because
         the ticket is initially created as the user your REST session is connected as.

         It is a list attribute (for explanation of list attributes, see LIST ATTRIBUTE
         PROPERTIES in RT::Client::REST::Object).

       requestors
         This contains e-mail addresses of the requestors.

         It is a list attribute (for explanation of list attributes, see LIST ATTRIBUTE
         PROPERTIES in RT::Client::REST::Object).

       cc
         A list of e-mail addresses used to notify people of 'correspond' actions.

       admin_cc
         A list of e-mail addresses used to notify people of all actions performed on a ticket.

       created
         Time at which ticket was created. Note that this is an immutable field and therefore the
         value cannot be changed..

       starts
       started
       due
       resolved
       told
       time_estimated
       time_worked
       time_left
       last_updated

   Attributes storing a time
       The attributes which store a time stamp have an additional accessor with the suffix
       "_datetime" (eg., "resolved_datetime").  This allows you can get and set the stored value
       as a DateTime object.  Internally, it is converted into the date-time string which RT
       uses, which is assumed to be in UTC.

DB METHODS

       For full explanation of these, please see "DB METHODS" in RT::Client::REST::Object
       documentation.

       retrieve
         Retrieve RT ticket from database.

       store ([text => $text])
         Create or update the ticket.  When creating a new ticket, optional 'text' parameter can
         be supplied to set the initial text of the ticket.

       search
         Search for tickets that meet specific conditions.

TICKET-SPECIFIC METHODS

       comment (message => $message, %opts)
         Comment on this ticket with message $message.  %opts is a list of key-value pairs as
         follows:

         attachments
           List of filenames (an array reference) that should be attached to the ticket along
           with the comment.

         cc
           List of e-mail addresses to send carbon copies to (an array reference).

         bcc
           List of e-mail addresses to send blind carbon copies to (an array reference).

       correspond (message => $message, %opts)
         Add correspondence to the ticket.  Takes exactly the same arguments as the comment
         method above.

       attachments
         Get attachments associated with this ticket.  What is returned is an object of type
         RT::Client::REST::SearchResult which can then be used to get at objects of type
         RT::Client::REST::Attachment.

       transactions
         Get transactions associated with this ticket.  Optionally, you can specify exactly what
         types of transactions you want listed, for example:

           my $result = $ticket->transactions(type => [qw(Comment Correspond)]);

         Please reference RT::Client::REST documentation for the full list of valid transaction
         types.

         Return value is an object of type RT::Client::REST::SearchResult which can then be used
         to iterate over transaction objects (RT::Client::REST::Transaction).

       take
         Take this ticket.  If you already the owner of this ticket,
         "RT::Client::REST::Object::NoopOperationException" will be thrown.

       untake
         Untake this ticket.  If Nobody is already the owner of this ticket,
         "RT::Client::REST::Object::NoopOperationException" will be thrown.

       steal
         Steal this ticket.  If you already the owner of this ticket,
         "RT::Client::REST::Object::NoopOperationException" will be thrown.

CUSTOM FIELDS

       This class inherits 'cf' method from RT::Client::REST::Object.  To create a ticket with a
       bunch of custom fields, use the following approach:

         RT::Client::REST::Ticket->new(
           rt => $rt,
           # blah blah
           cf => {
             'field one' => $value1,
             'field two' => $another_value,
           },
         )->store;

       Some more examples:

         # Update a custom field value:
         $ticket->cf('field one' => $value1);
         $ticket->store;

         # Get a custom field value:
         my $another value = $ticket->cf('field two');

         # Get a list of ticket's custom field names:
         my @custom_fields = $ticket->cf;

INTERNAL METHODS

       rt_type
         Returns 'ticket'.

SEE ALSO

       RT::Client::REST, RT::Client::REST::Object, RT::Client::REST::Attachment,
       RT::Client::REST::SearchResult, RT::Client::REST::Transaction.

AUTHOR

       Dmitri Tikhonov <dtikhonov@yahoo.com>

LICENSE

       Perl license.