Provided by: libsvn-hooks-perl_1.31-1_all bug

NAME

       SVN::Hooks::CheckJira - Integrate Subversion with the JIRA ticketing system.

VERSION

       version 1.31

DESCRIPTION

       This SVN::Hooks plugin requires that any Subversion commits affecting some parts of the
       repository structure must make reference to valid JIRA issues in the commit log message.
       JIRA issues are referenced by their keys which consists of a sequence of uppercase letters
       separated by an hyfen from a sequence of digits. E.g., CDS-123, RT-1, and SVN-97.

       It's active in the "pre-commit" and/or the "post-commit" hook.

       It's configured by the following directives.

   CHECK_JIRA_CONFIG(BASEURL, LOGIN, PASSWORD [, REGEXP [, REGEXP]])
       This directive specifies how to connect and to authenticate to the JIRA server. BASEURL is
       the base URL of the JIRA server, usually, something like "http://jira.example.com/jira".
       LOGIN and PASSWORD are the credentials of a JIRA user who has browsing rights to the JIRA
       projects that will be referenced in the commit logs.

       The fourth argument is an optional qr/Regexp/ object. It will be used to match against the
       commit logs in order to extract the list of JIRA issue keys. By default, the JIRA keys are
       looked for in the whole commit log, which is equivalent to qr/(.*)/. Sometimes this can be
       suboptimal because the user can introduce in the message some text that inadvertently
       looks like a JIRA issue key whithout being so. With this argument, the log message is
       matched against the REGEXP and only the first matched group (i.e., the part of the message
       captured by the first parenthesis ($1)) is used to look for JIRA issue keys.

       The fifth argument is another optional qr/Regexp/ object. It is used to match JIRA project
       keys, which match qr/[A-Z]{2,}/ by default. However, since you can specify different
       patterns for JIRA project keys
       (<http://confluence.atlassian.com/display/JIRA/Configuring+Project+Keys>), you need to be
       able to specify this here too.

       The JIRA issue keys are extracted from the commit log (or the part of it specified by the
       REGEXP) with the following pattern: "qr/\b([A-Z]+-\d+)\b/g";

   CHECK_JIRA(REGEXP => {OPT => VALUE, ...})
       This directive tells how each part of the repository structure must be integrated with
       JIRA.

       During a commit, all files being changed are tested against the REGEXP of each CHECK_JIRA
       directive, in the order that they were called. If at least one changed file matches a
       regexp, the issues cited in the commit log are checked against their current status on
       JIRA according to the options specified after the REGEXP.

       The available options are the following:

       projects => 'PROJKEYS'
           By default, the commiter can reference any JIRA issue in the commit log. You can
           restrict the allowed keys to a set of JIRA projects by specifying a comma-separated
           list of project keys to this option.

       require => [01]
           By default, the log must reference at least one JIRA issue. You can make the reference
           optional by passing a false value to this option.

       valid => [01]
           By default, every issue referenced must be valid, i.e., it must exist on the JIRA
           server. You can relax this requirement by passing a false value to this option. (Why
           would you want to do that, though?)

       unresolved => [01]
           By default, every issue referenced must be unresolved, i.e., it must not have a
           resolution. You can relax this requirement by passing a false value to this option.

       by_assignee => [01]
           By default, the commiter can reference any valid JIRA issue. Passing a true value to
           this option you require that the commiter can only reference issues to which she is
           the current assignee.

       check_one => CODE-REF
           If the above checks aren't enough you can pass a code reference (subroutine) to this
           option. The subroutine will be called once for each referenced issue with three
           arguments:

           the JIRA::Client object used to talk to the JIRA server.
           the RemoteIssue object representing the issue.
           the SVN::Look object used to grok information about the commit.

           The subroutine must simply return with no value to indicate success and must die to
           indicate failure.

           Plese, read the JIRA::Client and SVN::Look modules documentation to understand how to
           use these objects.

       check_all => CODE-REF
           Sometimes checking each issue separatelly isn't enough. You may want to check some
           relation among all the referenced issues. In this case, pass a code reference to this
           option. It will be called once for the commit. Its first argument is the JIRA::Client
           object used to talk to the JIRA server. The following arguments are references to
           RemoteIssue objects for every referenced issue. The last argument is the SVN::Look
           object used to grok information about the commit. The subroutine must simply return
           with no value to indicate success and must die to indicate failure.

       check_all_svnlook => CODE-REF
           This check is the same as the previous one, except that the first argument passed to
           the routine is the SVN::Look object used to grok information about the commit. The
           rest of the arguments are the same.

       post_action => CODE-REF
           This is not a check, but an opportunity to perform some action after a successful
           commit. The code reference passed will be called once during the post-commit hook
           phase. Its first argument is the JIRA::Client object used to talk to the JIRA server.
           The second argument is the SVN::Look object that can be used to inspect all the
           information about the commit proper.  The following arguments are the JIRA keys
           mentioned in the commit log message. The value returned by the routine, if any, is
           ignored.

       exclude => REGEXP
           Normally you specify a CHECK_JIRA with a regex matching a root directory in the
           repository hierarchy. Sometimes you need to specify some subparts of that root
           directory that shouldn't be treated by this CHECK_JIRA directive. You can use this
           option to specify these exclusions by means of another regex.

       You can set defaults for these options using a CHECK_JIRA directive with the string
       'default' as a first argument, instead of a qr/Regexp/.

           # Set some defaults
           CHECK_JIRA(default => {
               projects    => 'CDS,TST',
               by_assignee => 1,
           });

           # Check if some commits are scheduled, i.e., if they reference
           # JIRA issues that have at least one fix version.

           sub is_scheduled {
               my ($jira, $issue, $svnlook) = @_;
               return scalar @{$issue->{fixVersions}};
           }
           CHECK_JIRA(qr/^(trunk|branches/fix)/ => {
               check_one   => \&is_scheduled,
           });

       Note that you need to call CHECK_JIRA at least once with a qr/Regexp/ in order to trigger
       the checks. A call for ('default' doesn't count. If you want to change defaults and force
       checks for every commit, do this:

           CHECK_JIRA(default => {projects => 'CDS'});
           CHECK_JIRA(qr/./);

       The 'post_action' pseudo-check can be used to interact with the JIRA server after a
       successful commit. For instance, you may want to add a comment to each refered issue like
       this:

           # This routine returns a closure that can be passed to
           # post_action.  The closure receives a string to be added as a
           # comment to each issue refered to by the commit message. The
           # commit info can be interpolated inside the comment using the
           # SVN::Look method names inside angle brackets.

           sub add_comment {
               my ($format) = @_;
               return sub {
                   my ($jira, $svnlook, @keys) = @_;
                   # Substitute keywords in the input comment with calls
                   # into the $svnlook reference
                   $format =~ s/\{(\w+)\}/"\$svnlook->$1()"/eeg;
                   for my $key (@keys) {
                       $jira->addComment($key, $format);
                   }
               }
           }

           CHECK_JIRA(qr/./ => {
               post_action => add_comment("Subversion Commit r{rev} by {author} on {date}\n{log_msg}")
           });

       You can use a generic CHECK_JIRA excluding specific directories from it using the
       "exclude" option like this:

           CHECK_JIRA(qr:^(trunk|branches/[^/]): => {
               exclude => qr:/documentation/:,
               # other options...
           });

   CHECK_JIRA_DISABLE
       This directive globally disables all CHECK_JIRA directives. It's useful, for instance,
       when your JIRA server must be taken down for maintenance and you don't want to reject
       Subversion commits in this period.

AUTHOR

       Gustavo L. de M. Chaves <gnustavo@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2015 by CPqD <www.cpqd.com.br>.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.