Book Image

Jira 8 Administration Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Patrick Li
Book Image

Jira 8 Administration Cookbook - Third Edition

By: Patrick Li

Overview of this book

Jira is a project management tool used widely by organizations to plan, track, and release software. Jira administrators are at the heart of these processes and need to know how to successfully administer and customize Jira offerings. This updated Jira 8 Administration Cookbook demonstrates how to efficiently work with Jira Core and Jira Service Desk. The book starts with a variety of recipes to help you manage users and workflows. You'll learn how to set up custom forms and capture important data with custom fields and screens. Next, you'll gain insights into the latest email capabilities, which will assist you with everything from managing outgoing email rules to processing incoming emails for automated issue creation. Later, you'll be guided through running scripts to automate tasks, getting easy access to logs, and even working with tools to troubleshoot problems. The book will also ensure you understand how to integrate Jira with Slack, set up SSO with Google, and delegate administrator permissions. Finally, a dedicated section on Jira Service Desk will enable you to set up and customize your own support portal, work with internal teams to solve problems, and achieve optimized services with Service Level Agreement (SLA). By the end of this book, you'll have the skills you need to extend and customize your Jira implementation effectively.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Creating your own custom field types

All custom fields that come out-of-the-box with Jira have predefined purposes, such as the text field, which allows users to type in some simple text. It will often be useful to have a specialized custom field that does exactly what you need. Unfortunately, this often requires custom development efforts.

However, there is an add-on that provides a custom field type that lets you use Groovy scripts to power its logic.

In this recipe, we will look at how to create a custom field that uses a Groovy script to display the total number of comments on any given issue.

Getting ready

For this recipe, we need to have the ScriptRunner for Jira add-on installed. You can download it from the following...