Book Image

JIRA Development Cookbook

Book Image

JIRA Development Cookbook

Overview of this book

JIRA provides issue tracking and project tracking for software development teams to improve code quality and the speed of development.This book is your one-stop resource to master JIRA extension and customization. You will learn how to create your own JIRA plugins, customize the look and feel of your JIRA UI, work with Workflows, Issues, Custom Fields, and much more.The book starts with recipes on simplifying the Plugin development process followed by a complete chapter dedicated to the Plugin Framework to master Plugins in JIRA.Then we will move on to writing custom field plugins to create new field types or custom searchers. We then learn how to program and customize Workflows to transform JIRA into a user-friendly system. Reporting support in an application like JIRA is inevitable! With so much data spanning across different projects, issues, etc and a lot of project planning done on it, we will cover how to work on reports and gadgets to get customized data according to our needs. We will then look at customizing the various searching aspects of JIRA such as JQL, searching in plugins, managing filters, and so on. Then the book steers towards programming Issues, i.e. creating/editing/deleting issues, creating new issue operations, managing the various other operations available on issues via the JIRA APIs etc. In the latter half of the book, you will learn how to customize JIRA by adding new tabs, menus, and web items, communicate with JIRA via the REST, SOAP or XML/RPC interfaces, and work with the JIRA database.The book ends with a chapter on useful and general JIRA recipes.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
JIRA Development Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgment
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Overriding validation of custom fields


We have seen how to write a custom field and set its options programmatically. We also discussed how the value set on a multi-valued custom field is validated against its set of pre-configured options. If the value doesn't belong to it, the validation fails and the issue can't be created or updated.

But what if we have a scenario where we need to suppress this validation? What if we need to add values to an issue which doesn't come from its pre-configured options? Normally, you would add this to the options programmatically, as we've seen before but what if we don't want to do this due to some reason? This is when you can suppress the validation in your custom field.

Getting ready

Create your custom field, as we have seen in the first recipe of this chapter.

How to do it...

All you need to do here is to suppress the validation happening in the original parent custom field if you are extending an existing custom field type like MultiSelectCFType. The following...