Transition parent issue (Deprecated)
This post-function has been deprecated and replaced by Transition Issue(s). It could be removed at any time. You can still use it, but it is highly recommended that you update any workflows that use this post-function.
A workflow post-function that triggers a transition on the parent issue of the current issue.
When you add this post-function to a transition and trigger it, the add-on will trigger the first transition encountered, applicable to the parent issue and specified workflow, if any. You might want to specify multiple transitions if the parent issue can be in different statuses.
To add the 'Transition parent issue' post-function to a transition:
Click Edit for the workflow that has the transition you wish to configure the post-function on.
In the Workflow Designer, select the transition.
ClickÂ
Post FunctionsÂ
in the properties panel.ClickÂ
Add post function
.SelectÂ
Transition parent issue
 from the list of post-functions.ClickÂ
Add
 to add the post-function on the transition.Specify transition(s) either in the table or as a result of the calculated transitions Groovy script. See below for more information.Â
ClickÂ
Add
 to add the post-function to the transition.
Transition(s)
Trigger one of the following transitions
Input the transition name(s)
 or id(s)
 and optionally the workflow name manually or using the Transition picker. If you do not specify the workflow name (manually) the app will not check for a specific workflow. The app triggers the first transition specified in the table that is applicable to the issue in context.
To pick a transition using the Transition picker:
Click Transition picker
Choose a workflow from Workflow name
Select a transition from the list of transitions displayed
Select the checkbox "Workflow Name",  to target a transition in a specific workflow. Leave it unchecked to trigger the transition of any workflow.
Finally, click on either
Use Transition Name
 - recommended if you want the post-function to search for the transition to trigger by name, which is useful when targeting multiple workflows.Use Transition ID
 - if you want to differentiate between transitions that bear the same name.
Click
Add
.
To remove a transition: Click on the Remove
 link for the specific transition
To reorder transitions:Â Select and move the transition in the table to reorder the list
Trigger a calculated transition
Input a Groovy script that returns transition name(s)
 or id(s)
 and optionally the workflow name. To specify the workflow name, write a Groovy script that returns the transition name
 or ID
 along with the workflow name separated by @@.Â
Eg:Â "Done@@HR workflow".
To specify multiple transitions, write a Groovy script that returns a collection of transition names
 or IDs
. Eg:Â ["Done","44@@Employee workflow"]
Options
Skip workflow conditions: Ignores the workflow conditions on the triggered transition, if any.
Skip workflow validators: Ignores the workflow validators on the triggered transition, if any.
Skip permission check: Skips the check whether the current or the "run as" user (explained below) has the appropriate permissions to trigger the transition.
Transition screen
If the triggered transition on the parent issue uses a transition screen you might want/need to provide a value for fields(such as Resolution) present on the screen. Look below to know how to add/set/remove fields.
To add a field: Select a field from the list of fields and click on
 Add.
To Remove an added field: Click onÂ
Remove
 to remove a field.To Set a field value:Â
Copy value from current issue: Copies the field value(s) from the current issue.
Set field value to constant or Groovy template: You can set the field to a constant value that can optionally include the result of a Groovy template. For example:Â
To set the Fix Version/s to 2.0, you can specifyÂ
2.0
 in the value box.ÂTo set the Description of the issue, you can specifyÂ
This bug has been raised by <%=issue.get("reporter").getName()%> with <%=issue.get("priority").getName()%> priority. Act accordingly.Â
in the value box.
Set field value from Groovy Expression: You can set the field to the result of a Groovy expression. For example: To set the Assignee to the Reporter of the issue, you can specifyÂ
issue.get("reporter")Â
in the value box.
See the Expected Value tab of the Groovy help editor
 or refer to the documentation to know more about the expected value for the selected field.Â
Note that you can also set fields that do not appear on the transition screen.
Likewise, you might also want to provide a comment during that transition:
Comment type:Â The text of the comment can either be a
Text or Groovy template: A fixed text that can include a Groovy template markup that can be used as the comment body. For example,Â
The issue will be resolved on or before <%= issue.duedate%> by <%issue.assignee%>.
Groovy Expression: A Groovy expression whose return value (of type String) will be used as the comment body. For example,Â
issue.get("description")
 will add the description of the issue to the issue as a comment.
Comment text: Text that will be used as the comment body, which can either be a fixed text or the result of a Groovy expression or the result of a Groovy template.
Comment visibility
Restrict to Group: Restricts the visibility of the comment to a specified group. When you select a valid group name in theÂ
Restrict to Group
 field, the comment will be visible only to the members of the specified group. For no restriction, leave the field blank.Restrict to Project Role: Restricts the visibility of the comment to a selected project role. When you select a project role from the drop-downÂ
Restrict to Project Role
 field, the comment will be visible only to the members of the selected project role. For no restriction, leave the field blank.
Run as user
Run as user: Select one of the following options to set the author of the action performed by this post-function as:
Current user: The user transitioning the issue.
Specific user: The user specified in the select-list provided. Start typing into the field to select a user from the list of auto-suggestions.
User in field: The user specified in a user picker field of the issue being transitioned. Select one of the user fields from the list of available options in the field provided.
User from script: The user returned by the Groovy script specified in
Script
. This script should return either the Username of the user or an ApplicationUser object.Examples:
"jdoe"
- Usernameissue.get("assignee")
- the current issue's Assignee
Conditional execution
To execute this post-function based on the result of a groovy expression see Conditional execution/validation using a Groovy expression.
Error Handling
By default, all errors (Java Exceptions) raised by this post-function, including those raised by custom Groovy scripts, will be logged in the JIRA log file but will not be reported to the user and will not prevent the transition from completing.Â
However, when designing new workflows or troubleshooting them, it is more convenient to be notified immediately of any such error during the execution of the transition. On development and staging Jira instances, you can activate error reporting for all JMWE post-functions on the JMWE configuration page, and it is recommended to do so. But on production Jira instances, you might want to show errors only for the post-function(s) being worked on, in order to avoid disrupting other workflows. To make errors raised by the current post-function prevent the transition from completing and show the error in the browser, select Make transition fail when an error occurs in this post-function
.
You are viewing the documentation for Jira Data Center / Server.
Â