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 => $id,
)->new->retrieve;
unless ($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 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
- requestors
-
This is a list attribute (for explanation of list attributes, see LIST ATTRIBUTE PROPERTIES in RT::Client::REST::Object). Contains e-mail addresses of the requestors.
- 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.
- starts
- started
- due
- resolved
- told
- time_estimated
- time_worked
- time_left
- last_updated
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 with the exception of RT::Client::REST, which is GPLed.