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Introduction

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go-atlassian is a Go library that provides a simple and convenient way to interact with various Atlassian products' REST APIs. Atlassianarrow-up-right is a leading provider of software and tools for software development, project management, and collaboration. Some of the products that go-atlassian supports include Jira, Confluence, Jira Service Management, and more.

The go-atlassian library is designed to simplify the process of building Go applications that interact with Atlassian products. It provides a set of functions and data structures that can be used to easily send HTTP requests to the Atlassian APIs, parse the responses, and work with the data returned.


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🚀Features

  • Easy-to-use functions and data structures that abstract away much of the complexity of working with the APIs.

  • Comprehensive support for various Atlassian products' APIs.

  • Support for common operations like creating, updating, and deleting entities in Atlassian products.


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📁 Installation

If you do not have installed yet, you can find installation instructions . Please note that the package requires Go version 1.20 or later for module support.

To pull the most recent version of go-atlassian, use go get.


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📪 Packages

Then import the package into your project as you normally would. You can import the following packages:

Module
Path
URL's

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🔨 Usage

Before using the go-atlassian package, you need to have an Atlassian API key. If you do not have a key yet, you can sign up .

Create a client with your instance host and access token to start communicating with the Atlassian API's. In this example, we're going to instance a new Confluence Cloud client.

If you need to use a preconfigured HTTP client, simply pass its address to the New function.

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☕Cookbooks

For detailed examples and usage of the go-atlassian library, please refer to our . This section provides step-by-step guides and code samples for common tasks and scenarios.


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🌍 Services

The library uses the services interfaces to provide a modular and flexible way to interact with Atlassian products' REST APIs. It defines a set of services interfaces that define the functionality of each API, and then provides implementations of those interfaces that can be used to interact with the APIs.

Each service interface includes a set of methods that correspond to the available endpoints in the corresponding API. For example, the IssueService interface includes methods like Create, Update, and Get that correspond to the POST, PUT, and GET endpoints in the Jira Issues API.


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🎉 Implementation

Behind the scenes, the Create method on the IssueService interface is implemented by the issueService.Create function in the go-atlassian library. This function sends an HTTP request to the relevant endpoint in the Jira Issues API, using the credentials and configuration provided by the client, and then parses the response into a usable format.

Here's a little example about how to get the issue transitions using the Issue service.

The rest of the service functions work much the same way; they are concise and behave as you would expect. The contains several examples on how to use each service function.

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📪Call a RAW API Endpoint

If you need to interact with an Atlassian API endpoint that hasn't been implemented in the go-atlassian library yet, you can make a custom API request using the built-in Client.Call method to execute raw HTTP requests.

Please raise an issue in order to implement the endpoint


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✍️ Contributions

If you would like to contribute to this project, please adhere to the following guidelines.

  • Submit an issue describing the problem.

  • Fork the repo and add your contribution.

  • Follow the basic Go conventions found .

Again, contributions are greatly appreciated!


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💡 Inspiration

The project was created with the purpose to provide a unique point to provide an interface for interacting with Atlassian products.

This module is highly inspired by the Go library https://github.com/andygrunwald/go-jira but focused on Cloud solutions.

The library shares many similarities with go-jira, including its use of service interfaces to define the functionality of each API, its modular and flexible approach to working with Atlassian products' API's. However, go-atlassian also adds several new features and improvements that are not present in go-jira.

Despite these differences, go-atlassian remains heavily inspired by go-jira, and many of the core design principles and patterns used in go-jira can be found in go-atlassian as well.


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📝 License

Copyright © 2023 . This project is licensed.


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🤝 Special Thanks

We would like to extend our sincere thanks to the following sponsors for their generous support:

  • for providing us Atlassian Admin/Jira/Confluence Standard licenses.

  • for providing us with free licenses of

  • for providing us non-profit / open-source plan so hence I would like to express my thanks here.

Active development and maintenance by the community, with regular updates and bug fixes.
  • Comprehensive documentationarrow-up-right and examples to help developers get started with using the library.

  • Jira Assets

    github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/assets

    Confluence

    github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/confluence

    Confluence v2

    github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/confluence/v2

    Admin Cloud

    github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/admin

    Bitbucket Cloud (In Progress)

    github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/bitbucket

    Create a pull request with a description of your changes.

    Jira v2

    github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/jira/v2

    Getting Startedarrow-up-right

    Jira v3

    github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/jira/v3

    Getting Startedarrow-up-right

    Jira Software Agile

    github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/jira/agile

    Getting Startedarrow-up-right

    Jira Service Management

    github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/jira/sm

    Getting Startedarrow-up-right

    Goarrow-up-right
    herearrow-up-right
    herearrow-up-right
    Cookbookarrow-up-right
    documentationarrow-up-right
    herearrow-up-right
    Carlos Treminioarrow-up-right
    MITarrow-up-right
    arrow-up-right
    Atlassianarrow-up-right
    JetBrainsarrow-up-right
    GoLandarrow-up-right
    GitBookarrow-up-right
    go get github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2
    instance, err := confluence.New(nil, "INSTANCE_HOST")
    if err != nil {
        log.Fatal(err)
    }
    instance.Auth.SetBasicAuth("YOUR_CLIENT_MAIL", "YOUR_APP_ACCESS_TOKEN")
    transport := http.Transport{
    	Proxy: http.ProxyFromEnvironment,
    	Dial: (&net.Dialer{
    		// Modify the time to wait for a connection to establish
    		Timeout:   1 * time.Second,
    		KeepAlive: 30 * time.Second,
    	}).Dial,
    	TLSHandshakeTimeout: 10 * time.Second,
    }
    client := http.Client{
    	Transport: &transport,
    	Timeout:   4 * time.Second,
    }
    instance, err := confluence.New(&client, "INSTANCE_HOST")
    if err != nil {
    	log.Fatal(err)
    }
    instance.Auth.SetBasicAuth("YOUR_CLIENT_MAIL", "YOUR_APP_ACCESS_TOKEN")
    // BoardConnector represents the Jira boards.
    // Use it to search, get, create, delete, and change boards.
    type BoardConnector interface {
    	Get(ctx context.Context, boardID int) (*model.BoardScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Create(ctx context.Context, payload *model.BoardPayloadScheme) (*model.BoardScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Filter(ctx context.Context, filterID, startAt, maxResults int) (*model.BoardPageScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Backlog(ctx context.Context, boardID int, opts *model.IssueOptionScheme, startAt, maxResults int) (*model.BoardIssuePageScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Configuration(ctx context.Context, boardID int) (*model.BoardConfigurationScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Epics(ctx context.Context, boardID, startAt, maxResults int, done bool) (*model.BoardEpicPageScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	IssuesWithoutEpic(ctx context.Context, boardID int, opts *model.IssueOptionScheme, startAt, maxResults int) (
    		*model.BoardIssuePageScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	IssuesByEpic(ctx context.Context, boardID, epicID int, opts *model.IssueOptionScheme, startAt, maxResults int) (
    		*model.BoardIssuePageScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Issues(ctx context.Context, boardID int, opts *model.IssueOptionScheme, startAt, maxResults int) (*model.BoardIssuePageScheme,
    		*model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Move(ctx context.Context, boardID int, payload *model.BoardMovementPayloadScheme) (*model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Projects(ctx context.Context, boardID, startAt, maxResults int) (*model.BoardProjectPageScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Sprints(ctx context.Context, boardID, startAt, maxResults int, states []string) (*model.BoardSprintPageScheme,
    		*model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	IssuesBySprint(ctx context.Context, boardID, sprintID int, opts *model.IssueOptionScheme, startAt, maxResults int) (
    		*model.BoardIssuePageScheme, *model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Versions(ctx context.Context, boardID, startAt, maxResults int, released bool) (*model.BoardVersionPageScheme,
    		*model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Delete(ctx context.Context, boardID int) (*model.ResponseScheme, error)
    	Gets(ctx context.Context, opts *model.GetBoardsOptions, startAt, maxResults int) (*model.BoardPageScheme,
    		*model.ResponseScheme, error)
    }
    ctx := context.Background()
    issueKey := "KP-2"
    expand := []string{"transitions"}
    issue, response, err := atlassian.Issue.Get(ctx,issueKey, nil, expand)
    if err != nil {
    	log.Fatal(err)
    }
    log.Println(issue.Key)
    for _, transition := range issue.Transitions {
    	log.Println(transition.Name, transition.ID, transition.To.ID, transition.HasScreen)
    }
    package main  
      
    import (  
        "context"  
        "fmt" 
        "github.com/ctreminiom/go-atlassian/v2/jira/v3" 
        "log" 
        "net/http" 
        "os"
     )  
      
    type IssueTypeMetadata struct {  
        IssueTypes []struct {  
           ID          string `json:"id"`  
      Name        string `json:"name"`  
      Description string `json:"description"`  
      } `json:"issueTypes"`  
    }  
      
    func main() {  
      
        var (  
           host  = os.Getenv("SITE")  
           mail  = os.Getenv("MAIL")  
           token = os.Getenv("TOKEN")  
        )  
      
        atlassian, err := v3.New(nil, host)  
        if err != nil {  
           log.Fatal(err)  
        }  
      
        atlassian.Auth.SetBasicAuth(mail, token)  
      
        // Define the RAW endpoint  
        apiEndpoint := "rest/api/3/issue/createmeta/KP/issuetypes"  
      
        request, err := atlassian.NewRequest(context.Background(), http.MethodGet, apiEndpoint, "", nil)  
        if err != nil {  
           log.Fatal(err)  
        }  
      
        customResponseStruct := new(IssueTypeMetadata)  
        response, err := atlassian.Call(request, &customResponseStruct)  
        if err != nil {  
           log.Fatal(err)  
        }  
      
        fmt.Println(response.Status)  
    }
    Getting Startedarrow-up-right
    Getting Startedarrow-up-right
    Getting Startedarrow-up-right
    Getting Startedarrow-up-right
    Getting Startedarrow-up-right
    Testing
    codecov
    Go Reference
    FOSSA Status
    Mentioned in Awesome Go-Atlassian
    Documentation
    Sourcegraph
    Dependency Review
    Analysis
    FOSSA Status
    GitHub
    Releases
    OpenSSF Best Practices
    OpenSSF Best Practices
    Codacy Badge
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