The issues
category of commands allows you to manage the issue trackers of the student repositories. The currently available core actions are open
, close
and list
, which achieve about what you'd expect.
The issues open
command is very simple. Before we use it, however, we need to write a Markdown-formatted issue. Just like with the update
command (see update
), the first line of the file is the title. Here is issue.md
:
An important announcement
### Dear students
I have this important announcement to make.
Regards,
_The Announcer_
Awesome, that's an excellent issue. Let's open it in the task-2
repo for our dear students slarse
, glennol
and glassey
, who are listed in the students.txt
file (see setup
).
$ repobee issues open --assignments task-2 --students-file students.txt -i issue.md
Opened issue slarse-task-2/#1-'An important announcement'
Opened issue glennol-task-2/#1-'An important announcement'
Opened issue glassey-task-2/#1-'An important announcement'
From the output, we can read that in each of the repos, an issue with the title An important announcement
was opened as issue nr 1 (#1
). The number isn't that important, it's mostly good to note that the title was fetched correctly. And that's it! Neat, right?
Now that the deadline has passed for task-2
, we want to close the issues opened in open. The close-issues
command takes a regex that runs against titles. All issues with matching titles are closed. While you can make this really difficult, closing all issues with the title An important announcement
is simple: we provide the regex \AAn important announcement\Z
.
$ repobee issues close -a task-2 --sf students.txt -r '\AAn important announcement\Z'
[INFO] Closed issue slarse-task-2/#1-'An important announcement'
[INFO] Closed issue glennol-task-2/#1-'An important announcement'
[INFO] Closed issue glassey-task-2/#1-'An important announcement'
And there we go, easy as pie!
Note
Enclosing a regex expression in \A
and \Z
means that it must match from the start of the string to the end of the string. So, the regex used here will match the title An important announcement
, but it will not match e.g. An important anouncement and lunch
or Hey An important announcement
. In other words, it matches exactly the title An important announcement
, and nothing else. Not even an extra space or linebreak is allowed.
It can often be interesting to check what issues exist in a set of repos, especially so if you're a teaching assistant who just doesn't want to leave your trusty terminal. This is where the issues list
command comes into play. Typically, we are only interested in open issues, and can then use list issues like so:
$ repobee issues list -a task-2 --sf students.txt
[INFO] slarse-task-2/#1: Grading Criteria created 2018-09-12 18:20:56 by glassey
[INFO] glennol-task-2/#1: Grading Criteria created 2018-09-12 18:20:56 by glassey
[INFO] glassey-task-2/#1: Grading Criteria created 2018-09-12 18:20:56 by glassey
So, just grading critera issues posted by the user glassey
. What happened to the important announcements? Well, they are closed. If we want to se closed issues, we must specifically say so with the --closed
argument.
$ repobee issues list -a task-2 --sf students.txt --closed
[INFO] slarse-task-2/#2: An important announcement created 2018-09-17 17:46:43 by slarse
[INFO] glennol-task-2/#2: An important announcement created 2018-09-17 17:46:43 by slarse
[INFO] glassey-task-2/#2: An important announcement created 2018-09-17 17:46:43 by slarse
Other interesting arguments include --all
for both open and closed issues, --show-body
for showing the body of each issue, and --author <username>
for filtering by author. There's not much more to it, see repobee issues list -h
for complete and up-to-date information on usage!