Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

How to set up the integration?

...

Info

What are credentials used for?

The user is used to send the queue messages between Jira and Confluence. When you modify requirements, we update their text in Jira; When you modify issue titles, we update the link title in Confluence.

What permissions are needed?

  • The user doesn't have to be an administrator,

  • It needs to be the same user on both sides. Usernames can be different if you use OAuth, but when you authorize the other side, the associated account must be the same as saved in the properties.

  • It needs to have VIEW permissions on the spaces with requirements in Confluence,

  • It needs to have EDIT permissions on the issues with links, in Jira.

If I don't like providing credentials, how should I do?

  • It is not like we ask for a password. We just ask for a username. If we had been evil, we could have used any administrative user from the database to synchronize the queue, and you wouldn't have seen it. We ask for a username is because we are not malevolent.

  • It doesn't pose any extended security risk, since the only data we modify are Requirement Yogi tables.

  • It solves a lot of issues. Before using a queue, we used to send the information to Jira synchronously. Unfortunately, there were situations where we couldn't ask for OAuth approval (when saving a page) and this resulted in the message not being sent to Jira, and issues being different than the data in Confluence. Since implementing the queue, we've had zero support cases about synchronization. The queue is solving the authentication very effectively, with the drawback that we need a user to ensure the authentication is satisfying.

This was introduced in version 2.2, so head to our release notes if you have more questions.

After adding your credentials, make sure you have "Entity links" between the Jira project and the Confluence space.

Excerpt
hiddentrue
nameRequirement Yogi for Jira

You can have an efficient requirements management in Jira, thanks to our integration plug-in. Learn how to use it now.

To use all Jira connected features, make sure you download the Requirement Yogi for Jira app first.

How to set up the integration?

  • Set up the Application Links between Jira and Confluence,

  • Set up Entity Links between a Jira project and a Confluence space (or several),

  • Status
    colourYellow
    titleImportant
     Go to the administration and set the credentials in both products (since 2.2 for Confluence and 2.5 for Jira).

...

Set your credentials in Confluence

...

Set your credentials in Jira

...

What does the integration look like in Jira?

A Requirements panel on Jira issues:

...

Image Added

A custom field, if you choose to configure it instead of the panel:

...

Image Added

The dialog to add links on an issue:

...

Image Added

What does the integration look like in Confluence?

The glorious Jira bulk issue creation:

Image Modified

And of course, Jira issues appear in the popup as dependencies, and in the traceability matrix.

Image Modified

More about the Custom Field

Using the custom field is optional. All requirements can be displayed in the "requirements" panel, but some customers prefer using the custom field, which makes it possible to:

  • Make requirements visible in the REST API,

  • Make requirements visible in the XML API,

  • Make the field visible and mandatory on the Create Issue screen.

If interested, see more details on Release notes 2.2.5 for Jira

JQL function

The JQL function to search for issues with Requirement Yogi links is described on this page: JQL Syntax.

Related content

Child pages (Children Display)
page$1804534616