pt
Minimal client to use Pivotal Tracker from the console.
Setup
gem install pt
The first time you run it, pt
will ask you some data about your Pivotal Tracker account and your current project.
Usage
Run pt
from the root folder of your project.
pt # shows your "My work" tasks list
Run pt create
to create a new bug, chore or feature.
The rest of the commands will open you a list of your tasks and let you interact with it:
pt show # shows detailed info about a task
pt open # open a task in the browser
pt assign # assign owner
pt comment # add a comment
pt estimate # estimate a task in points scale
pt start # mark a task as started
pt finish # indicate you've finished a task
pt deliver # indicate the task is delivered
pt accept # mark a task as accepted
pt reject # mark a task as rejected, explaining why
Problems?
You can open a new issue. It can be helpful to include a trace of the requests and responses you're getting from Pivotal Tracker: you can get it by adding the --debug
parameter while invoking pt
(remember to remove all sensible data though).
Contributors
Anthony Crumley Johan Andersson
Thanks to...
- the contributors mentioned above and all the issue reporters
- the Pivotal Tracker guys for making a planning tool that doesn't suck and has an API
- Justin Smestad for his nice
pivotal-tracker
gem - Bryan Liles for letting me take over the gem name
License
See the LICENSE file included in the distribution.
Copyright
Copyright (C) 2011 Raul Murciano [email protected].