Drag-n-drop operations for JIRA Repositories
# | Drag This | To This | With This Connection Type | And This Will Happen |
---|---|---|---|---|
J1 | Anything from the System Model Panel (or Repository Panel) | Anything in the Repository Panel (or System Model Panel) | Reference | Reference Connection will be created but nothing will be generated. |
J2 | SysML block | JIRA project | Model Transform | If the SysML block has a JIRA Issue stereotype applied, then an issue structure will be generated in JIRA based on the SysML block structure. JIRA issue attributes will be populated based on the value properties in the SysML block. Model transform connections will be created between SysML blocks and JIRA issues |
J3 | SysML block | JIRA project | Data Map |
|
J4 | JIRA Issue | SysML Package | Model Transform |
|
J5 | JIRA Issue | SysML Package | Data Map |
|
J6 | SysML block, requirement, or activity | SysML Package | Reference |
|
Syndeia also provides the ability to view the status of a project in JIRA, directly from the SysML model. If you have SysML elements connected to JIRA issues (any connection type), then you can right click at the SysML project or package level in the SysML model tree and select Syndeia > Summarize Connected Artifacts. This will launch the JIRA Connected Issues Summary window, as shown in figure. The top part of the table shows a list of all JIRA issues that are connected to SysML elements (recursively) in the package. The bottom part of the table shows overall issue analytics, such as total number of connected issues, number of open issues, number of issues reported by a user, or the number of issues assigned to a user. This can be very useful in tracking the status of a project in JIRA directly from the SysML model.
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