Trac supports adding custom, user-defined fields to the ticket module. With custom fields you can add typed, site-specific properties to tickets.
Configuring custom ticket fields is done in the trac.ini file. All field definitions should be under a section named [ticket-custom]
.
The syntax of each field definition is:
FIELD_NAME = TYPE (FIELD_NAME.OPTION = VALUE) ...
The example below should help to explain the syntax.
plain
for plain text
wiki
to interpret the content as WikiFormatting
reference
to treat the content as a queryable value (since 1.0)
list
to interpret the content as a list of queryable values, separated by whitespace (since 1.0)
plain
for plain text or wiki
to interpret the content as WikiFormatting.
relative
for relative dates.
date
for absolute dates.
datetime
for absolute date and time values.
If the label
is not specified, it will be created by capitalizing the custom field name and replacing underscores with whitespaces.
Macros will be expanded when rendering textarea
fields with format wiki
, but not when rendering text
fields with format wiki
.
[ticket-custom] test_one = text test_one.label = Just a text box test_two = text test_two.label = Another text-box test_two.value = Default [mailto:joe@nospam.com owner] test_two.format = wiki test_three = checkbox test_three.label = Some checkbox test_three.value = 1 test_four = select test_four.label = My selectbox test_four.options = one|two|third option|four test_four.value = two test_five = radio test_five.label = Radio buttons are fun test_five.options = uno|dos|tres|cuatro|cinco test_five.value = dos test_six = textarea test_six.label = This is a large textarea test_six.value = Default text test_six.cols = 60 test_six.rows = 30 test_seven = time test_seven.label = A relative date test_seven.format = relative test_seven.value = now test_eight = time test_eight.label = An absolute date test_eight.format = date test_eight.value = yesterday test_nine = time test_nine.label = A date and time test_nine.format = datetime test_nine.value = in 2 hours
Note: To make a select
type field optional, specify a leading |
in the fieldname.options
option.
Custom ticket fields are stored in the ticket_custom
table, not in the ticket
table. So to display the values from custom fields in a report, you will need a join on the 2 tables. Let's use an example with a custom ticket field called progress
.
SELECT p.value AS __color__, id AS ticket, summary, owner, c.value AS progress FROM ticket t, enum p, ticket_custom c WHERE status IN ('assigned') AND t.id = c.ticket AND c.name = 'progress' AND p.name = t.priority AND p.type = 'priority' ORDER BY p.value
Note: This will only show tickets that have progress set in them. This is not the same as showing all tickets. If you created this custom ticket field after you have already created some tickets, they will not have that field defined, and thus they will never show up on this ticket query. If you go back and modify those tickets, the field will be defined, and they will appear in the query.
However, if you want to show all ticket entries (with progress defined and without), you need to use a JOIN
for every custom field that is in the query:
SELECT p.value AS __color__, id AS ticket, summary, component, version, milestone, severity, (CASE status WHEN 'assigned' THEN owner||' *' ELSE owner END) AS owner, time AS created, changetime AS _changetime, description AS _description, reporter AS _reporter, (CASE WHEN c.value = '0' THEN 'None' ELSE c.value END) AS progress FROM ticket t LEFT OUTER JOIN ticket_custom c ON (t.id = c.ticket AND c.name = 'progress') JOIN enum p ON p.name = t.priority AND p.type='priority' WHERE status IN ('new', 'assigned', 'reopened') ORDER BY p.value, milestone, severity, time
Note in particular the LEFT OUTER JOIN
statement here.
Note that if your config file uses an uppercase name:
[ticket-custom] Progress_Type = text
you would use lowercase in the SQL: AND c.name = 'progress_type'
.
See also: TracTickets, TracIni