Welcome to Runsheet V2 (RsV2). This guide will help you understand how to setup this software and how it works under the hood.
RsV2 is a second iteration, re-written from scratch, of an original runsheet script which given a set of tasks and their dependencies, scheduled them in the most time optimized arrangement and provided a UI to help tracking the progress of those tasks. You can think of it as a simpler, collaborative and more focused Gantt chart with live task status updates.
RsV2 can be used to track a weekend roll out for instance. You have a bunch of tasks that must be done in a certain order, such as putting up a maintenance notice, taking systems down, upgrading and testing. RsV2’s real advantage comes into play when multiple people are involved and prompt starting and finishing of tasks is of importance.
- RDBMS backed storage for tasks and runsheets
- Multiple runsheets per server
- Lax requirements on how the tasks and runsheets are stored
- Completely reactive UI with live collaborative features.
- Automatic time divisions based on total run time
- Support for variety of database backends
- Start time and “Behind Schedule” notifications
- Single Go binary for ease of deployment (not static yet!)
- Multi-platform support
go generate
go install -tags prod
Run runsheet -config example-config.json
and open your browser at
http://localhost:8080
RsV2 is configured using a file named config.yaml
which must be placed
in either: same directory as the executable; /etc/runsheet
;
$HOME/.runsheet
or their equivalent locations on other platforms.
config.yaml
has the following format:
# Optional
Listen: :8080
# A comment starting with hash character
ConnectionUrl: dbdriver://…
RunsheetsSql: select * from …
Listen
specifies which interface and port number to listen for
connections to serve the UI. :8080
is the default and means: serve on
port 8080
on all interfaces. To limit to localhost for instance, you
can use 127.0.0.1:8080
.
ConnectionUrl
specifies which DB driver to use and what parameters to
pass, such as username, password, host and others. Following are
examples of ConnectionUrl
s for various supported databases:
-# Oracle - Oracle Instant Client Basic is required
-ConnectionUrl: goracle://username/password@(DESCRIPTION=(ADDRESS_LIST=(ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=host.name.com)(PORT=1530)))(CONNECT_DATA=(SERVICE_NAME=MY_SERVICE_NAME)))
# Microsoft SQL
ConnectionUrl: sqlserver://username:password@host.name.com?database=my_db
# SQLite
ConnectionUrl: sqlite3://./relative/path/to/test.db
RunsheetsSql
is a query or otherwise any valid SQL for the given
database that retrieves the list of runsheets.
A runsheet is simply a list of tasks and their dependencies.
RunsheetsSql
must return the following columns (some optional):
id
(string): ID of the runsheetname
(string)(optional): name or title of the runsheet — supports markdowndescription
(string)(optional): runsheet description — supports markdownconnection_url
(string): Same format asConnectionUrl
above but for this runsheettasks_sql
(string): SQL to get the list of tasksupdate_sql
(string): SQL to update status of a taskstart_time
(string)(optional): start time and date of the first task
All column names are case sensitive and RunsheetsSql
must not retrieve
any column that is not specified above.
tasks_sql
is a query or otherwise any valid SQL for the given database
that retrieves the list of tasks for the corresponding runsheet.
A task is an undertaking assigned to a specific resource (person)
and has defined duration in minutes. It may also have dependencies on
other tasks. tasks_sql
must return the following columns (some
optional):
id
(string): Task IDname
(string)(optional): Task name — supports markdowndescription
(string)(optional): Task description — supports markdownassignee
(string): Name of assigneeduration
(number): Task duration in minutesstatus
(string): Task status which must be one ofidle
,ongoing
ordone
dependees
(string): List of task IDs this task depends on, each separated by|
All column names are case sensitive and tasks_sql
must not retrieve
any column that is not specified above.
As an example of dependees
: say we have three tasks with IDs of A
,
B
and C
. If C
depends on A
and B
, then C
’s record will have
A|B
in the dependees
column.
update_sql
is a valid SQL for the given database which updates status
for a given task. All occurrences of {{task}}
inside update_sql
will
be replaced with ID of the task whose status is being updated. All
occurences of {{status}}
inside update_sql
will be replaced with the
new status of the task. Below is an example:
update tasks set "status" = '{{status}}' where "id" = '{{task}}'
Note that no DB aware substitutions are done. Thus you’re required to quote literal string values in your SQL.
start_time
is a string representation of the start time and date the
earliest task in the runsheet is to be stamped with. Regular interval
timestamps are shown on the left side of a runsheet UI. You may use any
format supported by Javascript. Following is recommended: 2018-10-25 18:10:00 EST
where EST
defines the time zone, in this case Australian
Eastern Standard Time. You may use an offset instead, such as +11:00
or other abbreviations.