- Uses Redmine's REST API (don't forget to enable it in Redmine server settings).
- Does not require any plugins installed on Redmine/Chiliproject server.
- Requires JVM 11 or newer.
- Supports HTTP proxy
- Supports GZipped responses from servers
- Uses SLF4J for logging. Provide your own SLF4J binding
- [Supported Redmine versions] (https://github.com/taskadapter/redmine-java-api/wiki/Redmine-versions-compatibility)
- Available in Maven Central (binary, sources, javadocs).
Gradle dependency:
dependencies {
compile 'com.taskadapter:redmine-java-api:<current-version>'
}
Check the latest release version in Maven Central
The new fluent-style API (v. 4.x) requires a transport
instance for most calls.
First, create an instance of RedmineManager and then obtain its transport:
RedmineManager mgr = RedmineManagerFactory.createWithApiKey(uri, apiAccessKey);
Transport transport = mgr.getTransport();
String uri = "https://www.hostedredmine.com";
String apiAccessKey = "somekey";
String projectKey = "taskconnector-test";
Integer queryId = null; // any
RedmineManager mgr = RedmineManagerFactory.createWithApiKey(uri, apiAccessKey);
// override default page size if needed
mgr.setObjectsPerPage(100);
List<Issue> issues = mgr.getIssueManager().getIssues(projectKey, queryId);
for (Issue issue : issues) {
System.out.println(issue.toString());
}
Params params = new Params()
.add("set_filter", "1")
.add("f[]", "summary")
.add("op[summary]", "~")
.add("v[summary]", "another")
.add("f[]", "description")
.add("op[description]", "~")
.add("v[description][]", "abc");
result = issueManager.getIssues(params);
Redmine searches for "Open" issues by default. You can specify "all" in your Map if you want:
params.put("status_id", "*");
issue = issueManager.getIssueById(123, Include.journals, Include.relations, Include.attachments,
Include.changesets, Include.watchers);
journals = issue.getJournals();
RedmineManager mgr = RedmineManagerFactory.createWithApiKey(uri, apiAccessKey);
Version ver = new Version().setId(512);
IssueCategory cat = new IssueCategory(transport).setId(673);
ProjectManager projectManager = manager.getProjectManager();
Project projectByKey = projectManager.getProjectByKey("testid");
Issue issue = new Issue(mgr.getTransport(), projectId)
.setSubject("test123")
.setTargetVersion(ver)
.setCategory(cat);
.setProjectId(projectId)
.create();
Issue retrievedIssue = issueManager.getIssueById(123);
Issue issue = ...
List<CustomFieldDefinition> customFieldDefinitions = mgr.getCustomFieldManager().getCustomFieldDefinitions();
// sample implementation for getCustomFieldByName() is in CustomFieldResolver (test class).
// in prod code you would typically know the custom field name or id already
CustomFieldDefinition customField1 = getCustomFieldByName(customFieldDefinitions, "my_custom_1");
String custom1Value = "some value 123";
issue.addCustomField(CustomFieldFactory.create(customField1.getId(), customField1.getName(), custom1Value));
issueManager.update(issue);
Project project = new Project(transport)
.setName("Upload project")
.setIdentifier("uploadtmpproject")
.create();
List<Project> projects = mgr.getProjectManager().getProjects();
Map<String, String> params = new HashMap<>();
params.put("name", name);
List<User> list = userManager.getUsers(params);
Group group = new Group(transport)
.setName("group")
.create();
User user = new User(transport).set(...)
.create();
userManager.addUserToGroup(user, group);
user.delete();
TimeEntryManager timeEntryManager = redmineManager.getTimeEntryManager();
final Map<String, String> params = new HashMap<>();
params.put("project_id", projectId);
params.put("activity_id", activityId);
final List<TimeEntry> elements = timeEntryManager.getTimeEntries(params);
Supposing you have:
- caTrustStore: a Collection<KeyStore> object that has the custom CAs to use
Then the following function will return a RedmineManager object that uses those TrustStores to connect to Redmine:
public RedmineManager connectToRedmine(String apiAccessKey, String url) throws IOException {
try {
ClientConnectionManaget connectionManager =
RedmineManagerFactory.createConnectionManagerWithExtraTrust(caTrustStore);
HttpClient client = RedmineManagerFactory.getNewHttpClient(url, connectionManager);
return RedmineManagerFactory.createWithApiKey(url, apiAccessKey, client);
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println("Could not connect to Redmine");
throw new IOException(e.getMessage());
}
}
For another example, see IntegrationTestHelper class:
Optional<KeyStore> builtInExtension = getExtensionKeystore();
if (builtInExtension.isPresent()) {
return RedmineManagerFactory.createConnectionManagerWithExtraTrust(
Collections.singletonList(builtInExtension.get()));
}
Supposing you have:
- clientKeyStore: a KeyStore object that has your Client Certificate and Private Key loaded
- caTrustStore: a Collection<KeyStore> object that has the custom CAs to use
- password: A string representing clientKeyStore's password
Then the following function will return a RedmineManager object that uses those KeyStores to connect to Redmine:
public RedmineManager connectToRedmine(String apiAccessKey, String url) throws IOException {
try {
ClientConnectionManaget connectionManager =
RedmineManagerFactory.createConnectionManagerWithClientCertificate(
clientKeyStore, password, caTrustStore);
HttpClient client = RedmineManagerFactory.getNewHttpClient(url, connectionManager);
return RedmineManagerFactory.createWithApiKey(url, apiAccessKey, client);
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println("Could not connect to Redmine");
throw new IOException(e.getMessage());
}
}
For another example, see IntegrationTestHelper class:
Optional<KeyStore> builtInExtension = getExtensionKeystore();
Optional<KeyStore> builtInClient = getClientKeystore();
if (builtInExtension.isPresent() && builtInClient.isPresent()) {
return RedmineManagerFactory.createConnectionManagerWithClientCertificate(builtInClient.get(),
"keystore-password", Collections.singletonList(builtInExtension.get()));
}