Work with Comments

With HAPI, you can easily add comments to issues and restrict who can see the comments. 

To work with comments in Jira Service Management see this page.

Adding a comment to an existing issue

You can add a comment to an existing issue. For example:

            Issues.getByKey('SR-1').addComment('This is a comment')

Adding a comment while updating an issue

You can add a comment while updating an issue. For example:

            def issue = Issues.getByKey('SR-1')
        
            issue.update {
                setDescription('I am updating the description')
                setComment('This is a comment')
            }

Image showing how to add a comment while updating an issue with HAPI

Adding a comment while transitioning an issue

You can add a comment while transitioning an issue. In this example we're resolving an issue, setting the resolution, and adding a comment:

            def issue = Issues.getByKey('ABC-1')
 
            issue.transition('Resolve Issue') {
                setResolution('Done')
                setComment('resolving this issue')            
            }        

Check out our Transitioning Issues documentation for more information on transitioning issues.

Update a comment

You can update an existing comment and the restrictions. For example:

            def comment = Issues.getByKey('SR-1').addComment('Original comment')
        
            comment.update {
                setBody('Updated comment')
                setGroupRestriction('jira-administrators')
            }

Retrieving comments from an issue

You may want to retrieve comments to, for example, display them in a dashboard or use them in a scripted field.

You can retrieve comments from an issue as follows:

groovy
def issue = Issues.getByKey('SR-1') issue.comments

Overriding permissions while retrieving comments

The current user may not have the correct permissions to retrieve all comments from an issue. You can override permissions using getCommentsOverrideSecurity(). For example:

            def issue = Issues.getByKey('SR-1')
            issue.addComment('Adding a comment')
            
            issue.getCommentsOverrideSecurity()

Setting restrictions 

Setting group restrictions

You can restrict which groups can see a comment. In this example we're adding a comment to an existing issue and restricting the comment to the "jira-administrators" group:

            def issue = Issues.getByKey('SR-1')
  
            issue.update {
                setComment('This is a comment') {
                    setGroupRestriction('jira-administrators')
                }
            }

Setting project role restrictions

You can restrict which project roles can see a comment. In this example we're adding a comment to an existing issue and restricting the comment to the "Administrators" role:

            def issue = Issues.getByKey('SR-1')

            issue.update {
                setComment('This is a comment') {
                    setProjectRoleRestriction('Administrators')
                }
            }

Deleting a comment

You can delete a comment from an existing issue using delete(). For example:

            def comment = Issues.getByKey('SR-1').addComment('Adding a comment')
            comment.delete()

A Comment Deleted event is dispatched by default. You can use the closure below make sure this event is not dispatched.

            def comment = Issues.getByKey('SR-1').addComment('Adding another comment')
            comment.delete { dispatchEvent = false }

Overwriting permissions while deleting a comment

The current user may not have the correct permissions to delete a comment. You can delete a comment from an existing issue regardless of the permissions of the current user using deleteOverrideSecurity. For example:

            def comment = Issues.getByKey('SR-1').addComment('Adding a comment')
            comment.deleteOverrideSecurity()

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