Published: Fri 10 February 2017
By Zara Zaimeche
In Info .
About This Post
If you've been using Launchpad on your project,
by now you're probably aware of its norms and idiosyncracies.
It can be hard to envisage different ways of doing the same
tasks when thinking in terms of things that are possible in
Launchpad, so this post aims to give an overview of some of
the interesting new features in StoryBoard that don't have
a Launchpad equivalent.
StoryBoard has been custom designed to fit the OpenStack
use-case, and so has several features built
specifically around the OpenStack community's needs.
This post explains some of the key new things, so that
you can get familiar with the terminology, and construct
workflows that suit you--
hopefully by the end, you'll be as excited as we are!
The REST API
StoryBoard has been developed with an API-first approach. What
does this mean? Well, at its core, StoryBoard has a python API.
This then plugs into a database, and can get information from it
(or transmit information to it).
The StoryBoard API can then be accessed from various clients,
so that users can interact with some given database.
This means StoryBoard's features are first built
on the API side, and are then expressed in various clients. You
can do more in the API than in any given UI, since the UI just
expresses the API.
Why does that matter?
Custom scripts! Custom UIs! If you can express it in a script,
you can fetch the data from StoryBoard. You don't have to rely
on features in any current UI if you have a niche request, and
it's possible to build your own new UI (or dashboard) if you want.
You can also get info from the commandline on the fly with
a tool like curl.
There are some docs to illustrate usage here:
http://docs.openstack.org/infra/storyboard/webapi/v1.html
Moreover, as our API is generally RESTful, it's
straightforward to guess how to do things, and compatible
with a lot of other tools with minimal tinkering.
Here are some sample, heavily commented scripts for one simple example
(commandline) interface, a python client:
https://review.openstack.org/#/c/371620/
There is also a much more fully-featured and interactive
commandline StoryBoard interface named boartty in progress
over here,
that jeblair wrote on a plane:
The long and short of it is, if you know how
to display data from a REST API, you can display data from
a StoryBoard instance.
You can do some fun things with this.
For example, you could use pygame if you wanted to depict stories
as moving platforms or something (I have publically said I'll
try this, so I guess I've got to follow through at some point).
On that note, if anyone feels
like hacking something up, please tell us; we'd love it.
Our irc channel is irreverent and procrastinatory. You can find
us in #storyboard.
Worklists and Boards
StoryBoard introduces some new data models to meet the complex
needs of OpenStack.
Worklists are arbitrary
groupings of stories and/or tasks with whatever title the user
wants. Each 'item' (story or task) is placed on a 'card' on
the worklist. Here is an example:
A worklist can be handy as a personal todo list.
Anyone can make a worklist, and the creator can decide who
(if anyone) else can view and edit it. It is possible to either
populate a worklist manually, or automatically populate it
with stories or tasks that fulfil some criteria (eg: 'assigned
to Alice'. Here are some example filter criterai for an automatic worklist:
We also have boards, which are akin to collections of worklists.
Here's an example:
You can name 'lanes' (lists) in the board what you want,
and either populate them as a
visualisation of some data by making them 'automatic' (like
worklists,
populate them with stories or tasks that meet some criteria), or
manually move cards to and from non-automatic lanes.
This means you can use
boards to visualise data, or you can use them for a workflow like
kanban if that's your thing. So, for example, you might group
various stories in different lanes according to criteria, and
then the board would function as an 'epic', tracking the
status of multiple stories. You can give a board a markdown
description if you want to provide more detail on the background.
You can even take a hybrid approach
where you write custom scripts to move cards around based
on certain conditions.
Permissions for boards work the same way as worklist permissions.
A public board or worklist is visible to all, and editable for users and
owners. A private board or worklist is only visible to its users and
owners. Users can move and delete cards, but only owners can
delete lanes or change the metadata of the board itself (eg: its
title or description).
Complex Priority
We already wrote a massive email on this, intended as a thorough
overview, so we are going to shamelessly
copy and paste it here.
The crux is that in StoryBoard,
it's possible for different people to say 'this is a priority for us',
so that a task can have different priorities, tailored to different
audiences.
So, why is this useful?
Previously, StoryBoard allowed users to assign one priority to each task
('high', 'medium' or 'low'). The implementation meant that anyone could
change a task's priority, and this would be seen by everyone viewing the
task. There was no way to say 'you can only change this priority if you
have discussed this on irc and it has been agreed among the project
team', etc. This meant that people with no context could alter global
priority of tasks. Also, two different groups might prioritize tasks
differently, and this could result in long prioritization sessions,
where the real question was 'whose priorities matter most?' (and often
the answer was 'it depends on who the audience is', so these arguments
would result in a stalemate)
So, StoryBoard now has a way to say 'this task matters to me '. We use
worklists to express priority: if you manually add tasks to a worklist,
you can drag and drop them in order of priority. This has the side
effect that you can see how prioritizing one task affects the priority
of other tasks; you can only have one item at the top, and putting
anything high on the list will push other things down. It is
possible for others to subscribe to the worklists of those individuals
or teams whose priorities they care about; then, whenever they browse to
a story, they will see if any of the tasks are on those lists, and what
position the tasks are on the list.
Worklists have permissions, so it is possible to set up a project team list
on which items can only be moved by contributors selected by core
reviewers, etc. This stops everyone changing the priority of tasks
without discussion.
This is very new, and we're excited to see how people use it. We've lost
some ease in assigning priority in favour of finer grained
representation of priority. In the past, StoryBoard did show lots of
different people's priorities, it just didn't offer any way of tracking
whose priorities were whose. So this makes things more open and
explicit. We hope to tailor the implementation based on user feedback,
and these are the first steps! :)
Here's an example workflow for a project team:
Next, make a list of tasks you care about from
existing stories, by adding cards to the worklist:
and save it:
It will look something like this:
You can select users who are allowed to move things on the
worklist. To do so, edit the worklist:
and add people whom you want to be able to interact with the
worklist, eg: to add users:
You can drag and drop tasks in order of priority
This lets anyone who views your worklist see the priority of your tasks, and anyone who subscribes to it see the priority of those tasks when viewing affected stories.
You can also do it the other way round, adding existing stories
to a worklist you care about as you see them:
Browse to a story with a task you care about, and click the arrow next to that task to expand detailed information and options for it:
Then the 'add to worklist' button:
And add the task to your chosen worklist for team priorities:
If you go back to your worklist, that task will now be there!
On a story, tasks that feature in subscribed worklists will appear on the top-right, along with their position in the worklist:
If you are not subscribed to any worklists containing tasks
from the story (or the story itself), that space will be empty,
since we only display this information to people who want it:
Once you have a team worklist, you can link the worklist on irc or on the mailing list, etc, wherever it's
most visible, and invite people to subscribe!
It is possible to subscribe to email notifications for worklists, so
that you can be kept up to date on changes in priority. These
notifications can be toggled in the profile preferences (person icon on
navbar, near the bottom) and are separate from the main email
notifications, to avoid things getting spammy. :)
Thanks for reading, and we hope this has been useful.
Have fun, and happy task-tracking!