{% extends "zerver/portico.html" %} {# API information page #} {% block portico_content %}
With Zulip integrations, your team can stay up-to-date on code changes, issue tickets, build system results, and much more. If you don't see the system you would like to integrate with it, or run into any trouble, don't hesitate to email us.
Many of these integrations require creating a Zulip bot. You can do so on your Zulip settings page. Be sure to note its username and API key.
Get Zulip notifications for your Asana tasks!
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Asana notifications, and
subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name asana
.
Next, on your Zulip settings page, create an Asana bot. Please note the bot name and API key.
Then:
Download and install our Python bindings on the
server where the Asana mirroring script will live. The Asana
integration will be installed to a location
like /usr/local/share/zulip/integrations/asana/
.
Visit your Asana account settings page and retrieve your API key.
Edit asana/zulip_asana_config.py
and
change the following lines to configure the integration:
ASANA_API_KEY = 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef ZULIP_USER = "asana-bot@example.com" ZULIP_API_KEY = "0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef" {% if api_site_required %}ZULIP_SITE = "{{ external_api_uri }}"{% endif %}
If you are using a stream other than asana
,
set ZULIP_STREAM_NAME
to the chosen stream name.
Test your configuration by running the mirror with python
asana/zulip_asana_mirror
. It will print some informational
messages and process any recently created or completed tasks.
This mirror is intended to be a long-running processing and should be
hooked into your infrastructure for keeping services running (for
example, auto-restarting through supervisord
).
Please contact support@zulip.com if you'd like assistance with maintaining this integration.
Congratulations! You're done!
When team members create and
complete tasks in Asana, you'll get a Zulip notification that looks like
this:
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Basecamp notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name basecamp
.
Next, download and install our Python bindings and example scripts on the computer you'd like to run this mirroring script from.
You will need your Basecamp account ID. You can find it as a sequence of numbers in the URL when you log in:
Edit the Basecamp and Zulip credentials in integrations/basecamp/zulip_basecamp_config.py
using
your favorite editor:
BASECAMP_ACCOUNT_ID = "1234567" BASECAMP_USERNAME = "foo@example.com" BASECAMP_PASSWORD = "p455w0rd" ZULIP_USER = "basecamp-bot@example.com" ZULIP_API_KEY = "0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef" {% if api_site_required %}ZULIP_SITE = "{{ external_api_uri }}"{% endif %}
Before your first run of the script, you may optionally choose to configure it to mirror some number of hours of Basecamp activity:
BASECAMP_INITIAL_HISTORY_HOURS = 10
Now, simply run the api/integrations/basecamp/zulip_basecamp_mirror
script.
If needed, this script may be restarted, and it will automatically resume from when
it was last running.
Congratulations! You're done!
Whenever you create a new project,
calendar event, comment, message, or more, you'll get a notification in your selected stream
with the project or calendar as the topic.
Zulip supports both SVN and Git notifications from Beanstalk.
First, create the stream commits
and subscribe all
interested parties to this stream.
Next, in the Beanstalk web application, go to the Setup page and choose the Integrations tab.
Choose the Webhooks
integration from the list presented. Make sure to replace the @
in the bot's email address with %40
,
as Beanstalk's website will incorrectly refuse to parse a username containing a @
.
In the URL field, enter {{ external_uri_scheme }}bot_email:bot_api_key@{{ external_api_path }}/v1/external/beanstalk
:
Congratulations! You're done!
Whenever you do a
deployment, you'll get an automated notification that looks like
this:
Zulip supports both Git and Mercurial notifications from Bitbucket.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Bitbucket notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. The integration will
use the default stream commits
if no stream is supplied in the
hook; you still need to create the stream even if you are using this
default.
Next, from your repository's web page, go to the Administration page and choose Hooks on the left-hand side.
Choose the POST
hook from the list presented and click "Add hook." Make sure to replace the @
in the bot's email address with %40
,
as Bitbucket will not execute the hook if the username contains a @
.
In the URL field, enter {{ external_uri_scheme }}bot_email:bot_api_key@{{ external_api_path }}/v1/external/bitbucket
:
By default, notifications are sent to the commits
stream.
To send notifications to a different stream,
append ?stream=stream_name
to
the URL.
Congratulations! You're done!
Whenever you push code to your repository,
you'll get an automated notification that looks like this:
First, download and install our Python
bindings and example scripts on your Capistrano server.
Once you've done that, you'll use the zulip-send
utility to notify you when certain events happen.
Here's some example code for sending a Zulip notification after a deployment has completed:
after 'deploy', 'notify:humbug' namespace :notify do desc "Post a message to Zulip that we've deployed" task :humbug do # this will post to Zulip as the user defined in # ~/.zuliprc if you omit --user and --api-key run_locally "echo ':beers: I just deployed to #{stage}! :beers:' | zulip-send \ --user capistrano-bot@example.com --api-key a0b1c2d3e4f5a6b7c8d9e0f1a2b3c4d5 \ {% if api_site_required %} --site={{ external_api_uri }} \ {% endif %} --stream commits --subject deployments || true" end end
Some notes:
--user
and --api-key
above, you can fill out ~/.zuliprc
on your Capistrano
machine. For instructions on how to write that file, see the API page.deploy
above to
another step of your deployment process, if you'd like the
notification to fire at a different time.Congratulations! You're done!
Whenever you do a
deployment, you'll get an automated notification that looks like
this:
Thanks to Wes of TurboVote for submitting this integration!
First, create the streams you'd like to use for Codebase notifications. There will be two types of
messages: commit-related updates and issue-related updates. After creating these streams (we suggest naming
them codebase commits
and codebase issues
), make sure to subscribe all interested parties.
Next, download and install our Python bindings and example scripts on the computer you'd like to run this mirroring script from.
You will need your Codebase API Username. You can find it in the settings page of your account, under
API Credentials
.
Edit the Codebase and Zulip credentials in integrations/codebase/zulip_codebase_config.py
using
your favorite editor:
CODEBASE_API_USERNAME = "zulip-inc/leo-franchi-15" CODEBASE_API_KEY = 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef ZULIP_USER = "codebase-bot@example.com" ZULIP_API_KEY = "0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef" {% if api_site_required %}ZULIP_SITE = "{{ external_api_uri }}"{% endif %}
Before your first run of the script, you may optionally choose to configure it to mirror some number of hours of prior Codebase activity:
CODEBASE_INITIAL_HISTORY_HOURS = 10
Now, simply run the api/integrations/codebase/zulip_codebase_mirror
script.
If needed, this script may be restarted, and it will automatically resume from when
it was last running.
Congratulations! You're done!
Whenever you create a new project,
commit, issue, deployment, or more, you'll get notifications in your selected streams
with the associated information.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Desk.com notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
stream name desk
. Keep in mind you still need to
create the stream first even if you are using this recommendation.
Next, in Desk.com, open your Admin view via the top-left corner dropdown. In the Admin view, click on Apps, then click Install under "Custom Action":
From there, click "Install Custom Action" and accept the terms. Fill in the form like this:
{{ external_api_uri }}/v1/external/desk
desk-bot@yourdomain.com
From here, add a new action. You'll do this for every action you want a notification on Zulip for:
Let's say you want a notification each time a case is updated. Put in a descriptive name like "Announce case update", and copy-paste this to the "Appended URL path":
{% verbatim %}?stream=desk&topic={{case.id}}:+{{case.subject}}
The "appended URL path" will be the same for every notification — it makes sure the notification goes to the appropriate stream and topic within Zulip. Next, copy this template Zulip message into "Message to POST":
{% verbatim %}Case [{{case.id}}, {{case.subject}}]({{case.direct_url}}), was updated.
* Status: {{case.status.name}}
* Priority: {{case.priority}}
* Customer: {{customer.name}}
* Company: {{customer.company}}
* Description: {{case.description}}
You don't need to edit that. All the funny-looking stuff inside
{{
and }}
will be filled in by Desk.com for each event. The dialog should look
like this:
Save it, and then click "On" next to the action to enable it. This is important — actions are turned off by default!
Now you need to create a rule that triggers this action. Desk.com's support center has a lengthy article on rules, but in short, click on "Cases" up at the top, "Rules" on the left side, and then the specific event you want to notify on — in our example, "Case Updated". Add a rule with a name like "Notify Zulip of case update". Click on "Add Action", select "Trigger an App Action", and select "Zulip: Announce case update". Set "Enabled" to "Yes". The rule should look like this:
Finally, click Update.
Congratulations! You're done!
When a case is updated,
you'll see a notification like the following, to the stream
desk
, with a topic that matches the case's subject name:
You can send emails to Zulip! This is useful:
To send an email to a Zulip stream:
{{ email_gateway_example }}
). If the stream
name contains special characters, we've transformed the name so it is a
safe email recipient.Please note that it may take up to one minute for the message to show up in Zulip.
See customer support interactions right in Zulip, with our Freshdesk integration! Note that this integration must be set up by an administrator for your Freshdesk instance.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Freshdesk notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
stream name freshdesk
.
Next, on your Zulip settings page, create a Freshdesk bot.
Now we can set up the Freshdesk events that will trigger Zulips. Freshdesk provides separate triggering mechanisms for ticket creation and ticket changes, so we'll set up these triggers in two parts.
Visit your Freshdesk admin page. Under the "Helpdesk Productivity" section, click the "Dispatch'r" icon:
Click the "New rule" button to create a new Dispatch'r rule that will send notifications to Zulip when Freshdesk tickets are opened.
On the Dispatch'r rule creation page, give the rule a name and description. Next, we need to specify the conditions under which to trigger Zulip notifications. There isn't a shortcut for "always generate a notification on ticket creation", so we'll instead fake it by picking two complementary conditions: when the source is email, and when the source is not email:
In the "Action" section, add a new action of type "Trigger Webhook". Set the "Request Type" to "POST". Set the following "Callback URL", replacing the Zulip stream with your desired stream:
{{ external_api_uri }}/v1/external/freshdesk?stream=freshdesk
Check the "Requires Authentication" box, and supply the bot e-mail address and API key.
The Action section should look like this so far:
Select "JSON" for the "Encoding". Under the encoding, select "Advanced". Paste the following JSON into the "Content" box:
{"freshdesk_webhook": { "triggered_event":"{{triggered_event}}", "ticket_id":"{{ticket.id}}", "ticket_url":"{{ticket.url}}", "ticket_type":"{{ticket.ticket_type}}", "ticket_subject":"{{ticket.subject}}", "ticket_description":"{{ticket.description}}", "ticket_status":"{{ticket.status}}", "ticket_priority":"{{ticket.priority}}", "requester_name":"{{ticket.requester.name}}", "requester_email":"{{ticket.requester.email}}", } }
These ticket details are what will be forwarded to Zulip. The pasted JSON should look like this:
Save your new Dispatch'r rule. The next time a Freshdesk ticket is opened, the team will get a notification in Zulip!
If you only want to receive Zulip notifications on ticket creation, stop here, you're done! If you also want notifications on important ticket changes, please continue to the next section.
Visit your Freshdesk admin page. Under the "Helpdesk Productivity" section, click the "Observer" icon:
Click the "New rule" button to create a new Observer rule that will send notifications to Zulip when Freshdesk tickets are updated.
On the Observer rule creation page, give the rule a name and description. Under "When Any Of These Events Occur", create these new rules:
Priority is changed, from Any Priority, to Any Priority
Status is changed, from Any Status, to Any Status
Note is added, Type Any
If you do not want to receive Zulip notifications on one or more of these events, leave out the rule for that event.
Under "And The Events Are Performed By", select "Anyone".
So far, the rule should look like this:
Next, we need to specify the types of tickets that will trigger Zulip notifications. There isn't a shortcut for "always generate a notification on ticket update", so as before we'll instead fake it by picking two complementary conditions: when the source is email, and when the source is not email:
Under "Perform These Actions", add a new action of type "Trigger Webhook". Set the "Request Type" to "POST". Set the following "Callback URL", replacing the Zulip stream with your desired stream:
{{ external_api_uri }}/v1/external/freshdesk?stream=freshdesk
Check the "Requires Authentication" box, and supply the bot e-mail address and API key.
The Action section should look like this so far:
Select "JSON" for the "Encoding". Under the encoding, select "Advanced". Paste the following JSON into the "Content" box:
{"freshdesk_webhook": { "triggered_event":"{{triggered_event}}", "ticket_id":"{{ticket.id}}", "ticket_url":"{{ticket.url}}", "ticket_type":"{{ticket.ticket_type}}", "ticket_subject":"{{ticket.subject}}", "ticket_description":"{{ticket.description}}", "ticket_status":"{{ticket.status}}", "ticket_priority":"{{ticket.priority}}", "requester_name":"{{ticket.requester.name}}", "requester_email":"{{ticket.requester.email}}", } }
These ticket details are what will be forwarded to Zulip. The pasted JSON should look like this:
Save your new Observer rule. The next time a Freshdesk ticket is updated, the team will get a notification in Zulip!
Congratulations! You're done!
You'll now see support
progress in real time in Zulip:
First, download and install our Python bindings and example scripts on your Git server.
Next, create the stream you'd like to use for Git notifications, and
subscribe all interested parties to this stream. The integration will use
the default stream commits
if no stream is supplied in the
hook; you still need to create the stream even if you are using this
default.
Next, open integrations/git/zulip_git_config.py
in your favorite editor, and change the following lines to
specify the email address and API key for your Git bot:
ZULIP_USER = "git-bot@example.com" ZULIP_API_KEY = "0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef" {% if api_site_required %}ZULIP_SITE = "{{ external_api_uri }}"{% endif %}
You can also specify which pushes will result in
notifications and to what stream the notifications will be sent
by modifying the commit_notice_destination
function
in zulip_git_config.py
. By default, pushes to
the master
and test-post-receive
branches will result in a notification to
stream commits
.
Save integrations/git/zulip_git_config.py
to
the .git/hooks
directory of your git
repository.
Symlink
/usr/local/share/zulip/integrations/git/post-receive
into the .git/hooks
directory of your git repository.
Congratulations! You're done!
Whenever you make
a push to the master
branch of your git repository
(or whatever you configured above), the Zulip git plugin will
send an automated notification that looks like this:
Testing
You can test the plugin without changing
your master
branch by pushing to
the test-post-receive
branch.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for GitHub notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. The integration will
use the default stream commits
if no stream is supplied in
the hook; you still need to create the stream even if you are using this
default.
Next, go to your repository page and click "Settings":
From there, select "Webhooks & Services":
To find the Zulip hook, you have to click on Configure services.
Select "Zulip" from the list of service hooks. Fill in the API
key and email address for your bot and check the "active"
checkbox. You can optionally supply the Zulip stream (the default
is commits
) and restrict Zulip notifications to a specified
set of branches.
Further configuration is possible. By default, commits traffic (pushes, commit comments), Github issues traffic, and pull requests are enabled. You can exclude certain types of traffic via the checkboxes. If you want commit traffic, issue traffic, and pull requests to go to different places, you can use the Commit Stream and Issue Stream overrides; otherwise, it is safe to leave these fields blank and just have it default to the Stream setting.
Click the "Update settings" button to complete the configuration:
Congratulations! You're done!
When team members push to
your repository, you'll get a Zulip notification that looks like this:
Follow the "Getting Started with Hubot" section of the Hubot README to create your Hubot. You'll have a new directory from which bin/hubot
starts a vanilla Hubot instance with the shell backend.
npm install --save hubot-zulip
On your Zulip settings page, create a bot account. Note its username, API key and full name; you will use them on the next step.
HUBOT_ZULIP_BOT=hubot-bot@example.com HUBOT_ZULIP_API_KEY=your_key bin/hubot --adapter zulip --name "myhubot"
The bot account email address and API key are passed to Hubot via environment variables HUBOT_ZULIP_BOT
and HUBOT_ZULIP_API_KEY
. The --name
parameter must match the name you gave the bot on the settings page.
Hubot will automatically listen for commands on all public streams. You can also invite Hubot to invite-only streams.
To test your Hubot installation, send it an @-notification with a basic command, for example @Hubot pug me
, which should produce a result like this:
Source code for the hubot-zulip adapter is available on GitHub.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Jenkins or Hudson
notifications, and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We
recommend the name jenkins
or hudson
.
Install the plugin
Install the "Zulip"
plugin by going to Manage Jenkins > Manage Plugins >
Available
, typing in "Zulip", and clicking "Install
without restart". (For historical reasons, the plugin will be
named "Humbug Plugin")
Configure the plugin
Once the plugin
is installed, configure it by going to Manage Jenkins >
Configure System
. Scroll to the section labeled "Zulip
Notification Settings", and specify your bot's email address,
API key, the stream receiving the notifications, and whether you'd
like a notification on every build, or only when the build fails
(Smart Notification).
(If you don't see this option, you may first need to restart Jenkins.)
Configure a post-build action for your project
Once you've done that, it's time to configure one of your
projects to use the Zulip notification plugin. From your
project page, click "Configure" on the left sidebar. Scroll to
the bottom until you find the section labeled "Post-build
Actions". Click the dropdown and select "Zulip
Notification". It should look as below. Then click "Save".
Congratulations! You're done!
When your builds
fail or succeed, you'll see a commit message like the following
with a topic that matches the project name (in this case
"SecretProject"):
Troubleshooting
jenkins
) already exist? If not, add yourself to it and try again.If you are running JIRA version 5.2 or greater, or if you are using the hosted JIRA provided by Atlassian, you can use the built-in web-hook support to connect to Zulip — read on. For older, self-hosted JIRA installs, you can use our JIRA Plugin.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for JIRA notifications, and
subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name jira
.
In your JIRA administration control panel, go to the Webhooks page. If you are using the OnDemand hosted JIRA, follow the instructions on the Atlassian wiki for locating the Webhook UI.
Give your new web hook a name, and for the URL provide the following:
{{ external_api_uri }}/v1/external/jira?api_key=abcdefgh&stream=jira
where api_key
is the API key of your Zulip bot,
and stream
is the stream name you want the
notifications sent to.
Next, go back to Zulip and set up a stream called "jira," if it does not already exist. (If you prefer your JIRA notifications to go to a stream other than "jira," then change the URL above to match it.)
Congratulations! You're done!
Updates from JIRA will be sent to the Zulip stream you specified in the JIRA web-hook.
If you are running JIRA version 5.2 or greater, or using the hosted JIRA provided by Atlassian, we recommend using the web-hook method above instead. This plugin supports older versions of JIRA.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for JIRA notifications, and
subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name jira
.
Plugin Installation
The JIRA integration plugin requires two JIRA plugins. Please install the following plugins using the Universal Plugin Manager in your JIRA installation:SSL Setup
As Zulip is using a StartCOM SSL certificate that is not recognized by default in the Java installation shipped with JIRA, you will need to tell JIRA about the certificate. Navigate toAdministration > System > Configure SSL
and in
the Import SSL Certificates
field, enter {{ external_api_uri }}
. After clicking Save Certificates
,
follow the on-screen instructions and restart JIRA for it to recognize the proper certificates.
Zulip Integration
Copy the folderintegrations/jira/org/
(from the tarball you downloaded above) to your JIRA classes
folder.
For self-contained JIRA installations, this will be atlassian-jira/WEB-INF/classes/
, but this may be different in your deployment.
Edit the constants at the top of org/zulip/jira/ZulipListener.groovy
and fill them with the appropriate values:
String zulipEmail = "jira-notifications-bot@example.com" String zulipAPIKey = "0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef" String zulipStream = "JIRA" String issueBaseUrl = "https://jira.COMPANY.com/browse/"
In the Administrators page, navigate to Plugins > Other > Script Listeners
. In the Add Listener
section, click on
the Custom Listener
option. Select the events you wish the Zulip integration to fire for, and the projects you wish Zulip to be notified for.
In the Name of groovy class
field, enter org.zulip.jira.ZulipListener
.
Click Add Listener
, and JIRA will now notify your Zulip of changes to your issues!
Congratulations! You're done!
Updates from JIRA will be sent to the stream you've configured, as below.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Nagios notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. The integration will
use the default stream nagios
if no stream is supplied in the
configuration; you still need to create the stream even if you are using
this default.
Next, download and install our Python bindings and example scripts on your Nagios server.
Next, open integrations/nagios/zuliprc.example
in your favorite editor, and change the following lines to
specify the email address and API key for your Nagios bot,
saving it to /etc/nagios3/zuliprc
on your Nagios
server:
[api] email = NAGIOS_BOT_EMAIL_ADDRESS key = NAGIOS_BOT_API_KEY {% if api_site_required %}site = {{ external_api_uri }}{% endif %}
Copy integrations/nagios/zulip_nagios.cfg
to /etc/nagios3/conf.d
on your Nagios server.
Finally, add zulip
to the members
list for one or more of the contact groups in the CONTACT
GROUPS
section
of /etc/nagios3/conf.d/contacts.cfg
, doing
something like:
define contactgroup{
contactgroup_name admins
alias Nagios Administrators
members monitoring, zulip
}
/etc/init.d/nagios3 reload
.
Congratulations! You're done!
When your Nagios
system makes an alert, you'll see a message like the following,
to the stream nagios
(to change this, edit the
arguments to nagios-notify-zulip
in /etc/nagios3/conf.d/zulip_nagios.cfg
) with a
topic indicating the service with an issue:
Testing
If you
have external
commands enabled in Nagios, you can generate a test notice
from your Nagios instance by visiting using the Send
custom service notification
command in
the Service Commands
section of any individual
service's page on your Nagios instance.
Troubleshooting
You can confirm whether you've
correctly configured Nagios to run the Zulip plugin by looking
for SERVICE NOTIFICATION
lines mentioning zulip
in /var/log/nagios3/nagios.log
. You can confirm
whether you've configured the Zulip plugin code correctly by
running /usr/local/share/zulip/integrations/nagios/nagios-notify-zulip
directly.
Zulip supports integration with Perforce as a trigger that fires once a changelist is submitted and committed. To do this:
/usr/local/share/zulip/integrations/perforce
integrations/perforce/zulip_perforce_config.py
in
your favorite editor and change the ZULIP_USER
and
ZULIP_API_KEY
variables at the top of the file to the
credentials for the bot you'd like to use for this integration.p4 triggers
and add an entry something like the
following:
notify_zulip change-commit //depot/... "python /usr/local/share/zulip/integrations/perforce/zulip_change-commit.py %change% %changeroot%"
depot_subdirectory-commits
. So, a changelist that modifies
files in //depot/foo/bar/baz
will result in a message to
stream foo-commits
. Messages about changelists that modify
files in the depot root or files in multiple direct subdirectories of
the depot root will be sent to depot-commits
. If you'd
prefer different behavior, such as all commits across your depot going
to one stream, change it now in zulip_perforce_config.py
.
Make sure that everyone interested in getting these post-commit Zulips
is subscribed to the relevant streams!Congratulations! You're done!
When you commit to your
Perforce depot the team can see updates in real time in
Zulip:
Zulip supports Phabricator integration and can notify you of the latest items in your Phabricator feed.
You can follow the instructions at https://github.com/zulip/phabricator-to-zulip to get it set up.
Zulip supports Pivotal Tracker integration and can notify you of changes to the stories in your Pivotal Tracker project.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Pivotal Tracker
notifications, and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We
recommend the name pivotal
.
Next, in the Settings page for your project, choose the Integrations
tab. Scroll down to the Activity Web Hook
section, and enter
the following url:
{{ external_api_uri }}/v1/external/pivotal?api_key=abcdefgh&stream=pivotal
where api_key
is the API key of your Zulip bot,
and stream
is the stream name you want the
notifications sent to.
Choose version 5 of the API. Zulip supports both version 3 and version 5, but version 5 contains more information that lets Zulip format more useful messages.
Congratulations! You're done!
When you make changes in Pivotal Tracker they will be reflected in Zulip:
Zulip supports Puppet integration and can notify you when Puppet runs fail (or when they happen at all).
You can follow the instructions at https://forge.puppetlabs.com/mbarr/puppet_zulip to get it set up.
Thanks to Matt from Kensho for submitting this integration!
Get Zulip notifications when you hg push
!
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Mercurial notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name commits
.
Next, on your Zulip settings page, create a Mercurial bot.
Then:
Download and install our Python bindings on the server where the master Mercurial repository lives.
Edit the hg/.hgrc
configuration file for this master
Mercurial repository and add the following sections, using the
credentials for your Mercurial bot and setting the appropriate path to
the integration hook if it installs in a different location on this
system:
[hooks] changegroup = python:/usr/local/share/zulip/integrations/hg/zulip-changegroup.py:hook [zulip] email = "hg-bot@example.com" api_key = "0123456789abcdefg" stream = "commits" {% if api_site_required %}site = {{ external_api_uri }}{% endif %}
That's all it takes for the basic setup! On the next hg
push
, you'll get a Zulip update for the changeset.
The Mercurial integration also supports:
If you've set up your repository to
be browsable
via the web, add a web_url
configuration option to
the zulip
section of your master .hg/hgrc
to get
changelog and revision links in your Zulip notifications:
[zulip] email = "hg-bot@example.com" api_key = "0123456789abcdefg" stream = "commits" web_url = "http://hg.example.com:8000/" {% if api_site_required %}site = {{ external_api_uri }}{% endif %}
By default, this integration will send Zulip notifications for
changegroup events for all branches. If you'd prefer to only receive Zulip
notifications for specified branches, add a branches
configuration option to the zulip
section of your
master .hg/hgrc
, containing a comma-separated list of the
branches that should produce notifications:
[zulip] email = "hg-bot@example.com" api_key = "0123456789abcdefg" stream = "commits" branches = "prod,master"
You can also exclude branches that you don't want to cause
notifications. To do so, add an ignore_branches
configuration
option to the zulip
section of your
master .hg/hgrc
, containing a comma-separated list of the
branches that should be ignored:
[zulip] email = "hg-bot@example.com" api_key = "0123456789abcdefg" stream = "commits" ignore_branches = "noisy,even-more-noisy"
Congratulations! You're done!
When team members push new
changesets with hg push
, you'll get a Zulip notification that
looks like this:
New Relic can send messages to a Zulip stream for alerts and deploys.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for New Relic
notifications, and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We
recommend the name newrelic
.
Next, in your New Relic Account Settings page, click "Integrations", then "Alerting notifications". On the "Webhook" tab, enter the following webhook URL:
{{ external_api_uri }}/v1/external/newrelic?api_key=abcdefgh&stream=newrelic
where api_key
is the API key of your Zulip bot,
and stream
is the stream name you want the
notifications sent to.
Congratulations! You're done!
Your New Relic events will
appear in Zulip:
Get information on new or updated Redmine issues right in Zulip with our Zulip Redmine plugin! Note: this setup must be done by a Redmine Administrator.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Redmine notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name redmine
.
Then:
Clone the Zulip Redmine plugin repository by running:
git clone https://github.com/zulip/zulip-redmine-plugin
Follow
the Redmine
plugin installation guide to install
the zulip_redmine
plugin directory, which is a
subdirectory of the zulip-redmine-plugin
repository
directory. In a nutshell, the steps are:
Copy the zulip_redmine
directory to
the plugins
directory of your Redmine
instance.
Update the Redmine database by running (for Rake 2.X, see the guide for instructions for older versions):
rake redmine:plugins:migrate RAILS_ENV=production
Restart your Redmine instance.
The Zulip plugin is now registered with Redmine!
On your Zulip settings page, create a new Redmine bot.
To configure Zulip notification settings that apply to many projects in one go, in Redmine click the "Administration" link in the top left. Click the "Plugins" link on the Administration page, and click the "Configure" link to the right of the Zulip plugin description. In the "Projects" section, select all projects to which you want these settings to apply.
To configure Zulip notifications for a particular Redmine project, visit the project's Settings page.
In either case, fill out the bot email address and API key, and the Zulip stream that should receive notifications. Apply your changes.
To test the plugin, create an issue or update an existing issue in a Redmine project that has Zulip notifications configured (any project, if you've configured global settings).
Congratulations! You're done!
When you update issues in
Redmine, the team can see these updates in real time in Zulip:
Get service alerts, news, and new blog posts right in Zulip with our RSS integration!
First, create the stream you'd like to use for RSS notifications, and
subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name rss
.
Next, on your Zulip settings page, create an RSS bot.
Then, download and install our Python bindings on
the server where the RSS bot will live. The RSS integration will be
installed to a location
like /usr/local/share/zulip/integrations/rss/rss-bot
.
Follow the instructions in the rss-bot
script for
configuring the bot, adding your subscriptions, and setting up a cron job
to run the bot.
Congratulations! You're done!
When new items appear in
your feeds, the team can see these updates in real time in Zulip:
See what the team is committing to Stash right in Zulip with the Zulip Stash plugin!
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Stash notifications, and
subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name commits
.
Next, on your Zulip settings page, create a Stash bot.
Then:
Visit the Settings page for the Project that you'd like to generate Zulip notifications. Click the "Hooks" option in the left sidebar, and click "Add Hook" on the resulting page. Click the "Search for hook plugins" link:
On the search results page, look for and install the "Post-Receive WebHook for Stash" plugin:
Return to the Settings page for this Project and click the "Hooks" option in the left sidebar. The newly-installed post-receive webhook plugin is now listed in the "Post-receive" hooks section. Click the edit icon next to the hook to configure it:
Supply the following webhook URL, replacing the bot email address,
bot API key, and Zulip stream with the appropriate
information. Note: the @
-sign in the bot e-mail
address must be escaped to %40
:
{{ external_uri_scheme }}stash-bot%40example.com:api_key@{{ external_api_path }}/v1/external/stash?stream=commits
Congratulations! You're done!
When you push to Stash, the
team can see these updates in real time in Zulip:
It is easy to send Zulips on SVN commits, by configuring a post-commit hook. To do this:
First, create the stream you'd like to use for SVN commit
notifications, and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. The
integration will use the default stream commits
if no stream
is supplied in the hook; you still need to create the stream even if you
are using this default.
Then:
pysvn
. On Linux, you can install
the python-svn
package. On other platforms, you can install
a binary or from source following
the instructions
on the pysvn website.integrations/svn/zulip_svn_config.py
and integrations/svn/post-commit
from the API bindings
directory to the hooks
subdirectory of your SVN
repository.Next, open integrations/git/zulip_svn_config.py
in your favorite editor, and change the following lines to
configure your SVN integration:
ZULIP_USER = "svn-bot@example.com" ZULIP_API_KEY = "0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef" {% if api_site_required %}ZULIP_SITE = "{{ external_api_uri }}"{% endif %}
commits
; if you'd prefer a different stream, change it
now in zulip_svn_config.py
. Make sure that everyone
interested in getting these post-commit Zulips is subscribed to that
stream!Congratulations! You're done!
When you commit to this SVN
repository, the team can see these updates in real time in Zulip:
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Trac notifications, and
subscribe all interested parties to this stream. The integration will use
the default stream trac
if no stream is supplied in the
hook; you still need to create the stream even if you are using this
default.
Next, download and install our Python bindings and example scripts on your Trac server.
Next, open integrations/trac/zulip_trac_config.py
in
your favorite editor, and change the following lines to specify
your bot's email address, API key, and where you'd like your
notification messages to go (by default,
stream trac
):
ZULIP_USER = "trac-notifications-bot@example.com" ZULIP_API_KEY = "0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef" STREAM_FOR_NOTIFICATIONS = "trac" TRAC_BASE_TICKET_URL = "https://trac.example.com/ticket" {% if api_site_required %}ZULIP_SITE = "{{ external_api_uri }}"{% endif %}
Copy integrations/trac/zulip_trac.py
and integrations/trac/zulip_trac_config.py
into
your Trac installation's plugins/
subdirectory. Once you've done that, edit your Trac
installation's conf/trac.ini
to
add zulip_trac
to the [components]
section, as follows:
[components] zulip_trac = enabled
You may then need to restart Trac (or Apache) so that Trac will load our plugin.
Congratulations! You're done!
When people open
new tickets (or edit existing tickets), you'll see a message
like the following, to the stream trac
(or whatever
you configured above) with a topic that matches the ticket
name:
Additional trac configuration
After using the plugin
for a while, you may want to customize which changes to tickets
result in a Zulip notification using
the TRAC_NOTIFY_FIELDS
setting
in zulip_trac_config.py
.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Trello notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name trello
.
Next, download a copy
of trello-to-zulip
and follow the instructions in README.md
. When you
make changes in Trello, they will be reflected in Zulip:
Thanks to Nathan from FoundationDB for submitting this integration!
See Twitter search results in Zulip! This is great for seeing and discussing who is talking about you, friends, competitors, or important topics in real time.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for tweets, and subscribe
all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
name twitter
.
Next, download and install our Python bindings and example scripts. This bot should be set up on a trusted machine, because your API key is visible to local users through the command line or config file.
Next, install version 1.0 or later of
the twitter-python
library. If your operating system
distribution doesn't package a new enough version, you can install the
library from source
from the GitHub
repository.
Next, set up Twitter authentication. This bot uses OAuth to authenticate with Twitter, and in order to obtain a consumer key & secret, you must register a new application under your Twitter account:
To configure and deploy this bot:
~/.zulip_twitterrc
with the following
contents:
[twitter] consumer_key = consumer_secret = access_token_key = access_token_secret =
/usr/local/share/zulip/integrations/twitter/twitter-search-bot --search="@nprnews,quantum physics"Note:
twitter-search-bot
may install to a different
location on your operating system distribution.
* * * * * /usr/local/share/zulip/integrations/twitter/twitter-search-bot --search="@nprnews,quantum physics"
Congratulations! You're done!
When someone tweets a
message containing one of your search terms, you'll get a Zulip on your
specified stream, with the search term as the topic.
First, create the stream you'd like to use for Zendesk notifications,
and subscribe all interested parties to this stream. We recommend the
stream name zendesk
. Keep in mind you still need to create
the stream first even if you are using this recommendation.
Next, in Zendesk, open your Admin view via gear in the bottom-left corner. In the Admin view, click on Extensions, then click "add target".
From there, click "URL target". Fill in the form like this:
{{ external_api_uri }}{% verbatim %}/v1/external/zendesk?ticket_title={{ticket.title}}&ticket_id={{ticket.id}}&stream=zendesk{% endverbatim %}
zendesk-bot@yourdomain.com
Now select "Test Target" and click Submit. A test message should appear in the zendesk stream. If the message was received, save the target by selecting "Create target" and clicking Submit.
From here, add a new trigger. You'll do this for every action you want to create a Zulip notification. Triggers are added by selecting Triggers in the left menu and then clicking "add trigger" in the top right.
Let's say you want a notification each time a ticket is updated. Put in a descriptive title like "Announce ticket update". Under "Meet all of the folllowing conditions" select "Ticket: is..." and then select Updated. In the "Perform these actions" section select "Notification: Notify target" then select Zulip.
Next we need need to enter the message body into Message. You can use Zulip markdown and the Zendesk placeholders when creating your message. You can copy this example template:
{% verbatim %}Ticket [#{{ticket.id}}: {{ticket.title}}]({{ticket.link}}), was updated by {{current_user.name}}
* Status: {{ticket.status}}
* Priority: {{ticket.priority}}
* Type: {{ticket.ticket_type}}
* Assignee: {{ticket.assignee.name}}
* Tags: {{ticket.tags}}
* Description:
``` quote
{{ticket.description}}
```
{% endverbatim %}
Finally, click Submit.
Congratulations! You're Done!
When a ticket is updated
you will see a notification like the following, to the stream
zendesk
, with a topic that matches the ticket's subject
name: