Linear
Our Linear integration allows you to import issues
, teams
, and labels
from your Linear account into Port, according to your mapping and definition.
Common use cases
- Map issues, teams and labels in your Linear workspace environment.
- Watch for object changes (create/update/delete) in real-time, and automatically apply the changes to your entities in Port.
- Create/delete Linear objects using self-service actions.
Prerequisites
To install the integration, you need a Kubernetes cluster that the integration's container chart will be deployed to.
Please make sure that you have kubectl
and helm
installed on your machine, and that your kubectl
CLI is connected to the Kubernetes cluster where you plan to install the integration.
If you are having trouble installing this integration, please refer to these troubleshooting steps.
Installation
Choose one of the following installation methods:
- Real Time & Always On
- Scheduled
Using this installation option means that the integration will be able to update Port in real time using webhooks.
This table summarizes the available parameters for the installation. Set them as you wish in the script below, then copy it and run it in your terminal:
Parameter | Description | Example | Required |
---|---|---|---|
port.clientId | Your port client id | ✅ | |
port.clientSecret | Your port client secret | ✅ | |
port.baseUrl | Your Port API URL - https://api.getport.io for EU, https://api.us.getport.io for US | ✅ | |
integration.secrets.linearApiKey | Linear API key used to query the Linear GraphQL API | ✅ | |
integration.config.appHost | The host of the Port Ocean app. Used to set up the integration endpoint as the target for webhooks created in Linear | https://my-ocean-integration.com | ❌ |
Advanced configuration
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
integration.eventListener.type | The event listener type. Read more about event listeners |
integration.type | The integration to be installed |
scheduledResyncInterval | The number of minutes between each resync. When not set the integration will resync for each event listener resync event. Read more about scheduledResyncInterval |
initializePortResources | Default true, When set to true the integration will create default blueprints and the port App config Mapping. Read more about initializePortResources |
- Helm
- ArgoCD
To install the integration using Helm, run the following command:
helm repo add --force-update port-labs https://port-labs.github.io/helm-charts
helm upgrade --install my-linear-integration port-labs/port-ocean \
--set port.clientId="PORT_CLIENT_ID" \
--set port.clientSecret="PORT_CLIENT_SECRET" \
--set port.baseUrl="https://api.getport.io" \
--set initializePortResources=true \
--set scheduledResyncInterval=120 \
--set integration.identifier="my-linear-integration" \
--set integration.type="linear" \
--set integration.eventListener.type="POLLING" \
--set integration.secrets.linearApiKey="string"
The baseUrl
, port_region
, port.baseUrl
, portBaseUrl
, port_base_url
and OCEAN__PORT__BASE_URL
parameters are used to select which instance or Port API will be used.
Port exposes two API instances, one for the EU region of Port, and one for the US region of Port.
- If you use the EU region of Port, available at https://app.getport.io, your Port API URL is
https://api.getport.io
- If you use the US region of Port, available at https://app.us.getport.io, your Port API URL is
https://api.us.getport.io
To install the integration using ArgoCD, follow these steps:
- Create a
values.yaml
file inargocd/my-ocean-linear-integration
in your git repository with the content:
Remember to replace the placeholder for LINEAR_API_KEY
.
initializePortResources: true
scheduledResyncInterval: 120
integration:
identifier: my-ocean-linear-integration
type: linear
eventListener:
type: POLLING
secrets:
linearApiKey: LINEAR_API_KEY
- Install the
my-ocean-linear-integration
ArgoCD Application by creating the followingmy-ocean-linear-integration.yaml
manifest:
Remember to replace the placeholders for YOUR_PORT_CLIENT_ID
YOUR_PORT_CLIENT_SECRET
and YOUR_GIT_REPO_URL
.
Multiple sources ArgoCD documentation can be found here.
ArgoCD Application
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: my-ocean-linear-integration
namespace: argocd
spec:
destination:
namespace: mmy-ocean-linear-integration
server: https://kubernetes.default.svc
project: default
sources:
- repoURL: 'https://port-labs.github.io/helm-charts/'
chart: port-ocean
targetRevision: 0.1.14
helm:
valueFiles:
- $values/argocd/my-ocean-linear-integration/values.yaml
parameters:
- name: port.clientId
value: YOUR_PORT_CLIENT_ID
- name: port.clientSecret
value: YOUR_PORT_CLIENT_SECRET
- name: port.baseUrl
value: https://api.getport.io
- repoURL: YOUR_GIT_REPO_URL
targetRevision: main
ref: values
syncPolicy:
automated:
prune: true
selfHeal: true
syncOptions:
- CreateNamespace=true
The baseUrl
, port_region
, port.baseUrl
, portBaseUrl
, port_base_url
and OCEAN__PORT__BASE_URL
parameters are used to select which instance or Port API will be used.
Port exposes two API instances, one for the EU region of Port, and one for the US region of Port.
- If you use the EU region of Port, available at https://app.getport.io, your Port API URL is
https://api.getport.io
- If you use the US region of Port, available at https://app.us.getport.io, your Port API URL is
https://api.us.getport.io
- Apply your application manifest with
kubectl
:
kubectl apply -f my-ocean-linear-integration.yaml
- GitHub
- Jenkins
- Azure Devops
- GitLab
This workflow will run the Linear integration once and then exit, this is useful for scheduled ingestion of data.
If you want the integration to update Port in real time using webhooks you should use the Real Time & Always On installation option.
Make sure to configure the following Github Secrets:
Parameter | Description | Example | Required |
---|---|---|---|
port_client_id | Your Port client (How to get the credentials) id | ✅ | |
port_client_secret | Your Port client (How to get the credentials) secret | ✅ | |
port_base_url | Your Port API URL - https://api.getport.io for EU, https://api.us.getport.io for US | ✅ | |
config -> linear_api_key | Linear API key used to query the Linear GraphQL API | ✅ | |
initialize_port_resources | Default true, When set to true the integration will create default blueprints and the port App config Mapping. Read more about initializePortResources | ❌ | |
identifier | The identifier of the integration that will be installed | ❌ | |
version | The version of the integration that will be installed | latest | ❌ |
The following example uses the Ocean Sail Github Action to run the Linear integration. For further information about the action, please visit the Ocean Sail Github Action
Here is an example for linear-integration.yml
workflow file:
name: Linear Exporter Workflow
# This workflow is responsible for running Linear exporter.
on:
workflow_dispatch:
jobs:
run-integration:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: port-labs/ocean-sail@v1
with:
type: 'linear'
port_client_id: ${{ secrets.OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID }}
port_client_secret: ${{ secrets.OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET }}
port_base_url: https://api.getport.io
config: |
linear_api_key: ${{ secrets.OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY }}
This pipeline will run the Linear integration once and then exit, this is useful for scheduled ingestion of data.
Your Jenkins agent should be able to run docker commands.
If you want the integration to update Port in real time using webhooks you should use the Real Time & Always On installation option.
Make sure to configure the following Jenkins Credentials of Secret Text
type:
Parameter | Description | Example | Required |
---|---|---|---|
OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY | Linear API key used to query the Linear GraphQL API | ✅ | |
OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID | Your Port client (How to get the credentials) id | ✅ | |
OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET | Your Port client (How to get the credentials) secret | ✅ | |
OCEAN__PORT__BASE_URL | Your Port API URL - https://api.getport.io for EU, https://api.us.getport.io for US | ✅ | |
OCEAN__INITIALIZE_PORT_RESOURCES | Default true, When set to true the integration will create default blueprints and the port App config Mapping. Read more about initializePortResources | ❌ | |
OCEAN__INTEGRATION__IDENTIFIER | The identifier of the integration that will be installed | ❌ |
Here is an example for Jenkinsfile
groovy pipeline file:
pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Run Linear Integration') {
steps {
script {
withCredentials([
string(credentialsId: 'OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY', variable: 'OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY'),
string(credentialsId: 'OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID', variable: 'OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID'),
string(credentialsId: 'OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET', variable: 'OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET'),
]) {
sh('''
#Set Docker image and run the container
integration_type="linear"
version="latest"
image_name="ghcr.io/port-labs/port-ocean-${integration_type}:${version}"
docker run -i --rm --platform=linux/amd64 \
-e OCEAN__EVENT_LISTENER='{"type":"ONCE"}' \
-e OCEAN__INITIALIZE_PORT_RESOURCES=true \
-e OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY=$OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY \
-e OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID=$OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID \
-e OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET=$OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET \
-e OCEAN__PORT__BASE_URL='https://api.getport.io' \
$image_name
exit $?
''')
}
}
}
}
}
}
This pipeline will run the Linear integration once and then exit, this is useful for scheduled ingestion of data.
Your Azure Devops agent should be able to run docker commands. Learn more about agents here.
If you want the integration to update Port in real time using webhooks you should use the Real Time & Always On installation option.
Variable groups store values and secrets you'll use in your pipelines across your project. Learn more
Setting Up Your Credentials
- Create a Variable Group: Name it port-ocean-credentials. Store the required variables from the table.
- Authorize Your Pipeline:
- Go to "Library" -> "Variable groups."
- Find port-ocean-credentials and click on it.
- Select "Pipeline Permissions" and add your pipeline to the authorized list.
Parameter | Description | Example | Required |
---|---|---|---|
OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY | Linear API key used to query the Linear GraphQL API | ✅ | |
OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID | Your Port client (How to get the credentials) id | ✅ | |
OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET | Your Port client (How to get the credentials) secret | ✅ | |
OCEAN__PORT__BASE_URL | Your Port API URL - https://api.getport.io for EU, https://api.us.getport.io for US | ✅ | |
OCEAN__INITIALIZE_PORT_RESOURCES | Default true, When set to true the integration will create default blueprints and the port App config Mapping. Read more about initializePortResources | ❌ | |
OCEAN__INTEGRATION__IDENTIFIER | The identifier of the integration that will be installed | ❌ |
Here is an example for linear-integration.yml
pipeline file:
trigger:
- main
pool:
vmImage: "ubuntu-latest"
variables:
- group: port-ocean-credentials
steps:
- script: |
# Set Docker image and run the container
integration_type="linear"
version="latest"
image_name="ghcr.io/port-labs/port-ocean-$integration_type:$version"
docker run -i --rm \
-e OCEAN__EVENT_LISTENER='{"type":"ONCE"}' \
-e OCEAN__INITIALIZE_PORT_RESOURCES=true \
-e OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY=$(OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY) \
-e OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID=$(OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID) \
-e OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET=$(OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET) \
-e OCEAN__PORT__BASE_URL='https://api.getport.io' \
$image_name
exit $?
displayName: "Ingest Data into Port"
This workflow will run the Linear integration once and then exit, this is useful for scheduled ingestion of data.
If you want the integration to update Port in real time using webhooks you should use the Real Time & Always On installation option.
Make sure to configure the following GitLab variables:
Parameter | Description | Example | Required |
---|---|---|---|
OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY | Linear API key used to query the Linear GraphQL API | ✅ | |
OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID | Your Port client (How to get the credentials) id | ✅ | |
OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET | Your Port client (How to get the credentials) secret | ✅ | |
OCEAN__PORT__BASE_URL | Your Port API URL - https://api.getport.io for EU, https://api.us.getport.io for US | ✅ | |
OCEAN__INITIALIZE_PORT_RESOURCES | Default true, When set to true the integration will create default blueprints and the port App config Mapping. Read more about initializePortResources | ❌ | |
OCEAN__INTEGRATION__IDENTIFIER | The identifier of the integration that will be installed | ❌ |
Here is an example for .gitlab-ci.yml
pipeline file:
default:
image: docker:24.0.5
services:
- docker:24.0.5-dind
before_script:
- docker info
variables:
INTEGRATION_TYPE: linear
VERSION: latest
stages:
- ingest
ingest_data:
stage: ingest
variables:
IMAGE_NAME: ghcr.io/port-labs/port-ocean-$INTEGRATION_TYPE:$VERSION
script:
- |
docker run -i --rm --platform=linux/amd64 \
-e OCEAN__EVENT_LISTENER='{"type":"ONCE"}' \
-e OCEAN__INITIALIZE_PORT_RESOURCES=true \
-e OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY=$OCEAN__INTEGRATION__CONFIG__LINEAR_API_KEY \
-e OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID=$OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_ID \
-e OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET=$OCEAN__PORT__CLIENT_SECRET \
-e OCEAN__PORT__BASE_URL='https://api.getport.io' \
$IMAGE_NAME
rules: # Run only when changes are made to the main branch
- if: '$CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == "main"'
The baseUrl
, port_region
, port.baseUrl
, portBaseUrl
, port_base_url
and OCEAN__PORT__BASE_URL
parameters are used to select which instance or Port API will be used.
Port exposes two API instances, one for the EU region of Port, and one for the US region of Port.
- If you use the EU region of Port, available at https://app.getport.io, your Port API URL is
https://api.getport.io
- If you use the US region of Port, available at https://app.us.getport.io, your Port API URL is
https://api.us.getport.io
For advanced configuration such as proxies or self-signed certificates, click here.
Ingesting Linear objects
The Linear integration uses a YAML configuration to describe the process of loading data into the developer portal.
Here is an example snippet from the config which demonstrates the process for getting team
data from Linear:
createMissingRelatedEntities: true
deleteDependentEntities: true
resources:
- kind: team
selector:
query: "true"
port:
entity:
mappings:
identifier: .key
title: .name
blueprint: '"linearTeam"'
properties:
description: .description
workspaceName: .organization.name
url: "\"https://linear.app/\" + .organization.urlKey + \"/team/\" + .key"
The integration makes use of the JQ JSON processor to select, modify, concatenate, transform and perform other operations on existing fields and values from Linear's API events.
In the example above, two additional parameters are used:
createMissingRelatedEntities
- used to enable the creation of missing related entities in Port. This is useful when you want to create an entity and its related entities in one call, or if you want to create an entity whose related entity does not exist yet.
deleteDependentEntities
- used to enable deletion of dependent Port entities. This is useful when you have two blueprints with a required relation, and the target entity in the relation should be deleted. In this scenario, the delete operation will fail if this parameter is set to false
. If set to true
, the source entity will be deleted as well.
Configuration structure
The integration configuration determines which resources will be queried from Linear, and which entities and properties will be created in Port.
Kind
)-
The root key of the integration configuration is the
resources
key:resources:
- kind: team
selector:
... -
The
kind
key is a specifier for a Linear object:resources:
- kind: team
selector:
... -
The
selector
and thequery
keys allow you to filter which objects of the specifiedkind
will be ingested into your software catalog:resources:
- kind: team
selector:
query: "true" # JQ boolean expression. If evaluated to false - this object will be skipped.
port: -
The
port
,entity
and themappings
keys are used to map the Linear object fields to Port entities. To create multiple mappings of the same kind, you can add another item in theresources
array;resources:
- kind: team
selector:
query: "true"
port:
entity:
mappings: # Mappings between one Linear object to a Port entity. Each value is a JQ query.
identifier: .key
title: .name
blueprint: '"linearTeam"'
properties:
description: .description
workspaceName: .organization.name
url: "\"https://linear.app/\" + .organization.urlKey + \"/team/\" + .key"
- kind: team # In this instance project is mapped again with a different filter
selector:
query: '.name == "MyTeamName"'
port:
entity:
mappings: ...
Note the value of the blueprint
key - if you want to use a hardcoded string, you need to encapsulate it in 2 sets of quotes, for example use a pair of single-quotes ('
) and then another pair of double-quotes ("
)
Ingest data into Port
To ingest Linear objects using the integration configuration, you can follow the steps below:
- Go to the DevPortal Builder page.
- Select a blueprint you want to ingest using Linear.
- Choose the Ingest Data option from the menu.
- Click on
+ Data source
at the top right corner - Select Linear under the Project management providers category.
- Modify the configuration according to your needs.
- Click
Resync
.
Examples
Examples of blueprints and the relevant integration configurations:
Team
Team blueprint
{
"identifier": "linearTeam",
"title": "Linear Team",
"icon": "Linear",
"description": "A Linear team",
"schema": {
"properties": {
"description": {
"type": "string",
"title": "Description",
"description": "Team description"
},
"workspaceName": {
"type": "string",
"title": "Workspace Name",
"description": "The name of the workspace this team belongs to"
},
"url": {
"title": "Team URL",
"type": "string",
"format": "url",
"description": "URL to the team in Linear"
}
}
},
"calculationProperties": {}
}
Integration configuration
createMissingRelatedEntities: true
deleteDependentEntities: true
resources:
- kind: team
selector:
query: "true"
port:
entity:
mappings:
identifier: .key
title: .name
blueprint: '"linearTeam"'
properties:
description: .description
workspaceName: .organization.name
url: "\"https://linear.app/\" + .organization.urlKey + \"/team/\" + .key"
Label
Label blueprint
{
"identifier": "linearLabel",
"title": "Linear Label",
"icon": "Linear",
"description": "A Linear label",
"schema": {
"properties": {
"isGroup": {
"type": "boolean",
"title": "Is group",
"description": "Whether this label is considered to be a group"
}
}
},
"calculationProperties": {},
"relations": {
"parentLabel": {
"target": "linearLabel",
"title": "Parent Label",
"required": false,
"many": false
},
"childLabels": {
"target": "linearLabel",
"title": "Child Labels",
"required": false,
"many": true
}
}
}
Integration configuration
createMissingRelatedEntities: true
deleteDependentEntities: true
resources:
- kind: label
selector:
query: "true"
port:
entity:
mappings:
identifier: .id
title: .name
blueprint: '"linearLabel"'
properties:
isGroup: .isGroup
relations:
parentLabel: .parent.id
childLabels: "[.children.edges[].node.id]"
Issue
Issue blueprint
{
"identifier": "linearIssue",
"title": "Linear Issue",
"icon": "Linear",
"schema": {
"properties": {
"url": {
"title": "Issue URL",
"type": "string",
"format": "url",
"description": "URL to the issue in Linear"
},
"status": {
"title": "Status",
"type": "string",
"description": "The status of the issue"
},
"assignee": {
"title": "Assignee",
"type": "string",
"format": "user",
"description": "The user assigned to the issue"
},
"creator": {
"title": "Creator",
"type": "string",
"description": "The user that created to the issue",
"format": "user"
},
"priority": {
"title": "Priority",
"type": "string",
"description": "The priority of the issue"
},
"created": {
"title": "Created At",
"type": "string",
"description": "The created datetime of the issue",
"format": "date-time"
},
"updated": {
"title": "Updated At",
"type": "string",
"description": "The updated datetime of the issue",
"format": "date-time"
}
}
},
"calculationProperties": {},
"relations": {
"team": {
"target": "linearTeam",
"title": "Team",
"description": "The Linear team that contains this issue",
"required": false,
"many": false
},
"parentIssue": {
"title": "Parent Issue",
"target": "linearIssue",
"required": false,
"many": false
},
"labels": {
"target": "linearLabel",
"title": "Labels",
"required": false,
"many": true
}
}
}
Integration configuration
createMissingRelatedEntities: true
deleteDependentEntities: true
resources:
- kind: issue
selector:
query: "true"
port:
entity:
mappings:
identifier: .identifier
title: .title
blueprint: '"linearIssue"'
properties:
url: .url
status: .state.name
assignee: .assignee.email
creator: .creator.email
priority: .priorityLabel
created: .createdAt
updated: .updatedAt
relations:
team: .team.key
labels: .labelIds
parentIssue: .parent.identifier
Let's Test It
This section includes a sample response data from Linear. In addition, it includes the entity created from the resync event based on the Ocean configuration provided in the previous section.
Payload
Here is an example of the payload structure from Linear:
Team response data
{
"id": "92d25fa4-fb1c-449f-b314-47f82e8f280d",
"name": "Port",
"key": "POR",
"description": null,
"organization": {
"id": "36968e1b-496c-4610-8c25-641364da172e",
"name": "Getport",
"urlKey": "getport"
}
}
Label response data
{
"id": "36f84d2c-7b7d-4a71-96f2-6ea4140004d5",
"createdAt": "2024-05-17T15:17:40.858Z",
"updatedAt": "2024-05-17T15:17:40.858Z",
"archivedAt": null,
"name": "New-sample-label",
"description": null,
"color": "#bec2c8",
"isGroup": true,
"parent": null,
"children": {
"edges": [
{
"node": {
"id": "2e483c90-2aca-4db6-924d-b0571d49f691"
}
}
]
}
}
Issue response data
{
"id": "9b4745c2-a8e6-4432-9e56-0fa97b79ccbf",
"createdAt": "2024-05-16T21:52:00.299Z",
"updatedAt": "2024-05-17T09:27:40.077Z",
"archivedAt": null,
"number": 2,
"title": "sub issue with new title",
"priority": 3,
"estimate": null,
"sortOrder": -991,
"startedAt": null,
"completedAt": null,
"startedTriageAt": null,
"triagedAt": null,
"canceledAt": null,
"autoClosedAt": null,
"autoArchivedAt": null,
"dueDate": null,
"slaStartedAt": null,
"slaBreachesAt": null,
"trashed": null,
"snoozedUntilAt": null,
"labelIds": [
"402b218c-938c-4ddf-85db-0019bc632316"
],
"previousIdentifiers": [],
"subIssueSortOrder": -56.17340471045278,
"priorityLabel": "Medium",
"integrationSourceType": null,
"identifier": "POR-2",
"url": "https://linear.app/getport/issue/POR-2/sub-issue-with-new-title",
"branchName": "mor/por-2-sub-issue-with-new-title",
"customerTicketCount": 0,
"description": "",
"descriptionState": "AQG/pOWPAgAHAQtwcm9zZW1pcnJvcgMJcGFyYWdyYXBoAA==",
"team": {
"id": "92d25fa4-fb1c-449f-b314-47f82e8f280d",
"name": "Port",
"key": "POR"
},
"state": {
"name": "Todo"
},
"creator": {
"name": "Mor Paz",
"email": "mor@getport.io"
},
"assignee": {
"name": "Dudi Elhadad",
"email": "dudi@getport.io"
},
"parent": {
"id": "5ddd8e85-ad89-4c96-b901-0b901b29100d",
"identifier": "POR-1"
}
}
Mapping Result
The combination of the sample payload and the Ocean configuration generates the following Port entity:
Team entity in Port
{
"identifier": "POR",
"title": "Port",
"icon": null,
"blueprint": "linearTeam",
"team": [],
"properties": {
"url": "https://linear.app/getport/team/POR",
"workspaceName": "Getport"
},
"relations": {},
"createdAt": "2024-05-19T16:19:15.232Z",
"createdBy": "KZ5zDPudPshQMShUb4cLopBEE1fNSJGE",
"updatedAt": "2024-05-19T16:19:15.232Z",
"updatedBy": "KZ5zDPudPshQMShUb4cLopBEE1fNSJGE"
}
Label entity in Port
{
"identifier": "36f84d2c-7b7d-4a71-96f2-6ea4140004d5",
"title": "New-sample-label",
"icon": null,
"blueprint": "linearLabel",
"team": [],
"properties": {
"isGroup": false
},
"relations": {
"childLabels": [],
"parentLabel": null
},
"createdAt": "2024-05-19T16:19:17.747Z",
"createdBy": "KZ5zDPudPshQMShUb4cLopBEE1fNSJGE",
"updatedAt": "2024-05-19T16:19:17.747Z",
"updatedBy": "KZ5zDPudPshQMShUb4cLopBEE1fNSJGE"
}
Issue entity in Port
{
"identifier": "POR-2",
"title": "sub issue with new title",
"icon": null,
"blueprint": "linearIssue",
"team": [],
"properties": {
"status": "Todo",
"url": "https://linear.app/getport/issue/POR-2/sub-issue-with-new-title",
"created": "2024-05-16T21:52:00.299Z",
"priority": "Medium",
"assignee": "dudi@getport.io",
"updated": "2024-05-17T09:27:40.077Z",
"creator": "mor@getport.io"
},
"relations": {
"team": "POR",
"labels": [
"402b218c-938c-4ddf-85db-0019bc632316"
],
"parentIssue": "POR-1"
},
"createdAt": "2024-05-19T16:19:21.143Z",
"createdBy": "KZ5zDPudPshQMShUb4cLopBEE1fNSJGE",
"updatedAt": "2024-05-19T16:19:21.143Z",
"updatedBy": "KZ5zDPudPshQMShUb4cLopBEE1fNSJGE"
}
Alternative installation via webhook
While the Ocean integration described above is the recommended installation method, you may prefer to use a webhook to ingest data from Linear. If so, use the following instructions:
Webhook installation (click to expand)
In this example you are going to create a webhook integration between Linear and Port, which will ingest Linear issue entities.
Port configuration
Create the following blueprint definition:
Linear issue blueprint
{
"identifier": "linearIssue",
"title": "Linear Issue",
"icon": "Linear",
"schema": {
"properties": {
"url": {
"title": "Issue URL",
"type": "string",
"format": "url",
"description": "URL to the issue in Linear"
},
"status": {
"title": "Status",
"type": "string",
"description": "The status of the issue"
},
"assignee": {
"title": "Assignee",
"type": "string",
"format": "user",
"description": "The user assigned to the issue"
},
"creator": {
"title": "Creator",
"type": "string",
"description": "The user that created to the issue",
"format": "user"
},
"priority": {
"title": "Priority",
"type": "string",
"description": "The priority of the issue"
},
"created": {
"title": "Created At",
"type": "string",
"description": "The created datetime of the issue",
"format": "date-time"
},
"updated": {
"title": "Updated At",
"type": "string",
"description": "The updated datetime of the issue",
"format": "date-time"
}
}
},
"calculationProperties": {},
"relations": {}
}
Create the following webhook configuration using Port's UI
Linear issue webhook configuration
-
Basic details tab - fill the following details:
- Title :
Linear mapper
; - Identifier :
linear_mapper
; - Description :
A webhook configuration to map Linear issues to Port
; - Icon :
Linear
;
- Title :
-
Integration configuration tab - fill the following JQ mapping:
[
{
"blueprint": "linearIssue",
"entity": {
"identifier": ".body.data.identifier",
"title": ".body.data.title",
"properties": {
"url": ".body.data.url",
"status": ".body.data.state.name",
"assignee": ".body.data.assignee.email",
"creator": ".body.data.creator.email",
"priority": ".body.data.priorityLabel",
"created": ".body.data.createdAt",
"updated": ".body.data.updatedAt"
}
}
}
] -
Click Save at the bottom of the page.
Create a webhook in Linear
You can follow the instruction in Linear's docs, they are also outlined here for reference:
- Log in to Linear as a user with admin permissions.
- Click the workspace label at the top left corner.
- Choose Workspace Settings.
- At the bottom of the sidebar on the left, under My Account, choose API.
- Click on Create new webhook.
- Input the following details:
Label
- use a meaningful name such as Port Webhook.URL
- enter the value of theurl
key you received after creating the webhook configuration.- Under
Data change events
- mark issues.
- Click Create webhook at the bottom of the page.
In order to view the different payloads and events available in Linear webhooks, look here
Done! any change you make to an issue (open, close, edit, etc.) will trigger a webhook event that Linear will send to the webhook URL provided by Port. Port will parse the events according to the mapping and update the catalog entities accordingly.
Let's Test It
This section includes a sample webhook event sent from Linear when an issue is created or updated. In addition, it includes the entity created from the event based on the webhook configuration provided in the previous section.
Payload
Here is an example of the payload structure sent to the webhook URL when a Linear issue is created:
Webhook event payload
{
"action": "create",
"actor": {
"id": "11c5ce7d-229b-4487-b23b-f404e4a8c85d",
"name": "Mor Paz",
"type": "user"
},
"createdAt": "2024-05-19T17:55:29.277Z",
"data": {
"id": "d62a755d-5389-4dbd-98bb-3db03f239d9d",
"createdAt": "2024-05-19T17:55:29.277Z",
"updatedAt": "2024-05-19T17:55:29.277Z",
"number": 5,
"title": "New issue again",
"priority": 0,
"boardOrder": 0,
"sortOrder": -3975,
"labelIds": [],
"teamId": "92d25fa4-fb1c-449f-b314-47f82e8f280d",
"previousIdentifiers": [],
"creatorId": "11c5ce7d-229b-4487-b23b-f404e4a8c85d",
"stateId": "f12cad17-9b8f-470d-b20a-5e17da8e46b9",
"priorityLabel": "No priority",
"botActor": null,
"identifier": "POR-5",
"url": "https://linear.app/getport/issue/POR-5/new-issue-again",
"state": {
"id": "f12cad17-9b8f-470d-b20a-5e17da8e46b9",
"color": "#e2e2e2",
"name": "Todo",
"type": "unstarted"
},
"team": {
"id": "92d25fa4-fb1c-449f-b314-47f82e8f280d",
"key": "POR",
"name": "Port"
},
"subscriberIds": [
"11c5ce7d-229b-4487-b23b-f404e4a8c85d"
],
"labels": []
},
"url": "https://linear.app/getport/issue/POR-5/new-issue-again",
"type": "Issue",
"organizationId": "36968e1b-496c-4610-8c25-641364da172e",
"webhookTimestamp": 1716141329394,
"webhookId": "ee1fa20e-6b57-4448-86f7-39d9672ddedd"
}
Mapping Result
The combination of the sample payload and the webhook configuration generates the following Port entity:
{
"identifier": "POR-5",
"title": "New issue again",
"team": [],
"properties": {
"status": "Todo",
"url": "https://linear.app/getport/issue/POR-5/new-issue-again",
"created": "2024-05-19T17:55:29.277Z",
"priority": "No priority",
"updated": "2024-05-19T17:55:29.277Z"
},
"relations": {
"labels": []
},
"icon": "Linear"
}