-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 198
Example: Task Dependencies
Task dependencies work the same way in the API as they do in the UI. You can filter and sort on any of the fields. For information about Task Dependencies in Shotgun, check out the main documentation page on our support site: https://support.shotgunsoftware.com/entries/337228-task-dependencies
Let's create a couple of Tasks and create dependencies between them. First we'll create a 'Layout' Task for our Shot:
data = {
'project': {'type':'Project', 'id':65},
'content': 'Layout',
'start_date': '2010-04-28',
'due_date': '2010-05-05',
'entity': {'type':'Shot', 'id':860}
}
result = sg.create(Task, data)
Returns:
{'content': 'Layout',
'due_date': '2010-05-05',
'entity': {'id': 860, 'name': 'bunny_010_0010', 'type': 'Shot'},
'id': 556,
'project': {'id': 65, 'name': 'Demo Animation Project', 'type': 'Project'},
'start_date': '2010-04-28',
'type': 'Task'}
Now let's create an 'Anm' Task for our Shot:
data = {
'project': {'type':'Project', 'id':65},
'content': 'Anm',
'start_date': '2010-05-06',
'due_date': '2010-05-12',
'entity': {'type':'Shot', 'id':860}
}
result = sg.create(Task, data)
Returns:
{'content': 'Anm',
'due_date': '2010-05-12',
'entity': {'id': 860, 'name': 'bunny_010_0010', 'type': 'Shot'},
'id': 557,
'project': {'id': 65, 'name': 'Demo Animation Project', 'type': 'Project'},
'start_date': '2010-05-06,
'type': 'Task'}
Tasks each have an upstream_tasks
field and a downstream_tasks
field. Each field is a list []
type and can contain zero, one, or multiple Task entity hashes representing the dependent Tasks. Here is how to create a dependency between our 'Layout' and 'Anim' Tasks:
# make 'Layout' and upstream Task to 'Anm'. (aka, make 'Anm' dependent on 'Layout')
result = sg.update('Task', 557, {'upstream_tasks':[{'type':'Task','id':556}]})
Returns:
[{'id': 557,
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': [{'id': 556, 'name': 'Layout', 'type': 'Task'}]}]
This will also automatically update the downstream_tasks
field on 'Layout' to include the 'Anm' Task.
So now lets look at the Tasks we've created and their dependency-related fields:
filters = [
['entity', 'is', {'type':'Shot', 'id':860}]
]
fields = [
'content',
'start_date',
'due_date',
'upstream_tasks',
'downstream_tasks',
'dependency_violation',
'pinned'
]
result = sg.find("Task", filters, fields)
Returns:
[{'content': 'Layout',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Anm', 'id': 557}],
'due_date': '2010-05-05',
'id': 556,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-04-28',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': []},
{'content': 'Anm',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'FX', 'id': 558}],
'due_date': '2010-05-12',
'id': 557,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-05-06',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Layout', 'id': 556}]},
...
(Note that we have also created additional Tasks for this Shot but we're going to focus on these first two for simplicity)
If we update the due_date
field on our Layout Task, we'll see that the 'Anm' Task dates will automatically get pushed back to keep the dependency satisfied.
result = sg.update('Task', 556, {'due_date': '2010-05-07'})
Returns:
[{'due_date': '2010-05-07', 'type': 'Task', 'id': 556}]
Our Tasks now look like this (notice the new dates on the 'Anm' Task):
[{'content': 'Layout',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Anm', 'id': 557}],
'due_date': '2010-05-07',
'id': 556,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-04-28',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': []},
{'content': 'Anm',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'FX', 'id': 558}],
'due_date': '2010-05-14',
'id': 557,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-05-10',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Layout', 'id': 556}]},
...
Task Dependencies can work nicely if you are pushing out an end date for a Task as it will just recalculate the dates for all of the dependent Tasks. But what if we push up the Start Date of our 'Anm' Task to start before our 'Layout' Task is scheduled to end?
result = sg.update('Task', 557, {'start_date': '2010-05-06'})
Returns:
[{'type': 'Task', 'start_date': '2010-05-06', 'id': 557}]
Our Tasks now look like this:
[{'content': 'Layout',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Anm', 'id': 557}],
'due_date': '2010-05-07',
'id': 556,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-04-28',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': []},
{'content': 'Anm',
'dependency_violation': True,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'FX', 'id': 558}],
'due_date': '2010-05-12',
'id': 557,
'pinned': True,
'start_date': '2010-05-06',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Layout', 'id': 556}]},
...
Because the 'Anm' Task start_date
depends on the due_date
of the 'Layout' Task, this change creates a dependency violation. The update succeeds, but Shotgun has also set the dependency_violation
field to True
and has also updated the pinned
field to True
.
The pinned
field simply means that if the upstream Task(s) are moved, the 'Anm' Task will no longer get moved with it. The dependency is still there (in upstream_tasks
) but the Task is now "pinned" to those dates until the Dependency Violation is resolved.
We don't want that violation there. Let's revert that change so the Start Date for 'Anm' is after the End Date of 'Layout'
result = sg.update('Task', 557, {'start_date': '2010-05-10'})
Returns:
[{'type': 'Task', 'start_date': '2010-05-10', 'id': 557}]
Our Tasks now look like this:
[{'content': 'Layout',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Anm', 'id': 557}],
'due_date': '2010-05-07',
'id': 556,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-04-28',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': []},
{'content': 'Anm',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'FX', 'id': 558}],
'due_date': '2010-05-14',
'id': 557,
'pinned': True,
'start_date': '2010-05-10',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Layout', 'id': 556}]},
...
The dependency_violation
field has now been set back to False
since there is no longer a violation. But notice that the pinned
field is still True
. We will have to manually update that if we want the Task to travel with its dependencies again.
result = sg.update('Task', 557, {'pinned': False})
Returns:
[{'pinned': False, 'type': 'Task', 'id': 557}]
Our Tasks now look like this:
[{'content': 'Layout',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Anm', 'id': 557}],
'due_date': '2010-05-07',
'id': 556,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-04-28',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': []},
{'content': 'Anm',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'FX', 'id': 558}],
'due_date': '2010-05-14',
'id': 557,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-05-10',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Layout', 'id': 556}]},
...
Looks great. But that's an annoying manual process. What if we want to just reset a Task so that it automatically gets updated so that the Start Date is after its dependent Tasks?
Let's go back a couple of steps to where our 'Anm' Task had a Dependency Violation because we had moved the Start Date up before the 'Layout' Task End Date. Remember that the pinned
field was also True
. If we simply update the pinned
field to be False
, Shotgun will also automatically update the Task dates to satisfy the upstream dependencies and reset the dependency_violation
value to False
.
result = sg.update('Task', 557, {'pinned': False})
Returns:
[{'pinned': False, 'type': 'Task', 'id': 557}]
Our Tasks now look like this:
[{'content': 'Layout',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Anm', 'id': 557}],
'due_date': '2010-05-07',
'id': 556,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-04-28',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': []},
{'content': 'Anm',
'dependency_violation': False,
'downstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'FX', 'id': 558}],
'due_date': '2010-05-14',
'id': 557,
'pinned': False,
'start_date': '2010-05-10',
'type': 'Task',
'upstream_tasks': [{'type': 'Task', 'name': 'Layout', 'id': 556}]},
...
Notice by updating pinned
to False
, Shotgun also updated the start_date
and due_date
fields of our 'Anm' Task so it will satisfy the upstream Task dependencies. And since that succeeded, the dependency_violation
field has also been set to False
The dependency_violation
field is the only dependency-related field that is read-only. Trying to modify it will generate a Fault.
result = sg.update('Task', 557, {'dependency_violation': False})
Returns:
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# XMLRPC Fault 103:
# API update() Task.dependency_violation is read only:
# {"value"=>false, "field_name"=>"dependency_violation"}
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Traceback (most recent call last):
# ...