NAME
   RT::Extension::SLA - Service Level Agreements for RT

DESCRIPTION
   RT extension to implement automated due dates using service levels.

INSTALLATION
   perl Makefile.PL
   make
   make install
       May need root permissions

   make initdb
       Only run this the first time you install this module.

       If you run this twice, you may end up with duplicate data in your
       database.

       If you are upgrading this module, check for upgrading instructions
       in case changes need to be made to your database.

   Edit your /opt/rt4/etc/RT_SiteConfig.pm
       If you are using RT 4.2 or greater, add this line:

           Plugin('RT::Extension::SLA');

       For RT 3.8 and 4.0, add this line:

           Set(@Plugins, qw(RT::Extension::SLA));

       or add RT::Extension::SLA to your existing @Plugins line.

   Restart your webserver

UPGRADING
 From versions prior to 0.06
   You need to run an upgrade step on your RT database so this extension
   continues to work. Run the following from inside the source of this
   extension:

       /opt/rt4/sbin/rt-setup-database --action insert --datafile etc/upgrade/0.06/content

   It will prompt you for your DBA password and should complete without
   error.

CONFIGURATION
   Service level agreements of tickets is controlled by an SLA custom field
   (CF). This field is created during make initdb step (above) and applied
   globally. This CF MUST be of select one value type. Values of the CF
   define the service levels.

   It's possible to define different set of levels for different queues.
   You can create several CFs with the same name and different set of
   values. But if you move tickets between queues a lot then it's going to
   be a problem and it's preferred to use ONE SLA custom field.

   There is no WebUI in the current version. Almost everything is
   controlled in the RT's config using option %RT::ServiceAgreements and
   %RT::ServiceBusinessHours. For example:

       %RT::ServiceAgreements = (
           Default => '4h',
           QueueDefault => {
               'Incident' => '2h',
           },
           Levels => {
               '2h' => { Resolve => { RealMinutes => 60*2 } },
               '4h' => { Resolve => { RealMinutes => 60*4 } },
           },
       );

   In this example *Incident* is the name of the queue, and *2h* is the
   name of the SLA which will be applied to this queue by default.

   Each service level can be described using several options: Starts,
   Resolve, Response, KeepInLoop, OutOfHours and ServiceBusinessHours.

 Starts (interval, first business minute)
   By default when a ticket is created Starts date is set to first business
   minute after time of creation. In other words if a ticket is created
   during business hours then Starts will be equal to Created time,
   otherwise Starts will be beginning of the next business day.

   However, if you provide 24/7 support then you most probably would be
   interested in Starts to be always equal to Created time.

   Starts option can be used to adjust behaviour. Format of the option is
   the same as format for deadlines which described later in details.
   RealMinutes, BusinessMinutes options and OutOfHours modifiers can be
   used here like for any other deadline. For example:

       'standard' => {
           # give people 15 minutes
           Starts   => { BusinessMinutes => 15  },
       },

   You can still use old option StartImmediately to set Starts date equal
   to Created date.

   Example:

       '24/7' => {
           StartImmediately => 1,
           Response => { RealMinutes => 30 },
       },

   But it's the same as:

       '24/7' => {
           Starts => { RealMinutes => 0 },
           Response => { RealMinutes => 30 },
       },

 Resolve and Response (interval, no defaults)
   These two options define deadlines for resolve of a ticket and reply to
   customer(requestors) questions accordingly.

   You can define them using real time, business or both. Read more about
   the latter below.

   The Due date field is used to store calculated deadlines.

  Resolve
   Defines deadline when a ticket should be resolved. This option is quite
   simple and straightforward when used without "Response".

   Example:

       # 8 business hours
       'simple' => { Resolve => 60*8 },
       ...
       # one real week
       'hard' => { Resolve => { RealMinutes => 60*24*7 } },

  Response
   In many companies providing support service(s) resolve time of a ticket
   is less important than time of response to requestors from staff
   members.

   You can use Response option to define such deadlines. The Due date is
   set when a ticket is created, unset when a worker replies, and re-set
   when the requestor replies again -- until the ticket is closed, when the
   ticket's Due date is unset.

   NOTE that this behaviour changes when Resolve and Response options are
   combined; see "Using both Resolve and Response in the same level".

   Note that by default, only the requestors on the ticket are considered
   "outside actors" and thus require a Response due date; all other email
   addresses are treated as workers of the ticket, and thus count as
   meeting the SLA. If you'd like to invert this logic, so that the Owner
   and AdminCcs are the only worker email addresses, and all others are
   external, see the "AssumeOutsideActor" configuration.

   The owner is never treated as an outside actor; if they are also the
   requestor of the ticket, it will have no SLA.

   If an outside actor replies multiple times, their later replies are
   ignored; the deadline is awlways calculated from the oldest
   correspondence from the outside actor.

  Using both Resolve and Response in the same level
   Resolve and Response can be combined. In such case due date is set
   according to the earliest of two deadlines and never is dropped to 'not
   set'.

   If a ticket met its Resolve deadline then due date stops "flipping", is
   freezed and the ticket becomes overdue. Before that moment when an
   inside actor replies to a ticket, due date is changed to Resolve
   deadline instead of 'Not Set', as well this happens when a ticket is
   closed. So all the time due date is defined.

   Example:

       'standard delivery' => {
           Response => { RealMinutes => 60*1  }, # one hour
           Resolve  => { RealMinutes => 60*24 }, # 24 real hours
       },

   A client orders goods and due date of the order is set to the next one
   hour, you have this hour to process the order and write a reply. As soon
   as goods are delivered you resolve tickets and usually meet Resolve
   deadline, but if you don't resolve or user replies then most probably
   there are problems with delivery of the goods. And if after a week you
   keep replying to the client and always meeting one hour response
   deadline that doesn't mean the ticket is not over due. Due date was
   frozen 24 hours after creation of the order.

  Using business and real time in one option
   It's quite rare situation when people need it, but we've decided that
   business is applied first and then real time when deadline described
   using both types of time. For example:

       'delivery' => {
           Resolve => { BusinessMinutes => 0, RealMinutes => 60*8 },
       },
       'fast delivery' {
           StartImmediately => 1,
           Resolve => { RealMinutes => 60*8 },
       },

   For delivery requests which come into the system during business hours
   these levels define the same deadlines, otherwise the first level set
   deadline to 8 real hours starting from the next business day, when
   tickets with the second level should be resolved in the next 8 hours
   after creation.

 Keep in loop (interval, no defaults)
   If response deadline is used then Due date is changed to repsonse
   deadline or to "Not Set" when staff replies to a ticket. In some cases
   you want to keep requestors in loop and keed them up to date every few
   hours. KeepInLoop option can be used to achieve this.

       'incident' => {
           Response   => { RealMinutes => 60*1  }, # one hour
           KeepInLoop => { RealMinutes => 60*2 }, # two hours
           Resolve    => { RealMinutes => 60*24 }, # 24 real hours
       },

   In the above example Due is set to one hour after creation, reply of a
   inside actor moves Due date two hours forward, outside actors' replies
   move Due date to one hour and resolve deadine is 24 hours.

 Modifying Agreements
  OutOfHours (struct, no default)
   Out of hours modifier. Adds more real or business minutes to resolve
   and/or reply options if event happens out of business hours, read also
   </"Configuring business hours"> below.

   Example:

       'level x' => {
           OutOfHours => { Resolve => { RealMinutes => +60*24 } },
           Resolve    => { RealMinutes => 60*24 },
       },

   If a request comes into the system during night then supporters have two
   hours, otherwise only one.

       'level x' => {
           OutOfHours => { Response => { BusinessMinutes => +60*2 } },
           Resolve    => { BusinessMinutes => 60 },
       },

   Supporters have two additional hours in the morning to deal with bunch
   of requests that came into the system during the last night.

  IgnoreOnStatuses (array, no default)
   Allows you to ignore a deadline when ticket has certain status. Example:

       'level x' => {
           KeepInLoop => { BusinessMinutes => 60, IgnoreOnStatuses => ['stalled'] },
       },

   In above example KeepInLoop deadline is ignored if ticket is stalled.

   NOTE: When a ticket goes from an ignored status to a normal status, the
   new Due date is calculated from the last action (reply, SLA change, etc)
   which fits the SLA type (Response, Starts, KeepInLoop, etc). This means
   if a ticket in the above example flips from stalled to open without a
   reply, the ticket will probably be overdue. In most cases this shouldn't
   be a problem since moving out of stalled-like statuses is often the
   result of RT's auto-open on reply scrip, therefore ensuring there's a
   new reply to calculate Due from. The overall effect is that ignored
   statuses don't let the Due date drift arbitrarily, which could wreak
   havoc on your SLA performance.

 Configuring business hours
   In the config you can set one or more work schedules. Use the following
   format:

       %RT::ServiceBusinessHours = (
           'Default' => {
               ... description ...
           },
           'Support' => {
               ... description ...
           },
           'Sales' => {
               ... description ...
           },
       );

   Read more about how to describe a schedule in Business::Hours.

  Defining different business hours for service levels
   Each level supports BusinessHours option to specify your own business
   hours.

       'level x' => {
           BusinessHours => 'work just in Monday',
           Resolve    => { BusinessMinutes => 60 },
       },

   then %RT::ServiceBusinessHours should have the corresponding definition:

       %RT::ServiceBusinessHours = (
           'work just in Monday' => {
               1 => { Name => 'Monday', Start => '9:00', End => '18:00' },
           },
       );

   Default Business Hours setting is in
   $RT::ServiceBusinessHours{'Default'}.

 Defining service levels per queue
   In the config you can set per queue defaults, using:

       %RT::ServiceAgreements = (
           Default => 'global default level of service',
           QueueDefault => {
               'queue name' => 'default value for this queue',
               ...
           },
           ...
       };

 AssumeOutsideActor
   When using a Response configuration, the due date is unset when anyone
   who is not a requestor replies. If it is common for non-requestors to
   reply to tickets, and this should *not* satisfy the SLA, you may wish to
   set AssumeOutsideActor. This causes the extension to assume that the
   Response SLA has only been met when the owner or AdminCc reply.

       %RT::ServiceAgreements = (
           AssumeOutsideActor => 1,
           ...
       };

 Access control
   You can totally hide SLA custom field from users and use per queue
   defaults, just revoke SeeCustomField and ModifyCustomField.

   If you want people to see the current service level ticket is assigned
   to then grant SeeCustomField right.

   You may want to allow customers or managers to escalate thier tickets.
   Just grant them ModifyCustomField right.

TODO
       * [implemented, TODO: tests for options in the config] default SLA for queues

       * [implemented, TODO: tests] add support for multiple b-hours definitions,
         this could be very helpfull when you have 24/7 mixed with 8/5 and/or
         something like 8/5+4/2 for different tickets(by requestor, queue or
         something else). So people would be able to handle tickets in the right
         order using Due dates.

       * [not implemented] tests for AssumeOutsideActor - need tests for all of the
         conditionals in RT::Action::SLA_SetDue::IsOutsideActor

       * [not implemented] WebUI

DESIGN
 Classes
   Actions are subclasses of RT::Action::SLA class that is subclass of
   RT::Extension::SLA and RT::Action classes.

   Conditions are subclasses of RT::Condition::SLA class that is subclass
   of RT::Extension::SLA and RT::Condition classes.

   RT::Extension::SLA is a base class for all classes in the extension, it
   provides access to config, generates Business::Hours objects, and other
   things useful for whole extension. As this class is the base for all
   actions and conditions then we MUST avoid adding methods which overload
   methods in 'RT::{Condition,Action}' RT's modules.

NOTES
   If you run make initdb more than once you will create multiple SLA CFs.
   You can remove these via RT's Configuration->Global menu, (both Custom
   Fields and Scrips).

AUTHOR
   Best Practical Solutions, LLC <[email protected]>

BUGS
   All bugs should be reported via email to

       L<[email protected]|mailto:[email protected]>

   or via the web at

       L<rt.cpan.org|http://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=RT-Extension-SLA>.

COPYRIGHT
   This extension is Copyright (C) 2007-2014 Best Practical Solutions, LLC.

   This is free software, licensed under:

     The GNU General Public License, Version 2, June 1991