Tasks

You can create tasks to define the process. These tasks can be performed by human or services.

Definition

A task is an activity in a process. There are several different kinds of task:

  • A human task is carried out by a person using a form to enter data or to receive information.

  • A service task is carried out automatically by the Bonita Engine and is invisible to users during normal operation.

  • A call activity calls a subprocess. The sequence flow of the process passes from the call activity to the subprocess. When the subprocess is complete, the flow returns to the call activity.

  • A script task executes a script in the Bonita Engine.

  • An abstract is a generic activity, usually used during diagram creation as a placeholder for a more specific type of task. An abstract task is treated as a service task when a process executes.

  • A send task sends a message to another process in the same diagram. The message is caught by a catch message event or a receive task.

  • A receive task receives a message from another process in the same diagram. The message was sent by a throw message event or a send task.

The items configured for a task depend on the task type, as shown in the following table:

To configure…​ Go to…​ Applies to task types…​

Task name in diagram

Details panel, General tab, General pane

All

Task name in the Bonita Applications

Details panel, General tab, Display in apps pane

All

Task description in Studio

Details panel, General tab, General pane

All

Task description in the Bonita Applications

Details panel, General tab, Display in apps pane

All

Task description after completion in the Bonita Applications

Details panel, General tab, Display in apps pane

All

Task type

Details panel, General tab, General pane

All

Priority

Details panel, General tab, General pane

Human, abstract, call activity, service, script

Estimated duration

Details panel, General tab, General pane

Human, abstract, call activity, service, script

Actor

Details panel, General tab, Actors pane

Human

Variables

Details panel, Data tab, Local variable pane

Human, abstract, call activity, service, script

Iteration

Details panel, General tab, Iteration pane

All

Contract

Details panel, Execution tab, Contract pane

Human

Form

Details panel, Execution tab, Form pane

Human

Connectors

Details panel, Execution tab, Connectors in/out pane

Human, abstract, call activity, receive, service, script

Operations

Details panel, Execution tab, Operations pane

All

KPIs (for subscription editions only)

Details panel, Execution tab, KPIs pane

All

Appearance in diagram

Details panel, Appearance tab, color & font pane

All

Subprocess to execute

Details panel, General tab, General pane

Call activity

Message content handling

Details panel, General tab, Message content pane

Receive

Messages

Details panel, General tab, Messages pane

Send

Correlation keys

Details panel, General tab, Correlation pane

Receive

To create a new task, select the relevant icon from the BPMN elements menu or from the context menu of the preceding element in the diagram, and drop it on the whiteboard. You can change the task type of an task in the diagram.

Setting a unique task name in the Bonita Applications

When you define a task in Bonita Studio, by default the task name and description in Bonita Applications are the same as the task name and description on the diagram.

Within a process instance (case), this task name must be contextualized with business information specific to the case so that, in the user task list, users efficiently pick the right task to do. You can leverage Bonita Studio to optimize user comfort and efficiency by inserting case information in task name and task description.

This howto applies to the legacy task list -Bonita 6.0 to 6.5.x versions- as well as the new task list - from Bonita 7.3 and above.

Pre-requisites: create the process example

Pool

First, create a new diagram. Then model the process in the first pool:

  1. Rename the diagram into "Request management" by clicking in the blank space around the pool

  2. Rename the pool into "Leave request management"

  3. Rename the lane into "Manager"

  4. Rename the start event into "New leave request"

  5. Since the submission of a new leave request happens at pool level (process instantiation), no need for a Submit request task ; just rename the default human task into "Validate request"

  6. Add a terminate end event that you can rename "Happy end"

The pool is shown here:

Process

Data model

Then, define a business object that will hold the leave requests data:

  1. From the project explorer, double click on your Business Data Model to open it

  2. Add a business object named LeaveRequest (with an upper case "L"), with 4 attributes:

    • startDate: as a DATE. Set it as mandatory

    • endDate: as a DATE, Set it as mandatory

    • requesterName: employee who submits the leave request, as a STRING

    • status: whether the request is "submitted" or "approved", as a STRING

  3. Click Finish

Variables

To allow this business object to be instantiated with each process instance, create a business variable at pool level:

  1. In the Data pane of the pool, Pool variables tab, Business variables table, Add a business variable named leaveRequest (with a lower case "l").

  2. For Business object, choose LeaveRequest (the default value if you only have one object)

  3. Click Finish

Process instantiation contract

To make sure the process gets the information it needs to start a new instance, create a contract:

  1. In the Execution pane > Contract tab, click on Add from data…​ to generate the contract inputs from the business variable

  2. Choose the Business variable option, and then the leaveRequest variable

  3. Click Next

  4. Unselect requesterName and status as the process doesn’t need this information from the form to instantiate
    The default values of business data attributes mapped to contract inputs are automatically set thanks to a script generated along with the contract inputs themselves.

  5. Click Finish, carefully read the warnings, and press OK and OK.

  6. In the Execution pane > Contract tab, a complex contract input is created, mapped to the selected attributes of the leaveRequest business variable, as shown here:

Contract

In actual BPM projects, we recommend you to also add a description to each contract input. It will be used as input field caption for end-users in the auto-generated form, if you decide to use such forms up to the User Acceptance Test phase of your project.

When the leave request is submitted, status and requesterName default values must be set. To do so, edit the script:

  1. Go back to the Data pane, Pool variables tab, Business variables table

  2. Click on leaveRequest and on the Edit…​ button

  3. Close to the Default value field, click on the pencil icon

  4. In the script, add: leaveRequestVar.status = "submitted", and

    def initiator = BonitaUsers.getProcessInstanceInitiator(apiAccessor,processInstanceId);
    leaveRequestVar.requesterName = "$initiator.firstName $initiator.lastName"

    so it becomes:

    def leaveRequestVar = new com.company.model.LeaveRequest()
    leaveRequestVar.startDate = leaveRequestInput.startDate
    leaveRequestVar.endDate = leaveRequestInput.endDate
    leaveRequestVar.status = "submitted"
    def initiator = BonitaUsers.getProcessInstanceInitiator(apiAccessor,processInstanceId);
    leaveRequestVar.requesterName = "$initiator.firstName $initiator.lastName"
    return leaveRequestVar
  5. Click OK, and OK.

Instantiation form

The Studio generates a form based on the contract requirements, for test purposes only. This is the form used in this howto, to save some time.

"Validate request" task

For the sake of this howto, do not specify any contract or form on the task, but just create an operation to switch the request status from "submitted" to "validated" when the task is completed.

  1. Click on task "Validate request"

  2. Go to the Execution pane > Operations tab

  3. Click on Add

  4. In the left operand, select leaveRequest

  5. As operator, select Use a Java method and then setStatus(String) - void

  6. Click OK

  7. In the right operand, write approved

The operation is shown here:

Operation on status

There you go. The process is ready. So how can you set a unique name for tasks, to be displayed in the user task list?

Configure the display options

For each case (request), the task should display the requester’s name, the request start date, end date, and status. After the task is submitted, the status will change and the task can also display the validator’s name.

As a good practice, we advise to display static information that defines the task in the Display name field, and dynamic information that appears, disappears or changes over the life of the case in the Display description and Description after completion fields. Therefore:

  • Start date, end date, and requester’s name will be managed in the task name

  • Status and validator’s name will be managed in the description

To configure the display options:

  1. Select the Validate request task

  2. Go to General pane > Display in apps tab.

Display name

The task display name will be made of the requester’s first name, last name, and the leave start date and end date.

  1. Next to the Display name field, click the pencil icon to display the expression editor.

  2. Select the Script expression

  3. Give it a name: buildValidateRequestDisplayName()

  4. Type the script.

     return "Validate leave: ${leaveRequest.requesterName}: ${leaveRequest.startDate.format('yyyy-M-d')} / ${leaveRequest.endDate.format('yyyy-M-d')}".toString()
  5. Click OK.

Display description

As a dynamic information, status is addressed here:

  1. Next to the Display description field, click the pencil icon to display the expression editor.

  2. Select the Script expression type

  3. Give it a name: buildValidateRequestDisplayDescription()

  4. Type the script.

     return "${leaveRequest.status}".toString()
  5. Click OK.

Description after completion

The status of the request when it’s validated as well as the validator’s name are displayed in the Done tasks filter of the user task list. To define it:

  1. Next to the Description after completion field, click the pencil icon to display the expression editor.

  2. Select the Script expression type

  3. Give it a name: buildValidateRequestDescAfterCompletion()

  4. Type the script.

     import com.bonitasoft.engine.api.APIAccessor;
    
     def executedBy = BonitaUsers.getUser(apiAccessor, apiAccessor.processAPI.getHumanTaskInstance(activityInstanceId).executedBy);
     return "${leaveRequest.status} by ${executedBy.firstName} ${executedBy.lastName}".toString()
  5. Click OK

When reusing these features for your own projects, make sure that the result of your scripts do not exceed 255 characters.

View it in the task list

  1. Save the diagram

  2. Run the pool. The default logged in user is Walter Bates

  3. Fill out the default instantiation form with two dates

  4. Click on Start

Once you are sent to the task list, you can see that the task name is contextualized.
It is computed once, when the task becomes ready.

The following set of instructions only applies to the task list in Bonita 7.3.0 and above. In earlier versions, the Description field is displayed by default.

To display the Description column and view the submitted status:

  1. Click on the settings wheel icon on the top right of the list

  2. Select Description

  3. Click outside the settings box The table settings have changed to display the Description column. It will be stored in the local storage of the browser

You can see the description field, showing the status: "submitted", as shown here:

display task name and description

  1. Logout

  2. Login with helen.kelly / bpm credentials (since Helen Kelly is Walter Bates' manager)

  3. Perform the task

  4. Go to the Done tasks filter

The Description column now shows the description after completion, with an edited status as well as the name of who performed the task, as shown here :

description after completion

If you don’t use the description after completion field, the Description column will still show the "display description" information.

Unlike the "technical" name and description of a task in the Studio, which are useful for development, information for each task as display name, display description and description after completion will be unique for each case in the task list, to make the task list more efficient for the users.

Another feature you can use to improve end users efficiency and satisfaction is word-based search:
To allow users to efficiently search by task name, you can configure the search option: from starts by (the beginning of the whole task name string), you can switch to word-based search (the beginning of every word in the task name).

To do so, go to word-based search.

Setting the word-based search may result in lesser performance, with some delay experienced by users on the display of search results. Turning this feature on requires some testing on your environment.