We have heard a lot of feedback and questions about the upcoming changes to Jira Cloud Automation packaging and acknowledge that this is a significant change for affected customers. We want to share some additional information:
To learn more about how to view your Automation usage and how your usage is calculated, please see the following support articles; View your automation usage and How is my usage calculated?. We have also updated some of the FAQs below to give you more complete information. |
Hello Community 👋
On November 1, 2023, we are launching a new Automation packaging model for all Jira Cloud products (Jira Software, Jira Service Management, Jira Work Management, and Jira Product Discovery).
Today, Automation usage is measured differently across both rule types and Atlassian products. Currently, there is only one pooled limit for all Jira Cloud products. Every time an Automation rule runs, it counts towards that limit regardless of whether it performed a successful action or not. The new packaging model brings a simpler, more consistent way to measure Automation usage. Each product will now have a fixed number of monthly rule runs based on the plan.
Here is a summary of the key changes for Jira Cloud products:
In today’s model, rule runs count toward your usage limit, even if they perform no actions. For example, let’s say you have the following rule set up:
Trigger: When an issue is created
Condition: If issue type = Bug
Action: Set Affects version field to Last released version
This rule would trigger and count toward your execution limit every time an issue was created, even for issues that aren’t bugs. In the new model, the rule will only count if the issue created is a Bug and the Affects version field is successfully updated.
In today’s model, customers get a single, pooled limit across all Jira products. For example, if a customer has JSW Standard and JSM Free, they would get a total of 600 Automation rule runs per month (100 from JSW Free and 500 from JSM Standard) that can be used across both products.
Each Jira product will have its own usage limit in the new model. Every Automation rule draws on the limit of a specific Jira product when it runs. We have increased the limits for our Free and Standard plans. Automation limits in the new model are shown on our support page here.
3. How will rules be counted in the new model
In today’s model, an Automation rule that is configured to run in a single Jira project does not count toward the usage limit. In the new model, all Automation rule types (i.e. single project, project type, multi-project, and global rules) will count towards the usage limit.
As we expand Automation to Atlassian products beyond Jira, these changes enable a simpler and more consistent usage attribution model for Automation - allowing customers to use Automation more efficiently for cross-product and cross-team collaboration.
We’ve also taken this opportunity to increase usage limits to give customers a larger runway to manage this change and confidently grow Automation usage in the future.
Here are a few suggestions to help you prepare for the change coming into effect on November 1, 2023.
From October 1st -31st, 2023, you’ll see a Preview option on the Global Automation screen next to the current usage tab.
This will help you understand how your usage translates into the new model. We will not be enforcing new model limits during this period.
If the new usage tab (available October 1st) shows that your Automation usage is breaching (going over) the new limits, we recommend looking at your current rules and optimizing them to lower your usage. Here are some things you can do:
Configure your rules to run where they need to: Make sure your rule runs only in the Jira projects (or Confluence spaces) you want it to run in.
Add conditions to your Automation rules: Ensure that actions occur exactly when you want them to in order to maximize the value you get out of your rules.
Disable rules: Monitor your rules and identify the ones that are either running too often or rules that you don’t need, and disable them to prevent wasteful rule runs.
What is the difference between the current packaging model and the new one?
In the old packaging model: |
In the new packaging model |
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All Automation rule runs are aggregated as a single limit across all of your Jira Cloud licenses. |
Each Jira Cloud product will have its own limit and will be measured per product license. |
Any rule that is triggered, regardless of successful action, counts towards your limit. |
Only rules that create a successful action will count towards your limit. |
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All customers will receive a notice by email by October 2, 2023 indicating whether they will exceed limits or not in the new model.
Global administrators will have access to the Automation usage tab in Jira settings that shows the new per-product limits. This will help admins see the new packaging model in the context of their current and projected Automation usage, and be more proactive about their usage if they need to. Visit our support documentation to learn more.
If you’re on an annual Atlassian Cloud subscription and approve a valid annual quote dated prior to October 18th, 2023, limits in the new model will apply on the next renewal date.
The following actions won't count towards your usage:
System rules that support core product functionality are unmetered. We will roll out the new packaging with two system rules implemented for JSM:
Attaching a risk assessment form for change requests
Transition issue in the project on deployments
Actions that run and only perform: log action, create variable, create lookup table, refetch issue, and look up issues won’t count toward your usage.
How do I optimize my rule runs?
Configure your rules to run where they need to: Make sure your rule runs only in the Jira projects (or Confluence spaces) you want it to run in.
Add conditions to your automation rules: Ensure that actions occur exactly when you want them to in order to maximize the value you get out of your rules. (e.g. filter by Jira Issue status)
Disable rules: Monitor your rules and identify the ones that are either running too often or rules that you don’t need, and disable them to prevent wasteful rule runs.
Speak with support and partner teams
If you have an annual subscription, get in touch with support, partners, or customer advocates to understand how the packaging change applies to you.
If you are on a Jira Cloud JSW, JSM, or JWM Standard edition and receive a notification that you are breaching limits in one or more products, speak with our Support, Partners, or Customer Advocates about your 3-month Premium trial.
Who qualifies for the 90-day trial of Jira Cloud Premium?
Only customers on the Jira Cloud Standard edition who are projected to breach the limits in the new model on November 1, 2023. These customers will receive a notification with a link to their 3-month trial of Premium at the cost of Standard, providing 4 months total to monitor and adjust to the new limits as needed.
Starting November 1, 2023, all Automation rules that successfully execute (both new rules and rules that you’ve already created) will automatically be assigned to a product. Here’s how this will work:
Single project rules are billed to the product to which the project belongs.
Project type rules are billed to the product to which the project type belongs.
Multi-project rules are billed to the product with the highest limit* among products in the rule scope.
Global rules are billed to the product with the highest limit* among the licensed products.
*The product with the highest limit is the one with the highest limit of rule runs.
Confluence Cloud is already on this model. We are making these changes to Jira Cloud Automation to make the experience consistent across our products.
These changes are only for Jira Cloud. The Automation for Jira app will remain unchanged for Jira Server and Jira Data Center.
If you have any other questions not covered here, please Contact us.
Kevin Bui
Senior Content Designer - Automation
Atlassian
Sydney, Australia
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