This is a containerized installation of Atlassian Confluence with Docker, and it's a match made in heaven for us all to enjoy. The aim of this image is to keep the installation as straight forward as possible, but with a few Docker related twists. You can get started by clicking the appropriate link below and reading the documentation.
- Atlassian JIRA Core
- Atlassian JIRA Software
- Atlassian JIRA Service Desk
- Atlassian Confluence
- Atlassian Bitbucket
- Atlassian Bamboo
If you want to help out, you can check out the contribution section further down.
To quickly get started running a Confluence instance, use the following command:
docker run --detach --publish 8090:8090 cptactionhank/atlassian-confluence:latest
Then simply navigate your preferred browser to http://[dockerhost]:8090
and finish the configuration.
You can configure a small set of things by supplying the following environment variables
Environment Variable | Description |
---|---|
X_PROXY_NAME | Sets the Tomcat Connectors ProxyName attribute |
X_PROXY_PORT | Sets the Tomcat Connectors ProxyPort attribute |
X_PROXY_SCHEME | If set to https the Tomcat Connectors secure=true and redirectPort equal to X_PROXY_PORT |
X_PATH | Sets the Tomcat connectors path attribute |
This image has been created with the best intentions and an good understanding of Docker, but it should not be expected to be flawless. Should you be in the position to do so, I request that you help support this repository with best-practices and other additions.
Travis CI and CircleCI has been configured to build the Dockerfile
and run acceptance tests on the Atlassian Confluence image to ensure it is working.
Travis CI has additionally been configured to automatically deploy new version branches when successfully building a new version of Atlassian Confluence in the master
branch and serves as the base. Furthermore an eap
branch has been setup to automatically build and commit updates to ensure this branch contains the latest version of Atlassian Confluence Early Access Program.
If you see out of date documentation, lack of tests, etc., you can help out by either
- creating an issue and opening a discussion, or
- sending a pull request with modifications (remember to read contributing guide before.)
Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery is made possible with the great services from GitHub, Travis CI, and CircleCI written in Ruby, using RSpec, Capybara, and PhantomJS frameworks.