Important directories and files

This page contains information about the important directories and files to be aware of when configuring Crowd.

On this page:

Home directory

The Crowd home directory is where Crowd stores its configuration information. If you're using the embedded HSQL database, supplied for evaluation purposes, Crowd will also store its database in this directory.

The location of this directory is specified in the crowd-init.properties file described below. You can set the location during installation.

You can check the location of your Crowd home directory on the System Information screen.

Important files and directories in the Crowd home directory:

bundled-plugins directory

The bundled-plugins directory is a sub-directory of your Crowd home directory. It contains plugins which are shipped with your Crowd installation, such as:

The plugins are a collection of jars generated when you install the Crowd web application. The jars are obtained by unzipping atlassian-bundled-plugins.zip from {CROWD_INSTALL}\crowd-webapp\WEB-INF\classes.

caches directory

The caches directory is a sub-directory of your Crowd home directory. It contains various files that Crowd caches to improve performance. The files in sub-directories of this directory are either created or updated when you install or restart the Crowd web application.

Do not modify or remove these files while Crowd is running. It should be safe for you to delete these files between application restarts.

It may improve Crowd's performance if you link this sub-directory to a fast disk.

database directory

If you are using the embedded HSQL database, supplied for evaluation purposes, Crowd will store its database in this directory.

plugin-data directory

The plugin-data directory is a sub-directory of your Crowd home directory. Plugins developed for Crowd 2.12 and older will store their data here. The directory will be created the first time a plugin needs it.

crowd.properties

Crowd 3.0.0 and newer versions don't use the crowd.properties file anymore. When upgrading from an older version, the required settings from your crowd.properties file will be migrated to the database, and the file will be renamed to crowd.properties.old. The crowd.properties file is still used by other external integrations.


Shared directory

This directory contains common data for all nodes in your Crowd installation. If you are using Crowd Data Center, this directory is expected to be a network share accessible from every node. If you are not using Crowd Data Center, this will be an ordinary local directory. By default it is located in the shared sub-directory of your Crowd home directory.

crowd.cfg.xml file

This file stores configuration information for the Crowd Administration Console application, including:

  • License information
  • Server ID
  • Database configuration properties
  • Setup phase reached

The contents of this file is automatically generated when you run the Crowd Setup Wizard.

Here's an example of the content of crowd.cfg.xml, when the embedded HSQL database was specified at setup:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

<application-configuration>
  <setupStep>complete</setupStep>
  <setupType>install.new</setupType>
  <buildNumber>320</buildNumber>
  <properties>
    <property name="crowd.server.id">B9AN-B9AN-B9AN-B9AN</property>
    <property name="hibernate.c3p0.acquire_increment">1</property>
    <property name="hibernate.c3p0.idle_test_period">100</property>
    <property name="hibernate.c3p0.max_size">15</property>
    <property name="hibernate.c3p0.max_statements">0</property>
    <property name="hibernate.c3p0.min_size">0</property>
    <property name="hibernate.c3p0.timeout">30</property>
    <property name="hibernate.connection.driver_class">org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver</property>
    <property name="hibernate.connection.password"></property>
    <property name="hibernate.connection.url">jdbc:hsqldb:C:/data/crowd-home-15/database/defaultdb</property>
    <property name="hibernate.connection.username">sa</property>
    <property name="hibernate.dialect">org.hibernate.dialect.HSQLDialect</property>
    <property name="hibernate.setup">true</property>
    <property name="license">AAABGQ0ODAoPeNpdkF1LwzAUhu/plus-some-more-stuff</property>
  </properties>
</application-configuration>

plugins directory

The plugins directory is a sub-directory of your Crowd shared directory. This directory will contain plugins that are not shipped with Crowd and that you have installed separately onto your Crowd instance.

backups directory

The backups directory is a sub-directory of your Crowd shared directory. This is the default location of Crowd backups. 

Installation directory

This is the directory into which the downloaded Crowd application has been unzipped during installation.

Important files in the Crowd installation directory:

crowd-init.properties file

This is where you specify your Crowd home directory (described above). You can set the location during installation.

The crowd-init.properties file is located in the Crowd installation directory at {CROWD_INSTALL}\crowd-webapp\WEB-INF\classes\crowd-init.properties.

The file content looks something like this before it has been customized:

## You can specify your crowd.home property here or in your system environment variables.

# On Windows-based operating systems, uncomment the following 
# line and set crowd.home to a directory Crowd should use to 
# store its configuration.
# NOTE: use forward slashes instead of backward slashes

#crowd.home=c:/data/crowd-home

# On Unix-based operating systems, uncomment the following
# line and set crowd.home to a directory Crowd should use to 
# store its configuration.

#crowd.home=/var/crowd-home

build.properties file

This configuration file stores various deployment properties of Crowd and the 'demo' application.

The file is located at the root of your Crowd installation directory (described above).

The default build.properties file will look similar to the following:

# Modify the attributes of this file to quickly adjust the deployment values of Crowd.

# The Hibernate database dialect to use.
hibernate.dialect=org.hibernate.dialect.HSQLDialect

# The Hibernate transaction factory to use.
hibernate.transaction.factory_class=org.hibernate.transaction.JDBCTransactionFactory

# The http port you wish to run crowd from, ie: http://localhost:8095/crowd
crowd.tomcat.connector.port=8095

# Tomcat requires a unique port for shutdown
crowd.tomcat.shutdown.port=8020

# Crowd context root
crowd.url=http://localhost:8095/crowd

# Demo context root
demo.url=http://localhost:8095/demo

Parameter

Description


hibernate.dialect

This parameter controls the database dialect that the Hibernate persistence system will use when executing commands against your database server.


hibernate.transaction.factory_class

This parameter controls the transaction factory to use when executing transactions at run-time:
Hibernate provides two generic options, additional application server specific options are available:

  • org.hibernate.transaction.JDBCTransactionFactory delegates to database (JDBC) transactions (default).
  • org.hibernate.transaction.JTATransactionFactory delegates to JTA (if an existing transaction is under way, the work performed is done in that context. Otherwise a new transaction is started).

crowd.url

The path and port for the root of the Crowd Administration Console web-application.


demo.url

The path and port for the root of the Crowd demo web-application


build.xml file

This is an Ant script that loads properties from the build.properties configuration file.

The file is located at the root of your Crowd installation directory (described above).

If configuring Crowd and/or the demo application to run on a port and context path other than the default, you will need to run the command build.sh (or build.bat) against the build.xml configuration file. This process will then edit all of the necessary Crowd configuration files for your deployment.

The sample output from running build.xml will look similar to the following:

shamid@mocha:~/atlassian-crowd-1.1.0$ ./build.sh
Buildfile: build.xml

init:

assistant:
 Changing Tomcat's connector port to 8095
 Changing Tomcat's shutdown port to 8020
Configuring the Crowd Console
Copying crowd.properties to: crowd-webapp/WEB-INF/classes
Copying 1 file to /home/shamid/atlassian-crowd-1.1.0/crowd-webapp/WEB-INF/classes
Configuring the Crowd hibernate configuration
Updating the HibernateDialect and TransactionFactory in crowd-webapp/WEB-INF/classes/jdbc.properties
Updating property file: /home/shamid/atlassian-crowd-1.1.0/crowd-webapp/WEB-INF/classes/jdbc.properties
Configuring the demo application
Renaming and copying demo.properties to: demo-webapp/WEB-INF/classes/crowd.properties
Copying 1 file to /home/shamid/atlassian-crowd-1.1.0/demo-webapp/WEB-INF/classes
Configuring the OpenID server application
Renaming and copying openidserver.properties to: crowd-openidserver-webapp/WEB-INF/classes/crowd.properties
Copying 1 file to /home/shamid/atlassian-crowd-1.1.0/crowd-openidserver-webapp/WEB-INF/classes
Configuring the OpenID hibernate configuration
Updating the HibernateDialect and TransactionFactory in crowd-openidserver-webapp/WEB-INF/classes/jdbc.properties
Updating property file: /home/shamid/atlassian-crowd-1.1.0/crowd-openidserver-webapp/WEB-INF/classes/jdbc.properties

BUILD SUCCESSFUL
Total time: 2 seconds

database directory

The Crowd database will be in the Crowd home directory, not the installation directory.

RELATED TOPICS

Last modified on Apr 22, 2024

Was this helpful?

Yes
No
Provide feedback about this article

In this section

Powered by Confluence and Scroll Viewport.