Confluence 2.10 has reached end of life
Check out the [latest version] of the documentation
This guide covers deploying Confluence standalone 2.2 or later against an Oracle database, and is also applicable to the WAR version. For older Confluence versions, please follow these instructions.
This database can only be set up by an Oracle database administrator. If you are not a DBA, you should not attempt to set up this database.
Oracle has a history of being extremely difficult to set up. If you do not have access to an experienced Oracle DBA in your organisation, you are recommended to select any free, scalable and easy-to-install alternative rather than proceeding with Oracle. Users evaluating Confluence are recommended to start with an alternative database and only consider migrating to Oracle after approval from their DBA. Atlassian's technical support for Oracle setup difficulties will also reflect the high minimum skill requirements for attempting an Oracle setup.
Database Setup Information
This setup guide must be used in conjunction with the list of Known Issues For Oracle. Please review that page before continuing.
Schema Requirements
Confluence must be deployed to a schema in it's own, separate Oracle instance. This avoids a Hibernate bug triggered by the existence of duplicate tablenames in other schemas, outlined here.
Database Incompatibilities
Orcale 9i and later are supported, please upgrade any older versions prior to installing Confluence.
Database driver update may be required
For all versions of Oracle, you must upgrade to the latest 10g drivers. Check the latest compatibility matrix before proceeding to the JDBC download page. We highly recommend to use the thin drivers.
Please check that your version of Oracle does not have any known issues:
Oracle Version |
Oracle Driver |
Issue |
Solution |
---|---|---|---|
Any |
Pre 10g |
Driver incompatibilities |
Upgrade to latest 10g drivers if compatible |
Pre 9 |
Any |
Earlier DBs not compatible |
Upgrade DB to 9.x or later |
9.0.1.0 |
Any |
DB not compatible |
Upgrade DB to 9.0.2.6 or later |
10g |
10.1.0.3.0 |
Drivers not compatible with Tomcat 5.5 |
Upgrade drivers to 10.1.0.4.0 or later |
You might be also interested in a relevant JIRA documentation to check the compatibility of your Oracle server and driver.
Deploying Against Oracle
Complete the instructions for installing Confluence standalone, then return to this document instead of proceeding to the Confluence Setup Guide.
Database Preparation
Tailor these instructions to your particular database version:
- Perform any necessary database or driver upgrades. Download the latest compatible database drivers
- Create a separate instance of Oracle and apply any configuration tasks.
- Create a Confluence user configuration and grant access permissions.
Adding a Datasource to Tomcat
- Open
<INSTALL>/conf/server.xml
for editing.
- Locate the section
Host -> Context
<Host name="localhost" debug="0" appBase="webapps" unpackWARs="true" autoDeploy="false"> <Context path="" docBase="../confluence" debug="0" reloadable="true"> <!-- Logger is deprecated in Tomcat 5.5. Logging configuration for Confluence is specified in confluence/WEB-INF/classes/log4j.properties --> <Manager pathname="" /> </Context> </Host>
- Paste in the
Resource
section provided, prior toManager
as shown<Host name="localhost" debug="0" appBase="webapps" unpackWARs="true" autoDeploy="false"> <Context path="" docBase="../confluence" debug="0" reloadable="true"> <!-- Logger is deprecated in Tomcat 5.5. Logging configuration for Confluence is specified in confluence/WEB-INF/classes/log4j.properties --> <Resource name="jdbc/confluence" auth="Container" type="javax.sql.DataSource" driverClassName="oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver" url="jdbc:oracle:thin:@hostname:port:sid" username="<username>" password="<password>" connectionProperties="SetBigStringTryClob=true" maxActive="25" maxIdle="5" maxWait="10000" /> <Manager pathname="" /> </Context> </Host>
- Change the
username
andpassword
to match the Oracle login.
- Change
url
to matchhostname
,port
andsid
of the Oracle server.sid
stands for the Schema ID. For example:For connecting to an Oracle RAC cluster, you'll need to edit the connection string directly injdbc:oracle:thin:@example.atlassian.com:1521:confluencedb
confluence.cfg.xml
, using Oracle's connection syntax like this:This example has been broken up over multiple lines for clarity, but it should be compacted into a single line when actually added tojdbc:oracle:thin:@(DESCRIPTION= (SDU=32768) (enable=broken) (LOAD_BALANCE=yes) (FAILOVER=yes) (ADDRESS= (PROTOCOL=TCP) (HOST=dbserver1.example.com) (PORT=1525)) (ADDRESS= (PROTOCOL=TCP) (HOST=dbserver2.example.com) (PORT=1525)) (CONNECT_DATA= (SERVICE_NAME=CONFDB)))
confluence.cfg.xml
on your server. - If required, choose different maxActive and maxIdle values. These set how many total database connections will be allowed at one time, and how many will be kept open even when there is no database activity.
Configure Confluence Datasource Access
Confluence must be configured to use this datasource:
- Edit the file
<INSTALL>/confluence/WEB-INF/web.xml
- Go to the end of the file and just before
</web-app>
, insert the following:<resource-ref> <description>Connection Pool</description> <res-ref-name>jdbc/confluence</res-ref-name> <res-type>javax.sql.DataSource</res-type> <res-auth>Container</res-auth> </resource-ref>
- Locate the Oracle JDBC database drivers for JDK 1.4, which comes bundled with your database. We recommend using the thin drivers only. Copy
ojdbc14.jar
to the<INSTALL>/common/lib
directory. This directory path is potentially<INSTALL>/lib
if Confluence is running off Apache Tomcat version 6 or above.
Confluence Setup Wizard
Now Confluence is ready to attempt to connect to Oracle:
- Startup Confluence using
<INSTALL>/bin/startup.bat
or<INSTALL>/bin/startup.sh
- Insert your licence and select External Database.
- Select Datasource Connection using your Oracle version.
- Enter
java:comp/env/jdbc/confluence
for the name of the datasource.
Confluence should now deploy using the Oracle database specified. Please read this comment on Oracle database optimisation.
Generic Oracle Configuration Tips
Websphere and Oracle
If you are planning to run Confluence on a Websphere application server and Oracle database, you should read the information on Known Issues for Websphere.
24-hour time format with Oracle 8i
We have received a report from a user that when an Oracle 8i database is configured to use 24-hour time as the default format, an exception like this may occur:
005-12-06 13:23:20 Loading root WebApplicationContext 2005-12-06 13:24:34 StandardContext[]: Exception sending context initialized event to listener instance of class com.atlassian.confluence.util.ConfluenceContextLoaderListener org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanCreationException: Error creating bean with name 'userAccessor' defined in class path resource [applicationContext.xml]: Can't resolve reference to bean 'userAccessorTarget' while setting property 'target'; nested exception is org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanCreationException: Error creating bean with name 'userAccessorTarget' defined in class path resource [applicationContext.xml]: Can't resolve reference to bean 'spacePermissionManager' while setting property 'spacePermissionManager'; nested exception is org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanCreationException: Error creating bean with name 'spacePermissionManager' defined in class path resource [securityContext.xml]: Can't resolve reference to bean 'spacePermissionManagerTarget' while setting property 'target'; nested exception is org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanCreationException: Error creating bean with name 'spacePermissionManagerTarget' defined in class path resource [securityContext.xml]: Initialization of bean failed; nested exception is org.springframework.jdbc.UncategorizedSQLException: (Hibernate operation): encountered SQLException [Cannot create PoolableConnectionFactory]; nested exception is org.apache.commons.dbcp.SQLNestedException: Cannot create PoolableConnectionFactory ... org.apache.commons.dbcp.SQLNestedException: Cannot create PoolableConnectionFactory, cause: java.sql.SQLException: ORA-00604: error occurred at recursive SQL level 1 ORA-12705: invalid or unknown NLS parameter value specified
One symptom of this problem is that Confluence may refuse to start after midday.
The workaround is to go to 'General Configuration' and set the default time format to "HH:mm".