If you’re new to Unstructured, read this note first.Before you can create a source connector, you must first sign in to your Unstructured account:
- If you do not already have an Unstructured account, go to https://unstructured.io/contact and fill out the online form to indicate your interest.
- If you already have an Unstructured account, go to https://platform.unstructured.io and sign in by using the email address, Google account, or GitHub account that is associated with your Unstructured account.
- A Confluence Cloud account or Confluence Data Center installation.
- The site URL for your Confluence Cloud account or Confluence Data Center installation.
- A user in your Confluence Cloud account or Confluence Data Center installation.
- The user must have the correct permissions in your Conflunce Cloud account or Confluence Data Center installation to access the target spaces and pages.
-
One of the following:
- For Confluence Cloud or Confluence Data Center, the target user’s name or email address, and password. Change a Confluence Cloud user’s password. Change a Confluence Data Center user’s password.
- For Confluence Cloud only, the target user’s name or email address, and API token. Create an API token.
- For Confluence Data Center only, the target user’s personal access token (PAT). Create a PAT.
- Optionally, the names of the specific spaces in the Confluence instance to access.
Document permissions metadata
The source connector outputs any permissions information that it can find in the source location about the processed source documents and associates that information with each corresponding element that is generated. This permissions information is output into thepermissions_data
field, which is within the
data_source
field under the element’s metadata
field. This information lists the users or groups, if any, that have
permissions to read, update, or delete the element’s associated source document.
The following example shows what the output looks like. Ellipses indicate content that has been omitted from this example for brevity.
<name>
(required) - A unique name for this connector.<url>
(required) - The URL to the target Confluence Cloud instance.<max-num-of-spaces>
- The maximum number of Confluence spaces to access within the Confluence Cloud instance. The default is500
unless otherwise specified.<max-num-of-docs-from-each-space>
- The maximum number of documents to access within each space. The default is150
unless otherwise specified.spaces
is an array of strings, with each<space-name>
specifying the name of a space to access, for example:["luke","paul"]
. By default, if no space names are specified, and the<max-num-of-spaces>
is exceeded for the instance, be aware that you might get unexpected results.extract_images
- Set totrue
to download images and replace the HTML content with Base64-encoded images. The default isfalse
if not otherwise specified.extract_files
- Set totrue
to download any embedded files in pages. The default isfalse
if not otherwise specified.
<username>
- The name or email address of the target user.<api-token>
- The user’s API token value.- For
cloud
,true
if you are using Confluence Cloud. The default isfalse
if not otherwise specified.
<personal-access-token>
- The target user’s PAT value.cloud
should always befalse
.
<username>
- The name or email address of the target user.<password>
- The user’s password.- For
cloud
,true
if you are using Confluence Cloud. The default isfalse
if not otherwise specified.