이 페이지는 Confluence에 보안메일 전송 방법을 정리한다.
The simplest way to set up a mail server through the Confluence Administration console. See Configuring a Server for Outgoing Mail.
If you want to add different options or parameters you can also set up a mail session for the Confluence distribution. In the example below we'll set up Gmail.
To set up a mail session for the Confluence distribution:
Move (don't copy) mail-x.x.x.jar
from <confluence-install>\confluence\WEB-INF\lib
to <confluence-install>\lib
(x.x.x. represents the version numbers on the jar files in your installation).
Don't leave a renamed backup of the jar files in \confluence\WEB-INF\lib
. Even with a different file name, the files will still be loaded as long as it remains in the directory.
... <Engine name="Standalone" defaultHost="localhost" debug="0"> <Context path="${confluence.context.path}/synchrony-proxy" docBase="../synchrony-proxy" debug="0" ... |
Edit the <confluence-install>\conf\server.xml
file and add the following at the end of the Confluence <context> tag, just before </Context>
.
<Resource name="mail/GmailSMTPServer"
auth="Container"
type="javax.mail.Session"
mail.smtp.host="smtp.gmail.com"
mail.smtp.port="465"
mail.smtp.auth="true"
mail.smtp.user="yourEmailAddress@gmail.com"
password="yourPassword"
mail.smtp.starttls.enable="true"
mail.transport.protocol="smtps"
mail.smtp.socketFactory.class="javax.net.ssl.SSLSocketFactory"
/>
Note: you're editing the <context> tag that contains the Confluence context path, not the one that contains the Synchrony context path.
Go to > General Configuration > Mail Servers.
Edit the server settings as necessary, and set the JNDI Location as:
java:comp/env/mail/GmailSMTPServer
Note that the JNDI Location is case sensitive and must match the resource name specified in server.xml.