This page last changed on Mar 06, 2011 by ggaskell.

The administration console allows you to schedule various administrative jobs in Confluence, so that they are executed at regular time intervals. The types of jobs which can be scheduled cover:

  • Confluence site backups
  • Storage optimisation jobs to clear Confluence's temporary files and caches
  • Index optimisation jobs to ensure Confluence's search indexes are up to date
  • Mail queue optimisation jobs to ensure Confluence's mail queue is maintained and notifications have been sent.

You need to have System Administrator permissions in order to configure and execute jobs.

Accessing Confluence's Scheduled Jobs Configuration

To access Confluence's Scheduled Jobs configuration page:

  1. Go to the Confluence 'Administration Console'. To do this:

    • Open the 'Browse' menu and select 'Confluence Admin'. The 'Administrator Access' login screen will be displayed.
    • Enter your password and click 'Confirm'. You will be temporarily logged into a secure session to access the 'Administration Console'.
  2. Click 'Scheduled Jobs' under 'Administration' in the left panel to open the 'Scheduled Jobs' page. For each job listed down this page, the following information is shown:
    • Job — the name of a job.
    • Status — the job's status, which is either 'Scheduled' (it it is currently enabled) or 'Disabled'. See below for details on disabling or re-enabling a job.
    • Last Execution — the date and time when the job was last executed. This field will be empty of the job was never executed.
    • Next Execution — the date and time when the job is next scheduled to be executed. This field will contain dash symbol ('-') if the job is disabled.
    • Avg. Duration — the length of time (in milliseconds) that it took to complete the job's last execution.
    • Actions — allows you to configure the job, execute it manually, view a history of previous executions or disable the job.

Screenshot above: Scheduled Jobs

Executing a Job Manually

  1. Access the 'Scheduled Jobs' configuration page (above).
  2. Locate the job you wish to execute manually and click its 'Run' link in the 'Actions' column. The job will be run immediately.
    Refer to 'Types of Jobs' (below) for detailed descriptions about each job.

    Not all jobs can be run manually.

Configuring a Job's Schedule

  1. Access the 'Scheduled Jobs' configuration page (above).
  2. Locate the job whose schedule you wish to configure and click its 'Edit' link in the 'Actions' column. The job's 'Edit Schedule for job' dialog box opens.
    Refer to 'Types of Jobs' (below) for detailed descriptions about each job.
  3. Enter an appropriate cron expression to define the frequency with which the job is executed.
    Refer to 'Cron Expressions' (below) for more details about their syntax. To revert the job's schedule back to its default settings, click the 'Default' button.
  4. Click 'Save' to record your job's new schedule.

    Not all jobs' schedules are configurable.

Screenshot above: Configuring a Job's Schedule

Disabling/Re-enabling a Job

By default, all jobs in Confluence are enabled.

  1. Access the 'Scheduled Jobs' configuration page (above).
  2. Locate the job you wish to disable/re-enable.
    Refer to 'Types of Jobs' (below) for detailed descriptions about each job.
    • If a job is enabled, click its 'Disable' link in the 'Actions' column to disable the job.
    • If a job is disabled, click its 'Enable' link in the 'Actions' column to enable the job.

      Not all jobs in Confluence can be disabled.

Viewing a Job's Execution History

  1. Access the 'Scheduled Jobs' configuration page (above).
  2. Locate the job whose execution history you wish to view and click the 'History' link.
    If a job has not completed at least one execution, its 'History' link will not be available.
    Refer to 'Types of Jobs' (below) for detailed descriptions about each job.
    The 'History for job' dialog box opens, showing a list of previous executions of the job in reverse chronological order, including the:
    • Start date and time
    • End date and time
    • The length of time (in milliseconds) that it took to complete the job

Screenshot above: Job Execution History

Types of Jobs

Job Name Description Execution Behaviour Default Schedule
Back Up Confluence Performs a backup of your entire Confluence site. Per cluster At 2am every day
Check Cluster Safety For clustered Confluence installations, this job ensures that only one Confluence instance in the cluster writes to the database at a time.
For standard (non-clustered) editions of Confluence, this job is useful for alerting customers who have accidentally connected a second Confluence instance to a Confluence database which is already in use.
Per cluster Every 30 seconds
Clean Index Queue Triggers a periodical clean of the index queue to ensure that its size does NOT grow indefinitely. Per cluster At 2am every day
Clean Temporary Directory Cleans up temporary files generated in the 'temp' subdirectory of the Confluence home directory. This temp directory may be created by exports etc. Per node At 4am every day
Clear Expired Mail Errors Clears notification errors in the mail error queue. A notification error is sent to the mail error queue whenever the notification fails to be sent due to an error. Per cluster At 3am every day
Clear Expired Remember Me Tokens Clears all expired 'Remember Me' tokens from the Confluence site. Remember Me tokens expire after two weeks. Per cluster On the 20th of each month
Email Daily Reports Emails a daily summary report of all Confluence changes to all subscribers.
Since each email report only records changes from the last 24-hour period, it is recommended that you only change the time of this job whilst keeping the job's frequency to 24 hours.
Per cluster At 12am every day
Flush Did You Mean Index Flushes changes to the 'Did You Mean' index, which keeps the 'Did You Mean' feature up to date. Confluence records each content update in the 'Did You Mean' index. Per node Every 2 hours from 12 am
Flush Index Queue Flushes changes to Confluence's index so that Confluence's search results are up to date. Confluence records each content update in its search index. Per node Every minute
Flush Local Task Queue Flushes the local task queue. (These are internal Confluence tasks that are typically flushed at a high frequency.) Per node Every minute
Flush Mail Queue Sends notifications that have been queued up in the mail queue. Per cluster Every minute
Flush Task Queue Flushes the task queue. (These are internal Confluence tasks that are typically flushed at a high frequency.) Per node Every minute
Optimise Indexing Compacts the confluence indexes to maintain searching performance.
This task is demanding on system resources and does not need to be performed too regularly. If you see Confluence performance deteriorate around 3pm, try scheduling this job for 3am only and check if search performance remains reasonable.
Per node At 3am and 3pm every day
Poll Mail Polls POP accounts on all spaces that have them configured. Per cluster Every minute

Cron Expressions

A cron expression is a string of 6-7 'time interval' fields that defines the frequency with which a job is executed. Each of these fields can be expressed as either a numerical value or a special character and each field is separated by at least one space or tab character.

The table below is shows the order of time interval fields in a cron expression and each field's permitted numerical values.

You can specify a special character instead of a numerical value for any field in the cron expression to provide flexibility in defining a job's frequency. Common special characters include:

  • '*' — a 'wild card' that indicates 'all permitted values'.
  • '?' — indicates 'ignore this time interval' in the cron expression. That is, the cron expression will not be bound by the time interval (such as 'Month', 'Day of week' or 'Year') to which this character is specified.

For more information about cron expressions, please refer to the Cron Trigger tutorial on the Quartz website.

Order in cron
expression
Time interval
field
Permitted
values*
Required?
1 Seconds 0-59 Yes
2 Minutes 0-59 Yes
3 Hours 0-23 Yes
4 Day of month 1-31 Yes
5 Month 1-12 or JAN-DEC Yes
6 Day of week 1-7 or SUN-SAT Yes
7 Year 1970-2099 No

* Excluding special characters.

RELATED TOPICS

Trigger Module
Configuring Backups


Document generated by Confluence on Mar 16, 2011 18:32