Linux DSN Configuration
This section describes how to set up ODBC connectivity and configure DSNs on several Linux distributions: Debian-based systems, like Ubuntu, and Red Hat Linux platforms, like Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) and Fedora.
Minimum Linux Versions
Here are the minimum supported versions for Red Hat-based and Debian-based systems:
OS | Min. Version |
Ubuntu | 18.04 |
Debian | 10 |
RHEL | 8 |
Fedora | 28 |
SUSE | 15 |
Installing the Driver Dependencies
Run the following commands as root or with sudo to install the necessary dependencies:
- Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install libc6 libstdc++6 zlib1g libgcc1
- RHEL/Fedora:
yum install glibc libstdc++ zlib libgcc
Installing the Driver
You can use standard package management systems to install the driver.
On Debian-based systems, like Ubuntu, run the following command with root or sudo:
dpkg -i /path/to/driver/setup/ConfluenceODBCDriverforUnix.deb
On systems that support the RPM package format, run the following command with root or sudo:
rpm -ivh /path/to/driver/ConfluenceODBCDriverforUnix.rpm
Licensing the Driver
Run the following commands to license the driver. To activate a trial, omit the <key> input.
cd /opt/cdata/cdata-odbc-driver-for-confluence/bin/
sudo ./install-license.sh <key>
Connecting through the Driver Manager
The driver manager loads the driver and passes function calls from the application to the driver. You need to register the driver with the driver manager and you define DSNs in the driver manager's configuration files.
The driver installation registers the driver with the unixODBC driver manager and creates a system DSN. The unixODBC driver manager can be used from Python and from many other applications. Your application may embed another driver manager.
Creating the DSN
See Using unixODBC to install unixODBC and configure DSNs. See Using the DataDirect Driver Manager to create a DSN to connect to OBIEE, Informatica, and SAS.
Connecting to Confluence
You can establish a connection to any Confluence Cloud account or Confluence Server instance. To connect set the URL connection property. For example, https://yoursitename.atlassian.net.
Authenticating to Confluence
Confluence supports the following authentication methods: Basic Authentication, standard OAuth2.0 Authentication and SSO.
Basic Authentication
Confluence Cloud Account
Aquire a Token
An API token is necessary for account authentication. To generate one, login to your Atlassian account and select API tokens > Create API token. The generated token is displayed.
Authenticate Using the Token
To authenticate to a Cloud account, provide the following (Note: Password has been deprecated for connecting to a Cloud Account and is now used only to connect to a Server Instance.):
- AuthScheme: Set this to Basic.
- User: The user to be used to authenticate with the Confluence server.
- APIToken: The API Token associated with the currently authenticated user.
- Url: The URL associated with your Jira endpoint. For example, https://yoursitename.atlassian.net.
Confluence Server Instance
To authenticate to a Server instance, specify the following:
- AuthScheme: Set this to Basic.
- User: The user which to be used to authenticate with the Confluence instance.
- Password: The password which is used to authenticate with the Confluence server.
- Url: The URL associated with your Jira endpoint. For example, https://yoursitename.atlassian.net.
OAuth
In all cases, you must set AuthScheme to OAuth and Scope to to the value obtained from your application settings. In all the flows described below, it is assumed that you have done so. Note: OAuth 1.0 is deprecated in Confluence Cloud and should only be used by hosted Confluence users.Desktop Applications
This section describes desktop authentication using the credentials for your custom OAuth app. See Creating a Custom OAuth App for more information.Get an OAuth Access Token
After setting the following, you are ready to connect:
- OAuthClientId: Set to the client Id in your app settings.
- OAuthClientSecret: Set to the client secret in your app settings.
- CallbackURL: Set to the Redirect URL in your app settings.
- OAuthVersion: Set to 2.0.
- Url: The URL to your Confluence endpoint; for example, https://yoursitename.atlassian.net.
Headless Machines
To configure the driver to use OAuth with a user account on a headless machine, you need to authenticate on another device that has an internet browser.- Choose one of two options:
- Option 1: Obtain the OAuthVerifier value as described in "Obtain and Exchange a Verifier Code" below.
- Option 2: Install the driver on a machine with a browser and transfer the OAuth authentication values after you authenticate through the usual browser-based flow, as described in "Transfer OAuth Settings" below.
- Then configure the driver to automatically refresh the access token on the headless machine.
Option 1: Obtain and Exchange a Verifier Code
To obtain a verifier code, you must authenticate at the OAuth authorization URL.
Follow the steps below to authenticate from the machine with an internet browser and obtain the OAuthVerifier connection property.
- Create the Authorization URL by setting the following properties:
- InitiateOAuth: Set to OFF.
- OAuthClientId: Set to the client Id assigned when you registered your application.
- OAuthClientSecret: Set to the client secret assigned when you registered your application.
- OAuthVersion: Set to 2.0.
- Call the GetOAuthAuthorizationURL stored procedure with the CallbackURL input parameter set to the exact Redirect URI you specified in your app details under APIS AND FEATURES > OAuth 2.0 (3LO).
- Open the returned URL in a browser. Log in and grant permissions to the driver. You are then redirected to the callback URL, which contains the verifier code.
- Save the value of the verifier code. You need to set this in the OAuthVerifier connection property.
Next, you need to exchange the OAuth verifier code for OAuth refresh and access tokens. Set the following properties:
On the headless machine, set the following connection properties to obtain the OAuth authentication values.
- InitiateOAuth: Set this to REFRESH.
- OAuthVerifier: Set this to the verifier code.
- OAuthClientId: (custom applications only) Set this to the client Id in your custom OAuth application settings.
- OAuthClientSecret: (custom applications only) Set this to the client secret in the custom OAuth application settings.
- OAuthSettingsLocation: Set this to persist the encrypted OAuth authentication values to the specified location.
- InitiateOAuth: Set to REFRESH.
After the OAuth settings file is generated, you need to re-set the following properties to connect:
- InitiateOAuth: Set this to REFRESH.
- OAuthClientId: Set this to the client Id assigned when you registered your application.
- OAuthClientSecret: Set this to the client secret assigned when you registered your application.
- OAuthSettingsLocation: Set this to the location containing the encrypted OAuth authentication values. Make sure this location gives read and write permissions to the driver to enable the automatic refreshing of the access token.
- OAuthVersion: Set to 2.0.
- Url: The URL to your Confluence endpoint; for example, https://yoursitename.atlassian.net.
Option 2: Transfer OAuth Settings
Prior to connecting on a headless machine, you need to install and create a connection with the driver on a device that supports an internet browser. Set the connection properties as described in "Desktop Applications" above.
After completing the instructions in "Desktop Applications", the resulting authentication values are encrypted and written to the location specified by OAuthSettingsLocation. The default filename is OAuthSettings.txt.
After you have successfully tested the connection, copy the OAuth settings file to your headless machine.
On the headless machine, set the following connection properties to connect to data:
- InitiateOAuth: Set this to REFRESH.
- OAuthClientId: Set this to the client Id assigned when you registered your application.
- OAuthClientSecret: Set this to the client secret assigned when you registered your application.
- OAuthSettingsLocation: Set this to the location of your OAuth settings file. Make sure this location gives read and write permissions to the driver to enable the automatic refreshing of the access token.
- CallbackURL: Set to the Callback URL in your app details under APIS AND FEATURES > OAuth 2.0 (3LO).
- InitiateOAuth: Set to REFRESH.
- OAuthSettingsLocation: Set to the location of your OAuth settings file. Make sure this location gives read and write permissions to the driver to enable the automatic refreshing of the access token.
- OAuthVersion: Set to 2.0.
- Url: The URL to your Confluence endpoint; for example, https://yoursitename.atlassian.net.
Crowd
Set the AuthScheme to Crowd, then configure these connection properties:
- User: The CROWD user account.
- Password: The password associated with the Crowd account.
- SSOLoginURL: The login URL associated with the Crowd account. You can find the IDP URL by navigating to your application > SSO > SSO information > Identity provider single sign-on URL.
- SSOAppName: The name of the application in which SSO is enabled.
- SSOAppPassword: The password of the application in which SSO is enabled.
- SSOExchangeUrl: The URL used used to exchange the SAML token for Confluence cookies. This URL may have the following formats:
- https://<authority of Confluence instance>/plugins/servlet/samlconsumer
- https://<authority of Confluence instance>/plugins/servlet/samlsso
Example connection string:
AuthScheme=Crowd;Url=https://yoursitename.atlassian.net;SSOLoginURL='https://<authority>/crowd/console/secure/saml/sso.action';User=crowdUserName;Password=crowdPassword;SSOExchangeUrl=https://<authority of Confluence instance>/plugins/servlet/samlconsumer;SSOAppName=CrowdAppName;SSOAppPassword=CrowdAppPassword;
Okta
To connect to Okta, set the AuthScheme to Okta, and set these properties:
- User: The Okta user.
- Password: The Okta user's password.
- SSOLoginURL: The SSO provider's login URL.
- SSOExchangeUrl: The URL used used to exchange the SAML token for Confluence cookies. This URL may have the following formats:
- https://<authority of Confluence instance>/plugins/servlet/samlconsumer
- https://<authority of Confluence instance>/plugins/servlet/samlsso
If you are using a trusted application or proxy that overrides the Okta client request OR configuring MFA, you must use combinations of SSOProperties to authenticate using Okta. Set any of the following, as applicable:
- APIToken: When authenticating a user via a trusted application or proxy that overrides the Okta client request context, set this to the API Token the customer created from the Okta organization.
- MFAType: If you have configured the MFA flow, set this to one of the following supported types: OktaVerify, Email, or SMS.
- MFAPassCode: If you have configured the MFA flow, set this to a valid passcode.
If you set this to empty or an invalid value, the driver issues a one-time password challenge to your device or email. After the passcode is received, reopen the connection where the retrieved one-time password value is set to the MFAPassCode connection property. - MFARememberDevice: True by default. Okta supports remembering devices when MFA is required. If remembering devices is allowed according to the configured authentication policies, the driver sends a device token to extend MFA authentication lifetime. If you do not want MFA to be remembered, set this variable to False.
Example connection string:
AuthScheme=Okta;Url=https://yoursitename.atlassian.net;SSOLoginURL='https://example.okta.com/home/appType/0bg4ivz6cJRZgCz5d6/46';User=oktaUserName;Password=oktaPassword;SSOExchangeUrl=https://<authority of Confluence instance>/plugins/servlet/samlconsumer;
Refreshing OAuth Values
The driver can refresh the temporary OAuth access tokens obtained during the browser-based OAuth authentication exchange. By default, the driver saves the encrypted tokens in the odbc.ini file corresponding to the DSN. Access to this odbc.ini file can be restricted in the case of System DSNs.
To enable the automatic token exchange, you can give the driver write access to the system odbc.ini. Or, you can set the OAuthSettingsLocation connection property to an alternate file path, to which the driver would have read and write access.
OAuthSettingsLocation=/tmp/oauthsettings.txt
Installing Dependencies for OAuth Authentication
The OAuth authentication standard requires the authenticating user to interact with Confluence, using a web-browser. If the first OAuth interaction is to be done on the same machine the driver is installed on, for example, a desktop application, the driver needs access to the xdg-open program, which opens the default browser.
To satisfy this dependency, install the corresponding package with your package manager:
Debian/Ubuntu Package | RHEL/Fedora Package | File |
xdg-utils | xdg-utils | xdg-open |
Set the Driver Encoding
The ODBC drivers need to specify which encoding to use with the ODBC Driver Manager. By default, the CData ODBC Drivers for Unix are configured to use UTF-16 which is compatible with unixODBC, but other Driver Managers may require alternative encoding.
Alternatively, if you are using the ODBC driver from an application that uses the ANSI ODBC API it may be necessary to set the ANSI code page. For example, to import Japanese characters in an ANSI application, you can specify the code page in the config file '/opt/cdata/cdata-odbc-driver-for-confluence/lib/cdata.odbc.confluence.ini':
[Driver]
AnsiCodePage = 932