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Confluence

Confluence most commonly refers to Atlassian's Confluence, a collaborative documentation platform used by teams to create, organize, and discuss work. The term also denotes the geographical junction of two or more bodies of water, where streams combine to form a single river.

Atlassian Confluence, first released in 2004, provides spaces to organize content, with pages, subpages, blogs, and

In collaboration workflows, Confluence integrates with Jira, Trello, Slack, and other tools, enabling linkable issues, project

Common uses include internal knowledge bases, onboarding portals, product and engineering documentation, meeting notes, and knowledge

See also: confluence as a geographical term.

attachments.
Content
is
structured
hierarchically,
and
users
can
create
templates
and
macros
to
embed
dynamic
content.
Pages
support
inline
editing,
comments,
mentions,
and
page
restrictions.
Version
history
enables
tracking
changes
and
restoring
earlier
revisions.
The
product
supports
search
across
content
and
export
options
to
PDF,
Word,
or
HTML.
documentation,
and
runbooks.
There
are
two
deployment
options:
Confluence
Cloud
and
Confluence
Server/Data
Center,
offering
different
scalability,
security,
and
administration
models.
Security
controls
include
space-level
and
page-level
permissions,
restrictions,
and
content
access
management.
The
platform
also
exposes
a
REST
API
and
marketplace
apps
to
extend
functionality.
sharing
across
teams.
As
a
wiki-like
workspace,
it
emphasizes
collaboration,
versioned
content,
and
centralized
information.