This page last changed on Dec 03, 2008 by jlargman.

Confluence has several plugins that you can use for generating statistics, such as:

  • Usage Tracking Plugin - will only provide the number of contribution counts and cannot tell you the documents authored by a single user.
  • Use Global statistics plugin - when installed, you would be able to access the statistics via the administration console under the Site Statistics option.
  • Confluence has a built-in access logging mechanism, which shows who has logged in and the URL invoked. To enable it, you need to modify a couple of configuration files and restart Confluence. The traditionally generated access log can then be analysed by one of the available access log analyser tools such as Webalizer, Google Analytics or AwStats which can generate useful statistics.
  • Use the SQL and Chart plugins together.
  • The Reporting Plugin contains macros which allow powerful and flexible reporting on Confluence content and content from other locations.
  • Our user community have contributed some great SQL queries.

If none of the above tools satisfy your requirements, you can create a feature request in jira. Please note that there are already several feature requests and improvements created by our customers all being collated under one umbrella issue

Please cast your vote, add your comments to the discussion and don't forget to add yourself as a watcher to be notified on progress. All our improvements and new features are implemented according to this guide.

RELATED TOPICS

Live Monitoring Using the JMX Interface
Live log viewer plugin.
Tomcat's access logs.

Document generated by Confluence on Dec 03, 2008 15:14