How to integrate Confluence MCP with OpenCode

How to integrate Confluence MCP with OpenCode This guide explains how to connect Confluence MCP to OpenCode using Composio Connect, which simplifies OAuth, API changes, and reliability concerns. There are two ways to set this up: Via Composio Connect MCP Via the Composio CLI

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Confluence is Atlassian's team collaboration and knowledge management platform. It helps your team organize, share, and update documents and project content in one secure workspace.

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How to integrate Confluence MCP with OpenCode

This guide explains how to connect Confluence MCP to OpenCode using Composio Connect, which simplifies OAuth, API changes, and reliability concerns.

There are two ways to set this up:

Also integrate Confluence with

Why use Composio?

Composio provides a single MCP server or CLI tool that exposes a set of meta-tools, allowing you to:

  • Connect to 1,000+ apps with on-demand tool loading, so you do not fill your LLM context window with unnecessary tool definitions.
  • Use programmatic tool calling through a remote Bash tool, letting LLMs write their own code to handle complex tool chaining. This reduces back-and-forth for frequent tool calls.
  • Handle large tool responses outside the LLM context to keep conversations lean.

Connect Confluence with OpenCode

Option 1: Using Composio CLI

1. Install Composio CLI

Install the Composio CLI, authenticate, and initialize your project:

bash
# Install the Composio CLI
curl -fsSL https://composio.dev/install | bash

# Authenticate with Composio
composio login

During login, you will be redirected to the sign-in page. Finish the flow and you are all set.

Composio CLI authorization screen

2. Authorize Confluence

Once the CLI is installed, it is essentially done. Give OpenCode access to your apps with these steps:

  1. Launch OpenCode.
  2. Prompt it to "Authenticate with Confluence Composio".
  3. Complete the authentication and authorization flow, and your Confluence integration is all set.
  4. Start asking anything you want.

Option 2: Using Composio MCP

You can also connect Confluence to OpenCode by adding Composio as an MCP server through the OpenCode CLI.

1. Add the Composio MCP server

bash
opencode mcp add

This launches an interactive prompt.

2. Fill in the fields

FieldValue
Namecomposio
Typeremote
URLhttps://connect.composio.dev/mcp
Require OAuthYes
Have client IDNo
OpenCode MCP server interactive prompt for Composio

Alternatively, you can skip the interactive prompt and paste the configuration directly into your OpenCode config file.

Open your global OpenCode config:

bash
open ~/.config/opencode/opencode.json

Add this under the mcp key and save the file.

bash
{
  "mcp": {
    "composio": {
      "type": "remote",
      "url": "https://connect.composio.dev/mcp",
      "enabled": true
    }
  }
}

3. Authenticate

Authenticate the Composio MCP server you just added:

bash
opencode mcp auth composio

This opens a browser session. Authorize Composio and you are done.

Composio browser authorization for OpenCode MCP

4. Verify installation

bash
opencode mcp list

5. Connect Confluence with OpenCode

Now, in the chat, ask the agent to connect to Confluence or give it any Confluence-related task.

For example, ask it to:

  • "Create a project documentation page in Marketing space"
  • "Add 'urgent' label to Q3 planning page"
  • "Publish team meeting summary as a blog post"

It will prompt you to authenticate and authorize access to Confluence.

That is it. Composio tools are now available in OpenCode, and your Confluence account is ready to use.

Way Forward

Now that Confluence is connected, extend your setup by connecting the other apps you already use every day, so your agent can run true cross-app workflows end to end.

  • Connect Calendar to turn threads into scheduled meetings automatically.
  • Connect Slack or Teams to post summaries, approvals, and alerts where your team works.
  • Connect Notion, Linear, Jira, or Asana to convert requests into tickets, tasks, and docs.
  • Connect Drive, Dropbox, or OneDrive to fetch, file, and share attachments without manual steps.

Start with one workflow you do repeatedly, then keep adding apps as you find new handoffs. With everything behind a single MCP endpoint, your agent can coordinate multiple tools safely and reliably in one conversation.

TOOLS & TRIGGERS

Supported Tools and Triggers

Every Confluence action and event your agent gets out of the box.

Add Content Label

Tool to add labels to a piece of content.

CQL Search

Searches for content in Confluence using Confluence Query Language (CQL).

Create Blogpost

Tool to create a new Confluence blog post.

Create Blogpost Property

Tool to create a property on a specified blog post.

Create Whiteboard Property

Tool to create a new content property on a whiteboard.

Create Footer Comment

Tool to create a footer comment on a Confluence page, blog post, attachment, or custom content.

Create Page

Tool to create a new Confluence page in a specified space.

Create Page Property

Tool to create a property on a Confluence page.

Create Private Space

Tool to create a private Confluence space.

Create Space

Tool to create a new Confluence space.

Create Space Property

Tool to create a new property on a Confluence space.

Create Whiteboard

Tool to create a new Confluence whiteboard.

Delete Blogpost Property

Tool to delete a blog post property.

Delete Page Content Property

Tool to delete a content property from a page by property ID.

Delete Whiteboard Content Property

Tool to delete a content property from a whiteboard by property ID.

Delete Page

Tool to delete a Confluence page.

Delete Space

Tool to delete a Confluence space by its key.

Delete Space Property

Tool to delete a space property.

Download Attachment

Downloads an attachment from a Confluence page and returns a publicly accessible S3 URL.

Get Attachment Labels

Tool to list labels on an attachment.

Get Attachments

Tool to retrieve attachments of a Confluence page.

Get Audit Logs

Tool to retrieve Confluence audit records.

Get Blogpost by ID

Tool to retrieve a specific Confluence blog post by its ID.

Get Blogpost Labels

Tool to retrieve labels of a specific Confluence blog post by ID.

Get Blogpost Like Count

Tool to get like count for a Confluence blog post.

Get Blogpost Operations

Tool to retrieve permitted operations for a Confluence blog post.

Get Blog Posts

Tool to retrieve a list of blog posts.

Get Blog Posts For Label

Tool to list all blog posts under a specific label.

Get Blogpost Version Details

Tool to retrieve details for a specific version of a blog post.

Get Blogpost Versions

Tool to retrieve all versions of a specific blog post.

Get Child Pages

Tool to list all direct child pages of a given Confluence page.

Get Blog Post Content Properties

Tool to retrieve all content properties on a blog post.

Get Page Content Properties

Tool to retrieve all content properties on a page.

Get Content Restrictions

Tool to retrieve restrictions on a Confluence content item.

Get Current User

Tool to get information about the currently authenticated user — always scoped to the account tied to the configured connection, not arbitrary users.

Get Inline Comments for Blog Post

Tool to retrieve inline comments for a Confluence blog post.

Get Labels

Tool to retrieve all labels in a Confluence site; use for label discovery when you need to list or page through labels.

Get Page Labels

Tool to retrieve labels of a specific Confluence page by ID.

Get Labels for Space

Tool to list labels on a space.

Get Labels for Space Content

Tool to list labels on all content in a space.

Get Page Ancestors

Tool to retrieve all ancestors for a given Confluence page by its ID.

Get Page by ID

Tool to retrieve a Confluence page by its ID.

Get Page Footer Comments

Tool to retrieve footer (non-inline) comments for a Confluence page.

Get Page Inline Comments

Tool to retrieve inline comments for a Confluence page.

Get Page Like Count

Tool to get like count for a Confluence page.

Get Pages

Tool to retrieve a paginated list of Confluence pages.

Get Page Versions

Tool to retrieve all versions of a specific Confluence page.

Get Space by ID

Tool to retrieve a Confluence space by its ID.

Get Space Contents

Tool to retrieve content in a Confluence space.

Get Space Properties

Tool to get properties of a Confluence space.

Get Spaces

Tool to retrieve a paginated list of Confluence spaces with optional filtering.

Get Tasks

Tool to list Confluence tasks (action items) with filtering by assignee, creator, space, page, blog post, status, and dates.

Get Anonymous User

Tool to retrieve information about the anonymous user.

Search Content

Searches for content by filtering pages from the Confluence v2 API with intelligent ranking.

Search Users

Searches for users using user-specific queries from the Confluence Query Language (CQL).

Update Blogpost

Tool to update a Confluence blog post's title or content.

Update Blogpost Property

Tool to update a property of a specified blog post.

Update Page Content Property

Tool to update a content property on a Confluence page.

Update Whiteboard Content Property

Tool to update a content property on a whiteboard.

Update Page

Tool to update an existing Confluence page, replacing the entire page content.

Update Space Property

Tool to update a space property.

Update Task

Tool to update a Confluence task status.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

With a standalone Confluence MCP server, the agents and LLMs can only access a fixed set of Confluence tools tied to that server. However, with the Composio Tool Router, agents can dynamically load tools from Confluence and many other apps based on the task at hand, all through a single MCP endpoint.

Yes, you can. OpenCode fully supports MCP integration. You get structured tool calling, message history handling, and model orchestration while Tool Router takes care of discovering and serving the right Confluence tools.

Yes, absolutely. You can configure which Confluence scopes and actions are allowed when connecting your account to Composio. You can also bring your own OAuth credentials or API configuration so you keep full control over what the agent can do.

All sensitive data such as tokens, keys, and configuration is fully encrypted at rest and in transit. Composio is SOC 2 Type 2 compliant and follows strict security practices so your Confluence data and credentials are handled as safely as possible.

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