Step 1: Navigate to the Integrations Page
Log in to your ClawStaff dashboard and click Integrations in the left sidebar. Find the Atlassian integration under the Productivity category. The integration card covers both Jira and Confluence; a single connection gives your Claws access to both products within the same Atlassian Cloud site.
The card displays an overview of supported actions including creating and updating Jira issues, reading Confluence pages, adding comments, and transitioning issue statuses through workflows.
Step 2: Click “Add Atlassian”
Click the Add Atlassian button to begin the OAuth setup. A modal will explain the permissions ClawStaff requests from your Atlassian account, including read and write access to Jira projects, Confluence spaces, and user profiles. These permissions are scoped to the specific Atlassian site you authorize. If you manage multiple sites, you will choose which one to connect.
Click Continue to Atlassian to be redirected to Atlassian’s OAuth consent screen. Ensure you are signed in with an account that has admin access to the Atlassian Cloud site you want to connect.
Step 3: Authorize ClawStaff in Atlassian
On the Atlassian authorization page, select the Atlassian site you want to connect from the dropdown at the top. The page will display the list of permissions ClawStaff is requesting, grouped by product: Jira permissions for issue management and Confluence permissions for page and space access. Review each permission scope and click Accept to grant access.
After authorization, Atlassian will redirect you back to the ClawStaff dashboard. You will see a success notification confirming the connection, along with a summary of the connected site name and available products. If you need to connect additional Atlassian sites, you can repeat this process.
Step 4: Select Projects and Spaces
The dashboard will now display your Jira projects and Confluence spaces. Select the Jira projects where your Claw should be able to create, read, and update issues. For each project, you can limit access to specific issue types or boards if you want to restrict what the Claw can modify.
For Confluence, select the spaces your Claw should be able to read and write to. You can grant access to entire spaces or limit it to specific page trees. If you use Confluence as a knowledge base for your Claw, enable the sync toggle to keep the Claw’s context updated whenever pages change.
Step 5: Test the Connection
Click the Test Connection button to verify that ClawStaff can communicate with your Atlassian site. The test will attempt to read a list of projects from Jira and spaces from Confluence, displaying the results in the dashboard. A green confirmation badge will appear next to each product that is successfully connected.
For a more thorough test, navigate to your Claw’s settings and trigger a test action, such as creating a test issue in Jira or reading a page from Confluence. Check the results in your Atlassian site to confirm the action was performed correctly. If the test fails, verify that your Atlassian account has the necessary admin permissions and that the OAuth consent was granted for the correct site.