• Get Started with the Atlassian Rovo MCP Server Using Docker We’re excited to announce that theremote Atlassian Rovo MCP serveris now available inDocker’s MCP Catalog and Toolkit, making it easier than ever to connect AI assistants to Jira and Confluence. • With just a few clicks, technical teams can use their favorite AI agents to create and update Jira issues, epics, and Confluence pages without complex setup or manual integrations. • In this post, we’ll show you how to get started with the Atlassian remote MCP server in minutes and how to use it to automate everyday workflows for product and engineering teams. • Figure 1: Discover over 300+ MCP servers including the remote Atlassian MCP server in Docker MCP Catalog. • What is the Atlassian Rovo MCP Server? • Like many teams, we rely heavily on Atlassian tools, especially Jira to plan, track, and ship product and engineering work.

Article Summaries:

  • Docker has added the Atlassian Rovo MCP server to its MCP Catalog and Toolkit, allowing teams to connect AI assistants directly to Jira and Confluence with a single click. The new remote server supports creating and updating Jira issues, epics, and Confluence pages, and it uses Docker’s built‑in OAuth for seamless authentication. Developers can enable the server on a machine with 8 GB RAM (16 GB recommended) by selecting the cloud‑iconed version in Docker Desktop’s MCP Toolkit. Once enabled, any MCP‑compatible client-such as Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Codex, or Gemini CLI-can connect instantly, enabling automated workflow tasks without manual setup.

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