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Adding and Managing Users
Adding and Managing Users Core user management activities include adding, editing, and deleting users. These activities are typically restricted to Administrative users. Adding Users Open the...
User Group Sites
User Group Sites With user group sites, you can create pages that are added automatically to each member’s personal site. These pages are organized into two page sets, My Profile (public) and My...
Users
Users Every person who accesses a Liferay site is considered a user. Unauthenticated users are considered Guest users. Liferay ships out-of-the-box with a default admin user who has complete...
Managing Site Membership and Permissions with User Groups
Managing Site Membership and Permissions with User Groups You can use user groups to manage site membership, roles, and permissions. Managing Site Membership with User Groups One of the primary...
Updating User Profile Pictures
Updating User Profile Pictures Users have profile pictures. Administrative Users can upload images in the Edit User form, and Users can update their own account information, including profile...
Cloud Native Experience
Cloud Native Experience Subscription This documentation reflects the Cloud Native Experience (CNE) as of Liferay DXP 2026.Q1. Use the latest version of the boilerplate repository before starting...
Cloud Native Experience: AWS Ready for Cloud 2025.Q4 and Earlier Versions
Cloud Native Experience: AWS Ready for Cloud 2025.Q4 and Earlier Versions This guide covers the AWS Ready toolkit version used throughout 2025.Q4 and earlier. Starting in 2026.Q1, the toolkit has...
Cloud Native Experience: Cloud Provider Ready
Cloud Native Experience: Cloud Provider Ready These provider-optimized toolkit offerings include opinionated Terraform blueprints that automate Day 0 tasks, such as networking, cluster...
AWS Managed Resources Reference
AWS Managed Resources Reference By default, Liferay uses several managed services to run background operations when hosting in AWS. These resources facilitate the provisioning and continued use of...
Configuring Externally Managed Services
Configuring Externally Managed Services Externally managed services are created, configured, and managed outside the Liferay Helm chart. Database Configuring an external database for Liferay in...
Configuring Liferay in AWS
Configuring Liferay in AWS Since Liferay installations hosted in AWS use Helm, you must configure and customize Liferay using the Helm CLI. You can write as many .yaml files as you need. To update...
Making Liferay Public in AWS
Making Liferay Public in AWS Now that you have Liferay installed, all that's left is to make it publicly available and then configure HTTPS for secure communication. Install the nginx Ingress...
Updating User Profile Pictures for Liferay 7.3 and Earlier Versions
Updating User Profile Pictures for Liferay 7.3 and Earlier Versions Users have profile pictures. Administrative Users can upload images in the Edit User form, and Users can update their own account...
Self-Hosted Installation and Upgrades
Self-Hosted Installation and Upgrades Liferay's flexibility makes it possible to host it in any way you choose: on any Kubernetes-based cloud platform via Helm charts and Terraform scripts, on...
Auto-Scaling in AWS
Auto-Scaling in AWS Liferay's auto-scaling feature automatically creates and destroys replicas (nodes) in the Liferay cluster to optimize performance. You can choose the minimum and maximum number...
Configuring Internally Managed Services
Configuring Internally Managed Services Internally managed services are configured and managed within the chart. These services are defined using the dependencies property: dependencies: : ...
Running Liferay DXP in Amazon Web Services
Running Liferay DXP in Amazon Web Services There are three ways to host Liferay DXP in AWS: Installing Liferay DXP using the plain Helm chart. Installing Liferay DXP from AWS Marketplace. ...
CNE AWS Ready: Cleaning Up the Environment
CNE AWS Ready: Cleaning Up the Environment If you no longer need your Cloud Native Experience (CNE) environment, remove the infrastructure and platform resources to avoid unnecessary cloud costs. ...
CNE AWS Ready: Incremental Backup and Restore
CNE AWS Ready: Incremental Backup and Restore Liferay Cloud Native Experience (CNE) AWS Ready supports automated backups and restores using AWS Backup and Argo Workflows. Backups are disabled by...
CNE AWS Ready: Understanding EKS Auto Mode
CNE AWS Ready: Understanding EKS Auto Mode Cloud Native Experience (CNE) uses Amazon EKS Auto Mode to manage Kubernetes node scaling automatically. EKS Auto Mode scales cluster nodes when...
CNE AWS Ready: Troubleshooting
CNE AWS Ready: Troubleshooting Liferay Cloud Native Experience (CNE) deployments involve multiple components, including AWS infrastructure, Kubernetes, GitOps workflows, and Terraform/OpenTofu...
CNE AWS Ready: Prerequisites
CNE AWS Ready: Prerequisites Before running the bootstrap scripts to deploy the Liferay Cloud Native Experience (CNE) in your AWS environment, prepare your local machine, cloud accounts, and Git...
CNE AWS Ready: Running Liferay on AWS GovCloud
CNE AWS Ready: Running Liferay on AWS GovCloud Use the Liferay Cloud Native Experience (CNE) installer to provision a Liferay environment on AWS GovCloud (US). The installer creates the required...
Cloud Native Experience: Kubernetes Ready
Cloud Native Experience: Kubernetes Ready The Generic Blueprint of the Cloud Native Experience is for teams running Liferay DXP on any CNCF-certified Kubernetes cluster, whether on-premises or in a...
Running Liferay on any Kubernetes Cluster for Cloud 2025.Q4 and Earlier Versions
Running Liferay on any Kubernetes Cluster for Cloud 2025.Q4 and Earlier Versions This guide covers the Kubernetes toolkit version used throughout 2025.Q4 and earlier. Starting in 2026.Q1, the...
Using GovCloud to run Liferay in AWS
Using GovCloud to run Liferay in AWS Government entities can use GovCloud to provision Liferay in AWS. Subscribe to Liferay DXP Visit the AWS Marketplace. In Discover Products, find Liferay...
Using Marketplace Artifacts to Run Liferay in AWS
Using Marketplace Artifacts to Run Liferay in AWS You can use AWS Marketplace artifacts to provision Liferay in AWS. Prerequisite Oras CLI (optional) Launch Liferay Set and export environment...
Viewing Metrics from Kubernetes
Viewing Metrics from Kubernetes It is important to track resource usage in the Kubernetes cluster. To view your resource usage, you must use a collector and an exporter. Before you can view...
Viewing Metrics with Prometheus
Viewing Metrics with Prometheus The Liferay Helm chart is prepared to set up the Prometheus JMX Exporter project agent out-of-the-box. Set the JMX_AGENT_YAML environment variable to the following...
Viewing Metrics with Glowroot
Viewing Metrics with Glowroot This is how to use Glowroot in Liferay installations hosted in AWS. For information on how to set up Glowroot in other circumstances, see Using Glowroot with Liferay....
CNE AWS Ready: Bootstrapping Your Initial Environment
CNE AWS Ready: Bootstrapping Your Initial Environment After completing the prerequisites, run the Cloud Native Experience (CNE) bootstrap process. This step provisions the AWS infrastructure,...
CNE AWS Ready: Using Elasticsearch
CNE AWS Ready: Using Elasticsearch Cloud Native Experience environments provision OpenSearch by default for search and analytics workloads. You can configure the platform to use Elasticsearch...
Cloud Native Experience: AWS Ready - Getting Started
Cloud Native Experience: AWS Ready - Getting Started The Cloud Native Experience (CNE) AWS Ready toolkit provides an opinionated framework for deploying Liferay DXP on Amazon Web Services using...
CNE: Helm Values Reference
CNE: Helm Values Reference Helm is configured in YAML. Below are descriptions of the Liferay default Helm chart values. affinity: {} # Set Liferay DXP StatefulSet spec affinity...
CNE: AWS Ready - Bootstrap Configuration Reference
CNE: AWS Ready - Bootstrap Configuration Reference The following configuration defines the cloud infrastructure, GitOps synchronization settings, and bootstrap execution options for Cloud Native...
CNE: AWS Ready - GitOps Infrastructure Configuration Reference
CNE: AWS Ready - GitOps Infrastructure Configuration Reference Cloud Native Experience (CNE) uses GitOps to manage infrastructure configuration. These configuration files define environment...
Cloud Native Experience Glossary
Cloud Native Experience Glossary This glossary provides a unified vocabulary for the Cloud Native Experience (CNE). Use these terms ensure consistent communication across development, platform...
Installing Liferay On A Local Server
Installing Liferay On A Local Server Liferay runs on an application server. There are three ways to host Liferay on a local machine: Using a Docker container Using a Liferay Tomcat bundle On a...
Installing a Liferay-Tomcat Bundle
Installing a Liferay-Tomcat Bundle The Tomcat Bundle includes the Apache Tomcat application server with Liferay DXP/Portal pre-deployed. It's the easiest, fastest way to install Liferay on...
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on JBoss EAP
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on JBoss EAP Liferay DXP 2025.Q2/Portal 2025.Q1 or below Installing on JBoss EAP requires installing the DXP WAR, installing dependencies, configuring JBoss,...
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on Tomcat
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on Tomcat Liferay DXP 2025.Q2/Portal 2025.Q1 or below Using a Liferay-Tomcat bundle or Docker image is the fastest way to get started using Liferay DXP. This...
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on Application Servers
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on Application Servers As new Liferay versions are released, their dependencies and installation steps change. Liferay made a big change for DXP with the 2025.Q3...
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on WebSphere
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on WebSphere Liferay DXP 2024.Q1/Portal GA112 or below Compatibility with IBM WebSphere application server has been removed in 2024.Q2 and later releases. ...
Installing on Tomcat
Installing on Tomcat Liferay DXP 2025.Q3+/Portal 2026.Q1+ For pre-Jakarta Liferay versions, see Installing Earlier Versions on Tomcat. Using a Liferay-Tomcat bundle or Docker image is the...
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on Wildfly
Installing Earlier Liferay Versions on Wildfly Liferay DXP 2025.Q2/Portal 2025.1 or below Installing on WildFly requires installing the DXP WAR, installing dependencies, configuring WildFly, and...
Installing on JBoss EAP
Installing on JBoss EAP Liferay DXP 2025.Q3+/Portal 2026.Q1+ For pre-Jakarta Liferay versions, see Installing Earlier Versions on JBoss EAP. Installing on JBoss EAP requires installing the DXP...
Setting Up JNDI on Tomcat
Setting Up JNDI on Tomcat Liferay 7.4+ To set up JNDI resources, you must put the necessary JDBC drivers in the Tomcat lib folder (i.e. tomcat-9.0.56/lib). For example, if you use an Oracle...
Installing on WildFly
Installing on WildFly Liferay DXP 2025.Q3+/Portal 2026.Q1+ For pre-Jakarta Liferay versions, see Installing Earlier Versions on WildFly. Installing on WildFly requires installing the DXP WAR,...
Running Liferay for the First Time
Running Liferay for the First Time Once you've installed Liferay DXP/Portal and configured a database for it, it is ready to run. Start the Server Run the startup script bundled with your...
Maintaining a Liferay Installation
Maintaining a Liferay Installation Starting with Liferay DXP 7.3 SP3+ and 7.4 GA1+, Liferay adopted a new release model for delivering updates and fixes. This new approach is referred to as Bundle...
Backing Up
Backing Up Once you have your DXP installation running, you should implement a comprehensive backup plan that accounts for unforeseen events. Backup copies are also valuable for testing updates...
Maintaining Clustered Installations
Maintaining Clustered Installations Setting up your Liferay DXP installation to function in a cluster provides performance and scalability improvements, but also requires additional consideration...
Blue-Green Deployments
Blue-Green Deployments Blue-green is a deployment technique in which you duplicate your production environment (the blue environment) and modify the duplicate (the green environment) with software...
Performing Rolling Restarts
Performing Rolling Restarts The rolling restart cluster maintenance process involves shutting down and updating nodes one at a time (while the other nodes are running) until they're all updated....
Migrating Liferay Instances
Migrating Liferay Instances Liferay DXP 2025.Q2+/Portal GA148+ [Beta Feature](../../security-and-administration/administration/configuring-liferay/feature-flags.md#beta-feature-flags) You can...
Patching Liferay
Patching Liferay Liferay DXP uses Bundle Releases for its latest releases. Please see Updating Liferay if you are applying an Update. All Hotfixes are patches. If you're applying a Hotfix,...
Accessing DXP Patch Code
Accessing DXP Patch Code Subscribers Liferay DXP Fix Pack and Hotfix source code is available in a private GitHub repository called liferay-dxp. The source code facilitates identifying and...
Slimming Down Patched Installations
Slimming Down Patched Installations Subscribers In Liferay DXP 7.2, patch information is retained in Patch Files in the installation by default. This facilitates restoring DXP to a previous patch...
Advanced Patching for DXP 7.2
Advanced Patching for DXP 7.2 Here are the DXP 7.2 advanced patching topics: Using Slim Bundles demonstrates conserving disk space by using DXP fix pack bundles that don't include Patch Files. ...
Custom Code and Patch Compatibility
Custom Code and Patch Compatibility Subscribers If you deploy code that customizes or patches your DXP 7.2 installation, you must maintain its compatibility with all patches you're using. The...