forked from Telodendria/Telodendria
Document the configuration file.
Note that we aren't even parsing this yet, but we will soon...
This commit is contained in:
parent
335e35a99c
commit
2f22c63893
1 changed files with 100 additions and 4 deletions
|
@ -1,13 +1,109 @@
|
|||
#
|
||||
# Telodendria configuration file
|
||||
#
|
||||
# This example configuration file serves as the authoritative
|
||||
# configuration documentation for the version of Telodendria it
|
||||
# ships with.
|
||||
#
|
||||
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Basic configuration
|
||||
#
|
||||
# This section contains the most common configuration items that you
|
||||
# should go through and check.
|
||||
#
|
||||
|
||||
# The address to listen on. You can specify multiple addresses by
|
||||
# simply adding more values to this directive. It is recommended
|
||||
# to only listen on localhost, and then configure a reverse proxy
|
||||
# such as relayd(8) in front of it, because the server does not
|
||||
# implement TLS.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Also note that Telodendria doesn't provide multiple ports for
|
||||
# different things. All APIs are made available over the same port.
|
||||
# This works because Matrix allows the port configuration to be
|
||||
# shared via .well-known/matrix/, which this server does properly
|
||||
# serve.
|
||||
listen "localhost:8008";
|
||||
|
||||
# Configure the domain name of your homeserver. Note that Matrix
|
||||
# servers cannot be migrated to other domains, so once this is set,
|
||||
# it should never change, unless you want to start over.
|
||||
server-name "example.com";
|
||||
|
||||
# The data directory in which Telodendria will store all user and
|
||||
# event information. Telodendria doesn't use a database; it uses a
|
||||
# flat-file directory structure, sort of like how most SMTP servers
|
||||
# use Maildirs or mbox files.
|
||||
data-dir "/var/telodendria";
|
||||
|
||||
# Whether to enable federation or not. Matrix is by default
|
||||
# a federated protocol, but if you just want your own internal chat
|
||||
# system with no contact to the outside, then you can disable
|
||||
# federation.
|
||||
federation "true";
|
||||
|
||||
# Whether to enable new user registration or not. For security and
|
||||
# anti-spam reasons, this is set to false. You can add users via the
|
||||
# command-line tool.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Generally, everyone should run their own homeserver, but that isn't
|
||||
# always possible with the waning number of available public IP
|
||||
# addresses, so if you'd like to provide a public service and allow
|
||||
# others to register for accounts on your homeserver, feel free to
|
||||
# enable registration. Telodendria should be able to handle a large
|
||||
# amount of users without difficulty.
|
||||
registration "false";
|
||||
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Advanced options
|
||||
#
|
||||
# This section contains options for system administrators that need
|
||||
# more control over their Telodendria instance.
|
||||
#
|
||||
|
||||
# Log to a file. If this directive is omitted, logging is done to
|
||||
# the system standard output. It may be redirected to the syslog from
|
||||
# there, but it may not.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Telodendria manages its own log file format, so it manually
|
||||
# configures the log file. If you're going to be running Telodendria
|
||||
# in a chroot, the log file will have to live inside the chroot.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Acceptable values here are "stdout", "stderr", or a log file.
|
||||
log "/var/log/telodendria.log" {
|
||||
# The level to log. This can be one of "error", "warning",
|
||||
# "task", "message", or "debug", with each level showing all
|
||||
# the levels above it as well. For example, "error" shows
|
||||
# only errors, "warning" shows warnings and errors, "task"
|
||||
# shows tasks, warnings, and errors, and so on.
|
||||
level "message";
|
||||
timestampFormat "none";
|
||||
|
||||
# If you want to customize the timestamp format, you may do so
|
||||
# here. Acceptable values are "none", "default", or a formatter
|
||||
# string as described by your system's strftime(3).
|
||||
timestampFormat "default";
|
||||
|
||||
# Whether or not to enable colored output on TTYs. Note that
|
||||
# color sequences will not be written to a log file, so this
|
||||
# only applies if the log is being written to a real terminal.
|
||||
color "true";
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
# How many worker threads to spin up and pull from the request queue.
|
||||
# This should generally be less than your total CPU core count, to
|
||||
# prevent overloading your system, but if you have a multithreaded
|
||||
# system, feel free to set this to as many threads as you feel
|
||||
# comfortable with Telodendria managing.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Note that if you have a single-threaded machine with only 1 CPU
|
||||
# core (as is typical with low-tier virtual machines), you may want
|
||||
# to set this to a lower number, or even set it to zero to disable
|
||||
# threading altogether, and run everything in a main thread,
|
||||
# processing requests one at a time.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Ultimately, it depends on what your machine is capable of. You may
|
||||
# just have to play around with this value to see which configuration
|
||||
# gives you the best performance.
|
||||
threads "4";
|
||||
|
||||
data-dir "/var/telodendria";
|
||||
|
||||
federation "true";
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue