Add a caveat for docker deployment in the config docs
[akkoma] / docs / config.md
1 # Configuration
2
3 This file describe the configuration, it is recommended to edit the relevant *.secret.exs file instead of the others founds in the ``config`` directory.
4 If you run Pleroma with ``MIX_ENV=prod`` the file is ``prod.secret.exs``, otherwise it is ``dev.secret.exs``.
5
6 ## Pleroma.Upload
7 * `uploader`: Select which `Pleroma.Uploaders` to use
8 * `filters`: List of `Pleroma.Upload.Filter` to use.
9 * `link_name`: When enabled Pleroma will add a `name` parameter to the url of the upload, for example `https://instance.tld/media/corndog.png?name=corndog.png`. This is needed to provide the correct filename in Content-Disposition headers when using filters like `Pleroma.Upload.Filter.Dedupe`
10 * `base_url`: The base URL to access a user-uploaded file. Useful when you want to proxy the media files via another host.
11 * `proxy_remote`: If you\'re using a remote uploader, Pleroma will proxy media requests instead of redirecting to it.
12 * `proxy_opts`: Proxy options, see `Pleroma.ReverseProxy` documentation.
13
14 Note: `strip_exif` has been replaced by `Pleroma.Upload.Filter.Mogrify`.
15
16 ## Pleroma.Uploaders.Local
17 * `uploads`: Which directory to store the user-uploads in, relative to pleroma’s working directory
18
19 ## Pleroma.Uploaders.S3
20 * `bucket`: S3 bucket name
21 * `public_endpoint`: S3 endpoint that the user finally accesses(ex. "https://s3.dualstack.ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com")
22 * `truncated_namespace`: If you use S3 compatible service such as Digital Ocean Spaces or CDN, set folder name or "" etc.
23 For example, when using CDN to S3 virtual host format, set "".
24 At this time, write CNAME to CDN in public_endpoint.
25
26 ## Pleroma.Upload.Filter.Mogrify
27
28 * `args`: List of actions for the `mogrify` command like `"strip"` or `["strip", "auto-orient", {"impode", "1"}]`.
29
30 ## Pleroma.Upload.Filter.Dedupe
31
32 No specific configuration.
33
34 ## Pleroma.Upload.Filter.AnonymizeFilename
35
36 This filter replaces the filename (not the path) of an upload. For complete obfuscation, add
37 `Pleroma.Upload.Filter.Dedupe` before AnonymizeFilename.
38
39 * `text`: Text to replace filenames in links. If empty, `{random}.extension` will be used.
40
41 ## Pleroma.Emails.Mailer
42 * `adapter`: one of the mail adapters listed in [Swoosh readme](https://github.com/swoosh/swoosh#adapters), or `Swoosh.Adapters.Local` for in-memory mailbox.
43 * `api_key` / `password` and / or other adapter-specific settings, per the above documentation.
44
45 An example for Sendgrid adapter:
46
47 ```elixir
48 config :pleroma, Pleroma.Emails.Mailer,
49 adapter: Swoosh.Adapters.Sendgrid,
50 api_key: "YOUR_API_KEY"
51 ```
52
53 An example for SMTP adapter:
54
55 ```elixir
56 config :pleroma, Pleroma.Emails.Mailer,
57 adapter: Swoosh.Adapters.SMTP,
58 relay: "smtp.gmail.com",
59 username: "YOUR_USERNAME@gmail.com",
60 password: "YOUR_SMTP_PASSWORD",
61 port: 465,
62 ssl: true,
63 tls: :always,
64 auth: :always
65 ```
66
67 ## :uri_schemes
68 * `valid_schemes`: List of the scheme part that is considered valid to be an URL
69
70 ## :instance
71 * `name`: The instance’s name
72 * `email`: Email used to reach an Administrator/Moderator of the instance
73 * `notify_email`: Email used for notifications.
74 * `description`: The instance’s description, can be seen in nodeinfo and ``/api/v1/instance``
75 * `limit`: Posts character limit (CW/Subject included in the counter)
76 * `remote_limit`: Hard character limit beyond which remote posts will be dropped.
77 * `upload_limit`: File size limit of uploads (except for avatar, background, banner)
78 * `avatar_upload_limit`: File size limit of user’s profile avatars
79 * `background_upload_limit`: File size limit of user’s profile backgrounds
80 * `banner_upload_limit`: File size limit of user’s profile banners
81 * `poll_limits`: A map with poll limits for **local** polls
82 * `max_options`: Maximum number of options
83 * `max_option_chars`: Maximum number of characters per option
84 * `min_expiration`: Minimum expiration time (in seconds)
85 * `max_expiration`: Maximum expiration time (in seconds)
86 * `registrations_open`: Enable registrations for anyone, invitations can be enabled when false.
87 * `invites_enabled`: Enable user invitations for admins (depends on `registrations_open: false`).
88 * `account_activation_required`: Require users to confirm their emails before signing in.
89 * `federating`: Enable federation with other instances
90 * `federation_reachability_timeout_days`: Timeout (in days) of each external federation target being unreachable prior to pausing federating to it.
91 * `allow_relay`: Enable Pleroma’s Relay, which makes it possible to follow a whole instance
92 * `rewrite_policy`: Message Rewrite Policy, either one or a list. Here are the ones available by default:
93 * `Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.NoOpPolicy`: Doesn’t modify activities (default)
94 * `Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.DropPolicy`: Drops all activities. It generally doesn’t makes sense to use in production
95 * `Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.SimplePolicy`: Restrict the visibility of activities from certains instances (See ``:mrf_simple`` section)
96 * `Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.TagPolicy`: Applies policies to individual users based on tags, which can be set using pleroma-fe/admin-fe/any other app that supports Pleroma Admin API. For example it allows marking posts from individual users nsfw (sensitive)
97 * `Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.SubchainPolicy`: Selectively runs other MRF policies when messages match (see ``:mrf_subchain`` section)
98 * `Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.RejectNonPublic`: Drops posts with non-public visibility settings (See ``:mrf_rejectnonpublic`` section)
99 * `Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.EnsureRePrepended`: Rewrites posts to ensure that replies to posts with subjects do not have an identical subject and instead begin with re:.
100 * `Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.AntiLinkSpamPolicy`: Rejects posts from likely spambots by rejecting posts from new users that contain links.
101 * `Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.MediaProxyWarmingPolicy`: Crawls attachments using their MediaProxy URLs so that the MediaProxy cache is primed.
102 * `public`: Makes the client API in authentificated mode-only except for user-profiles. Useful for disabling the Local Timeline and The Whole Known Network.
103 * `quarantined_instances`: List of ActivityPub instances where private(DMs, followers-only) activities will not be send.
104 * `managed_config`: Whenether the config for pleroma-fe is configured in this config or in ``static/config.json``
105 * `allowed_post_formats`: MIME-type list of formats allowed to be posted (transformed into HTML)
106 * `mrf_transparency`: Make the content of your Message Rewrite Facility settings public (via nodeinfo).
107 * `scope_copy`: Copy the scope (private/unlisted/public) in replies to posts by default.
108 * `subject_line_behavior`: Allows changing the default behaviour of subject lines in replies. Valid values:
109 * "email": Copy and preprend re:, as in email.
110 * "masto": Copy verbatim, as in Mastodon.
111 * "noop": Don't copy the subject.
112 * `always_show_subject_input`: When set to false, auto-hide the subject field when it's empty.
113 * `extended_nickname_format`: Set to `true` to use extended local nicknames format (allows underscores/dashes). This will break federation with
114 older software for theses nicknames.
115 * `max_pinned_statuses`: The maximum number of pinned statuses. `0` will disable the feature.
116 * `autofollowed_nicknames`: Set to nicknames of (local) users that every new user should automatically follow.
117 * `no_attachment_links`: Set to true to disable automatically adding attachment link text to statuses
118 * `welcome_message`: A message that will be send to a newly registered users as a direct message.
119 * `welcome_user_nickname`: The nickname of the local user that sends the welcome message.
120 * `max_report_comment_size`: The maximum size of the report comment (Default: `1000`)
121 * `safe_dm_mentions`: If set to true, only mentions at the beginning of a post will be used to address people in direct messages. This is to prevent accidental mentioning of people when talking about them (e.g. "@friend hey i really don't like @enemy"). Default: `false`.
122 * `healthcheck`: If set to true, system data will be shown on ``/api/pleroma/healthcheck``.
123 * `remote_post_retention_days`: The default amount of days to retain remote posts when pruning the database.
124 * `skip_thread_containment`: Skip filter out broken threads. The default is `false`.
125 * `limit_to_local_content`: Limit unauthenticated users to search for local statutes and users only. Possible values: `:unauthenticated`, `:all` and `false`. The default is `:unauthenticated`.
126 * `dynamic_configuration`: Allow transferring configuration to DB with the subsequent customization from Admin api.
127
128
129 ## :logger
130 * `backends`: `:console` is used to send logs to stdout, `{ExSyslogger, :ex_syslogger}` to log to syslog, and `Quack.Logger` to log to Slack
131
132 An example to enable ONLY ExSyslogger (f/ex in ``prod.secret.exs``) with info and debug suppressed:
133 ```elixir
134 config :logger,
135 backends: [{ExSyslogger, :ex_syslogger}]
136
137 config :logger, :ex_syslogger,
138 level: :warn
139 ```
140
141 Another example, keeping console output and adding the pid to syslog output:
142 ```elixir
143 config :logger,
144 backends: [:console, {ExSyslogger, :ex_syslogger}]
145
146 config :logger, :ex_syslogger,
147 level: :warn,
148 option: [:pid, :ndelay]
149 ```
150
151 See: [logger’s documentation](https://hexdocs.pm/logger/Logger.html) and [ex_syslogger’s documentation](https://hexdocs.pm/ex_syslogger/)
152
153 An example of logging info to local syslog, but warn to a Slack channel:
154 ```elixir
155 config :logger,
156 backends: [ {ExSyslogger, :ex_syslogger}, Quack.Logger ],
157 level: :info
158
159 config :logger, :ex_syslogger,
160 level: :info,
161 ident: "pleroma",
162 format: "$metadata[$level] $message"
163
164 config :quack,
165 level: :warn,
166 meta: [:all],
167 webhook_url: "https://hooks.slack.com/services/YOUR-API-KEY-HERE"
168 ```
169
170 See the [Quack Github](https://github.com/azohra/quack) for more details
171
172 ## :frontend_configurations
173
174 This can be used to configure a keyword list that keeps the configuration data for any kind of frontend. By default, settings for `pleroma_fe` and `masto_fe` are configured.
175
176 Frontends can access these settings at `/api/pleroma/frontend_configurations`
177
178 To add your own configuration for PleromaFE, use it like this:
179
180 ```elixir
181 config :pleroma, :frontend_configurations,
182 pleroma_fe: %{
183 theme: "pleroma-dark",
184 # ... see /priv/static/static/config.json for the available keys.
185 },
186 masto_fe: %{
187 showInstanceSpecificPanel: true
188 }
189 ```
190
191 These settings **need to be complete**, they will override the defaults.
192
193 NOTE: for versions < 1.0, you need to set [`:fe`](#fe) to false, as shown a few lines below.
194
195 ## :fe
196 __THIS IS DEPRECATED__
197
198 If you are using this method, please change it to the [`frontend_configurations`](#frontend_configurations) method.
199 Please **set this option to false** in your config like this:
200
201 ```elixir
202 config :pleroma, :fe, false
203 ```
204
205 This section is used to configure Pleroma-FE, unless ``:managed_config`` in ``:instance`` is set to false.
206
207 * `theme`: Which theme to use, they are defined in ``styles.json``
208 * `logo`: URL of the logo, defaults to Pleroma’s logo
209 * `logo_mask`: Whether to use only the logo's shape as a mask (true) or as a regular image (false)
210 * `logo_margin`: What margin to use around the logo
211 * `background`: URL of the background, unless viewing a user profile with a background that is set
212 * `redirect_root_no_login`: relative URL which indicates where to redirect when a user isn’t logged in.
213 * `redirect_root_login`: relative URL which indicates where to redirect when a user is logged in.
214 * `show_instance_panel`: Whenether to show the instance’s specific panel.
215 * `scope_options_enabled`: Enable setting an notice visibility and subject/CW when posting
216 * `formatting_options_enabled`: Enable setting a formatting different than plain-text (ie. HTML, Markdown) when posting, relates to ``:instance, allowed_post_formats``
217 * `collapse_message_with_subjects`: When a message has a subject(aka Content Warning), collapse it by default
218 * `hide_post_stats`: Hide notices statistics(repeats, favorites, …)
219 * `hide_user_stats`: Hide profile statistics(posts, posts per day, followers, followings, …)
220
221 ## :assets
222
223 This section configures assets to be used with various frontends. Currently the only option
224 relates to mascots on the mastodon frontend
225
226 * `mascots`: KeywordList of mascots, each element __MUST__ contain both a `url` and a
227 `mime_type` key.
228 * `default_mascot`: An element from `mascots` - This will be used as the default mascot
229 on MastoFE (default: `:pleroma_fox_tan`)
230
231 ## :mrf_simple
232 * `media_removal`: List of instances to remove medias from
233 * `media_nsfw`: List of instances to put medias as NSFW(sensitive) from
234 * `federated_timeline_removal`: List of instances to remove from Federated (aka The Whole Known Network) Timeline
235 * `reject`: List of instances to reject any activities from
236 * `accept`: List of instances to accept any activities from
237 * `report_removal`: List of instances to reject reports from
238 * `avatar_removal`: List of instances to strip avatars from
239 * `banner_removal`: List of instances to strip banners from
240
241 ## :mrf_subchain
242 This policy processes messages through an alternate pipeline when a given message matches certain criteria.
243 All criteria are configured as a map of regular expressions to lists of policy modules.
244
245 * `match_actor`: Matches a series of regular expressions against the actor field.
246
247 Example:
248
249 ```
250 config :pleroma, :mrf_subchain,
251 match_actor: %{
252 ~r/https:\/\/example.com/s => [Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.DropPolicy]
253 }
254 ```
255
256 ## :mrf_rejectnonpublic
257 * `allow_followersonly`: whether to allow followers-only posts
258 * `allow_direct`: whether to allow direct messages
259
260 ## :mrf_hellthread
261 * `delist_threshold`: Number of mentioned users after which the message gets delisted (the message can still be seen, but it will not show up in public timelines and mentioned users won't get notifications about it). Set to 0 to disable.
262 * `reject_threshold`: Number of mentioned users after which the messaged gets rejected. Set to 0 to disable.
263
264 ## :mrf_keyword
265 * `reject`: A list of patterns which result in message being rejected, each pattern can be a string or a [regular expression](https://hexdocs.pm/elixir/Regex.html)
266 * `federated_timeline_removal`: A list of patterns which result in message being removed from federated timelines (a.k.a unlisted), each pattern can be a string or a [regular expression](https://hexdocs.pm/elixir/Regex.html)
267 * `replace`: A list of tuples containing `{pattern, replacement}`, `pattern` can be a string or a [regular expression](https://hexdocs.pm/elixir/Regex.html)
268
269 ## :media_proxy
270 * `enabled`: Enables proxying of remote media to the instance’s proxy
271 * `base_url`: The base URL to access a user-uploaded file. Useful when you want to proxy the media files via another host/CDN fronts.
272 * `proxy_opts`: All options defined in `Pleroma.ReverseProxy` documentation, defaults to `[max_body_length: (25*1_048_576)]`.
273 * `whitelist`: List of domains to bypass the mediaproxy
274
275 ## :gopher
276 * `enabled`: Enables the gopher interface
277 * `ip`: IP address to bind to
278 * `port`: Port to bind to
279 * `dstport`: Port advertised in urls (optional, defaults to `port`)
280
281 ## Pleroma.Web.Endpoint
282 `Phoenix` endpoint configuration, all configuration options can be viewed [here](https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix/Phoenix.Endpoint.html#module-dynamic-configuration), only common options are listed here
283 * `http` - a list containing http protocol configuration, all configuration options can be viewed [here](https://hexdocs.pm/plug_cowboy/Plug.Cowboy.html#module-options), only common options are listed here. For deployment using docker, you need to set this to `[ip: {0,0,0,0}, port: 4000]` to make pleroma accessible from other containers (such as your nginx server).
284 - `ip` - a tuple consisting of 4 integers
285 - `port`
286 * `url` - a list containing the configuration for generating urls, accepts
287 - `host` - the host without the scheme and a post (e.g `example.com`, not `https://example.com:2020`)
288 - `scheme` - e.g `http`, `https`
289 - `port`
290 - `path`
291 * `extra_cookie_attrs` - a list of `Key=Value` strings to be added as non-standard cookie attributes. Defaults to `["SameSite=Lax"]`. See the [SameSite article](https://www.owasp.org/index.php/SameSite) on OWASP for more info.
292
293
294
295 **Important note**: if you modify anything inside these lists, default `config.exs` values will be overwritten, which may result in breakage, to make sure this does not happen please copy the default value for the list from `config.exs` and modify/add only what you need
296
297 Example:
298 ```elixir
299 config :pleroma, Pleroma.Web.Endpoint,
300 url: [host: "example.com", port: 2020, scheme: "https"],
301 http: [
302 # start copied from config.exs
303 dispatch: [
304 {:_,
305 [
306 {"/api/v1/streaming", Pleroma.Web.MastodonAPI.WebsocketHandler, []},
307 {"/websocket", Phoenix.Endpoint.CowboyWebSocket,
308 {Phoenix.Transports.WebSocket,
309 {Pleroma.Web.Endpoint, Pleroma.Web.UserSocket, websocket_config}}},
310 {:_, Phoenix.Endpoint.Cowboy2Handler, {Pleroma.Web.Endpoint, []}}
311 ]}
312 # end copied from config.exs
313 ],
314 port: 8080,
315 ip: {127, 0, 0, 1}
316 ]
317 ```
318
319 This will make Pleroma listen on `127.0.0.1` port `8080` and generate urls starting with `https://example.com:2020`
320
321 ## :activitypub
322 * ``accept_blocks``: Whether to accept incoming block activities from other instances
323 * ``unfollow_blocked``: Whether blocks result in people getting unfollowed
324 * ``outgoing_blocks``: Whether to federate blocks to other instances
325 * ``deny_follow_blocked``: Whether to disallow following an account that has blocked the user in question
326
327 ## :http_security
328 * ``enabled``: Whether the managed content security policy is enabled
329 * ``sts``: Whether to additionally send a `Strict-Transport-Security` header
330 * ``sts_max_age``: The maximum age for the `Strict-Transport-Security` header if sent
331 * ``ct_max_age``: The maximum age for the `Expect-CT` header if sent
332 * ``referrer_policy``: The referrer policy to use, either `"same-origin"` or `"no-referrer"`
333 * ``report_uri``: Adds the specified url to `report-uri` and `report-to` group in CSP header.
334
335 ## :mrf_user_allowlist
336
337 The keys in this section are the domain names that the policy should apply to.
338 Each key should be assigned a list of users that should be allowed through by
339 their ActivityPub ID.
340
341 An example:
342
343 ```elixir
344 config :pleroma, :mrf_user_allowlist,
345 "example.org": ["https://example.org/users/admin"]
346 ```
347
348 ## :web_push_encryption, :vapid_details
349
350 Web Push Notifications configuration. You can use the mix task `mix web_push.gen.keypair` to generate it.
351
352 * ``subject``: a mailto link for the administrative contact. It’s best if this email is not a personal email address, but rather a group email so that if a person leaves an organization, is unavailable for an extended period, or otherwise can’t respond, someone else on the list can.
353 * ``public_key``: VAPID public key
354 * ``private_key``: VAPID private key
355
356 ## Pleroma.Captcha
357 * `enabled`: Whether the captcha should be shown on registration
358 * `method`: The method/service to use for captcha
359 * `seconds_valid`: The time in seconds for which the captcha is valid
360
361 ### Pleroma.Captcha.Kocaptcha
362 Kocaptcha is a very simple captcha service with a single API endpoint,
363 the source code is here: https://github.com/koto-bank/kocaptcha. The default endpoint
364 `https://captcha.kotobank.ch` is hosted by the developer.
365
366 * `endpoint`: the kocaptcha endpoint to use
367
368 ## :admin_token
369
370 Allows to set a token that can be used to authenticate with the admin api without using an actual user by giving it as the 'admin_token' parameter. Example:
371
372 ```elixir
373 config :pleroma, :admin_token, "somerandomtoken"
374 ```
375
376 You can then do
377
378 ```sh
379 curl "http://localhost:4000/api/pleroma/admin/invite_token?admin_token=somerandomtoken"
380 ```
381
382 ## :pleroma_job_queue
383
384 [Pleroma Job Queue](https://git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma_job_queue) configuration: a list of queues with maximum concurrent jobs.
385
386 Pleroma has the following queues:
387
388 * `federator_outgoing` - Outgoing federation
389 * `federator_incoming` - Incoming federation
390 * `mailer` - Email sender, see [`Pleroma.Emails.Mailer`](#pleroma-emails-mailer)
391 * `transmogrifier` - Transmogrifier
392 * `web_push` - Web push notifications
393 * `scheduled_activities` - Scheduled activities, see [`Pleroma.ScheduledActivities`](#pleromascheduledactivity)
394
395 Example:
396
397 ```elixir
398 config :pleroma_job_queue, :queues,
399 federator_incoming: 50,
400 federator_outgoing: 50
401 ```
402
403 This config contains two queues: `federator_incoming` and `federator_outgoing`. Both have the `max_jobs` set to `50`.
404
405 ## Pleroma.Web.Federator.RetryQueue
406
407 * `enabled`: If set to `true`, failed federation jobs will be retried
408 * `max_jobs`: The maximum amount of parallel federation jobs running at the same time.
409 * `initial_timeout`: The initial timeout in seconds
410 * `max_retries`: The maximum number of times a federation job is retried
411
412 ## Pleroma.Web.Metadata
413 * `providers`: a list of metadata providers to enable. Providers available:
414 * Pleroma.Web.Metadata.Providers.OpenGraph
415 * Pleroma.Web.Metadata.Providers.TwitterCard
416 * Pleroma.Web.Metadata.Providers.RelMe - add links from user bio with rel=me into the `<header>` as `<link rel=me>`
417 * `unfurl_nsfw`: If set to `true` nsfw attachments will be shown in previews
418
419 ## :rich_media
420 * `enabled`: if enabled the instance will parse metadata from attached links to generate link previews
421 * `ignore_hosts`: list of hosts which will be ignored by the metadata parser. For example `["accounts.google.com", "xss.website"]`, defaults to `[]`.
422 * `ignore_tld`: list TLDs (top-level domains) which will ignore for parse metadata. default is ["local", "localdomain", "lan"]
423
424 ## :fetch_initial_posts
425 * `enabled`: if enabled, when a new user is federated with, fetch some of their latest posts
426 * `pages`: the amount of pages to fetch
427
428 ## :hackney_pools
429
430 Advanced. Tweaks Hackney (http client) connections pools.
431
432 There's three pools used:
433
434 * `:federation` for the federation jobs.
435 You may want this pool max_connections to be at least equal to the number of federator jobs + retry queue jobs.
436 * `:media` for rich media, media proxy
437 * `:upload` for uploaded media (if using a remote uploader and `proxy_remote: true`)
438
439 For each pool, the options are:
440
441 * `max_connections` - how much connections a pool can hold
442 * `timeout` - retention duration for connections
443
444 ## :auto_linker
445
446 Configuration for the `auto_linker` library:
447
448 * `class: "auto-linker"` - specify the class to be added to the generated link. false to clear
449 * `rel: "noopener noreferrer"` - override the rel attribute. false to clear
450 * `new_window: true` - set to false to remove `target='_blank'` attribute
451 * `scheme: false` - Set to true to link urls with schema `http://google.com`
452 * `truncate: false` - Set to a number to truncate urls longer then the number. Truncated urls will end in `..`
453 * `strip_prefix: true` - Strip the scheme prefix
454 * `extra: false` - link urls with rarely used schemes (magnet, ipfs, irc, etc.)
455
456 Example:
457
458 ```elixir
459 config :auto_linker,
460 opts: [
461 scheme: true,
462 extra: true,
463 class: false,
464 strip_prefix: false,
465 new_window: false,
466 rel: false
467 ]
468 ```
469
470 ## Pleroma.ScheduledActivity
471
472 * `daily_user_limit`: the number of scheduled activities a user is allowed to create in a single day (Default: `25`)
473 * `total_user_limit`: the number of scheduled activities a user is allowed to create in total (Default: `300`)
474 * `enabled`: whether scheduled activities are sent to the job queue to be executed
475
476 ## Pleroma.Web.Auth.Authenticator
477
478 * `Pleroma.Web.Auth.PleromaAuthenticator`: default database authenticator
479 * `Pleroma.Web.Auth.LDAPAuthenticator`: LDAP authentication
480
481 ## :ldap
482
483 Use LDAP for user authentication. When a user logs in to the Pleroma
484 instance, the name and password will be verified by trying to authenticate
485 (bind) to an LDAP server. If a user exists in the LDAP directory but there
486 is no account with the same name yet on the Pleroma instance then a new
487 Pleroma account will be created with the same name as the LDAP user name.
488
489 * `enabled`: enables LDAP authentication
490 * `host`: LDAP server hostname
491 * `port`: LDAP port, e.g. 389 or 636
492 * `ssl`: true to use SSL, usually implies the port 636
493 * `sslopts`: additional SSL options
494 * `tls`: true to start TLS, usually implies the port 389
495 * `tlsopts`: additional TLS options
496 * `base`: LDAP base, e.g. "dc=example,dc=com"
497 * `uid`: LDAP attribute name to authenticate the user, e.g. when "cn", the filter will be "cn=username,base"
498
499 ## BBS / SSH access
500
501 To enable simple command line interface accessible over ssh, add a setting like this to your configuration file:
502
503 ```exs
504 app_dir = File.cwd!
505 priv_dir = Path.join([app_dir, "priv/ssh_keys"])
506
507 config :esshd,
508 enabled: true,
509 priv_dir: priv_dir,
510 handler: "Pleroma.BBS.Handler",
511 port: 10_022,
512 password_authenticator: "Pleroma.BBS.Authenticator"
513 ```
514
515 Feel free to adjust the priv_dir and port number. Then you will have to create the key for the keys (in the example `priv/ssh_keys`) and create the host keys with `ssh-keygen -m PEM -N "" -b 2048 -t rsa -f ssh_host_rsa_key`. After restarting, you should be able to connect to your Pleroma instance with `ssh username@server -p $PORT`
516
517 ## :auth
518
519 * `Pleroma.Web.Auth.PleromaAuthenticator`: default database authenticator
520 * `Pleroma.Web.Auth.LDAPAuthenticator`: LDAP authentication
521
522 Authentication / authorization settings.
523
524 * `auth_template`: authentication form template. By default it's `show.html` which corresponds to `lib/pleroma/web/templates/o_auth/o_auth/show.html.eex`.
525 * `oauth_consumer_template`: OAuth consumer mode authentication form template. By default it's `consumer.html` which corresponds to `lib/pleroma/web/templates/o_auth/o_auth/consumer.html.eex`.
526 * `oauth_consumer_strategies`: the list of enabled OAuth consumer strategies; by default it's set by `OAUTH_CONSUMER_STRATEGIES` environment variable. Each entry in this space-delimited string should be of format `<strategy>` or `<strategy>:<dependency>` (e.g. `twitter` or `keycloak:ueberauth_keycloak_strategy` in case dependency is named differently than `ueberauth_<strategy>`).
527
528 ## OAuth consumer mode
529
530 OAuth consumer mode allows sign in / sign up via external OAuth providers (e.g. Twitter, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, etc.).
531 Implementation is based on Ueberauth; see the list of [available strategies](https://github.com/ueberauth/ueberauth/wiki/List-of-Strategies).
532
533 Note: each strategy is shipped as a separate dependency; in order to get the strategies, run `OAUTH_CONSUMER_STRATEGIES="..." mix deps.get`,
534 e.g. `OAUTH_CONSUMER_STRATEGIES="twitter facebook google microsoft" mix deps.get`.
535 The server should also be started with `OAUTH_CONSUMER_STRATEGIES="..." mix phx.server` in case you enable any strategies.
536
537 Note: each strategy requires separate setup (on external provider side and Pleroma side). Below are the guidelines on setting up most popular strategies.
538
539 Note: make sure that `"SameSite=Lax"` is set in `extra_cookie_attrs` when you have this feature enabled. OAuth consumer mode will not work with `"SameSite=Strict"`
540
541 * For Twitter, [register an app](https://developer.twitter.com/en/apps), configure callback URL to https://<your_host>/oauth/twitter/callback
542
543 * For Facebook, [register an app](https://developers.facebook.com/apps), configure callback URL to https://<your_host>/oauth/facebook/callback, enable Facebook Login service at https://developers.facebook.com/apps/<app_id>/fb-login/settings/
544
545 * For Google, [register an app](https://console.developers.google.com), configure callback URL to https://<your_host>/oauth/google/callback
546
547 * For Microsoft, [register an app](https://portal.azure.com), configure callback URL to https://<your_host>/oauth/microsoft/callback
548
549 Once the app is configured on external OAuth provider side, add app's credentials and strategy-specific settings (if any — e.g. see Microsoft below) to `config/prod.secret.exs`,
550 per strategy's documentation (e.g. [ueberauth_twitter](https://github.com/ueberauth/ueberauth_twitter)). Example config basing on environment variables:
551
552 ```elixir
553 # Twitter
554 config :ueberauth, Ueberauth.Strategy.Twitter.OAuth,
555 consumer_key: System.get_env("TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY"),
556 consumer_secret: System.get_env("TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET")
557
558 # Facebook
559 config :ueberauth, Ueberauth.Strategy.Facebook.OAuth,
560 client_id: System.get_env("FACEBOOK_APP_ID"),
561 client_secret: System.get_env("FACEBOOK_APP_SECRET"),
562 redirect_uri: System.get_env("FACEBOOK_REDIRECT_URI")
563
564 # Google
565 config :ueberauth, Ueberauth.Strategy.Google.OAuth,
566 client_id: System.get_env("GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID"),
567 client_secret: System.get_env("GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET"),
568 redirect_uri: System.get_env("GOOGLE_REDIRECT_URI")
569
570 # Microsoft
571 config :ueberauth, Ueberauth.Strategy.Microsoft.OAuth,
572 client_id: System.get_env("MICROSOFT_CLIENT_ID"),
573 client_secret: System.get_env("MICROSOFT_CLIENT_SECRET")
574
575 config :ueberauth, Ueberauth,
576 providers: [
577 microsoft: {Ueberauth.Strategy.Microsoft, [callback_params: []]}
578 ]
579
580 # Keycloak
581 # Note: make sure to add `keycloak:ueberauth_keycloak_strategy` entry to `OAUTH_CONSUMER_STRATEGIES` environment variable
582 keycloak_url = "https://publicly-reachable-keycloak-instance.org:8080"
583
584 config :ueberauth, Ueberauth.Strategy.Keycloak.OAuth,
585 client_id: System.get_env("KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_ID"),
586 client_secret: System.get_env("KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_SECRET"),
587 site: keycloak_url,
588 authorize_url: "#{keycloak_url}/auth/realms/master/protocol/openid-connect/auth",
589 token_url: "#{keycloak_url}/auth/realms/master/protocol/openid-connect/token",
590 userinfo_url: "#{keycloak_url}/auth/realms/master/protocol/openid-connect/userinfo",
591 token_method: :post
592
593 config :ueberauth, Ueberauth,
594 providers: [
595 keycloak: {Ueberauth.Strategy.Keycloak, [uid_field: :email]}
596 ]
597 ```
598
599 ## OAuth 2.0 provider - :oauth2
600
601 Configure OAuth 2 provider capabilities:
602
603 * `token_expires_in` - The lifetime in seconds of the access token.
604 * `issue_new_refresh_token` - Keeps old refresh token or generate new refresh token when to obtain an access token.
605 * `clean_expired_tokens` - Enable a background job to clean expired oauth tokens. Defaults to `false`.
606 * `clean_expired_tokens_interval` - Interval to run the job to clean expired tokens. Defaults to `86_400_000` (24 hours).
607
608 ## :emoji
609 * `shortcode_globs`: Location of custom emoji files. `*` can be used as a wildcard. Example `["/emoji/custom/**/*.png"]`
610 * `pack_extensions`: A list of file extensions for emojis, when no emoji.txt for a pack is present. Example `[".png", ".gif"]`
611 * `groups`: Emojis are ordered in groups (tags). This is an array of key-value pairs where the key is the groupname and the value the location or array of locations. `*` can be used as a wildcard. Example `[Custom: ["/emoji/*.png", "/emoji/custom/*.png"]]`
612 * `default_manifest`: Location of the JSON-manifest. This manifest contains information about the emoji-packs you can download. Currently only one manifest can be added (no arrays).
613
614 ## Database options
615
616 ### RUM indexing for full text search
617 * `rum_enabled`: If RUM indexes should be used. Defaults to `false`.
618
619 RUM indexes are an alternative indexing scheme that is not included in PostgreSQL by default. While they may eventually be mainlined, for now they have to be installed as a PostgreSQL extension from https://github.com/postgrespro/rum.
620
621 Their advantage over the standard GIN indexes is that they allow efficient ordering of search results by timestamp, which makes search queries a lot faster on larger servers, by one or two orders of magnitude. They take up around 3 times as much space as GIN indexes.
622
623 To enable them, both the `rum_enabled` flag has to be set and the following special migration has to be run:
624
625 `mix ecto.migrate --migrations-path priv/repo/optional_migrations/rum_indexing/`
626
627 This will probably take a long time.
628
629 ## :rate_limit
630
631 A keyword list of rate limiters where a key is a limiter name and value is the limiter configuration. The basic configuration is a tuple where:
632
633 * The first element: `scale` (Integer). The time scale in milliseconds.
634 * The second element: `limit` (Integer). How many requests to limit in the time scale provided.
635
636 It is also possible to have different limits for unauthenticated and authenticated users: the keyword value must be a list of two tuples where the first one is a config for unauthenticated users and the second one is for authenticated.
637
638 See [`Pleroma.Plugs.RateLimiter`](Pleroma.Plugs.RateLimiter.html) documentation for examples.