lemmy/config/defaults.hjson

121 lines
4.6 KiB
Text

{
# settings related to the postgresql database
database: {
# Configure the database by specifying a URI
#
# This is the preferred method to specify database connection details since
# it is the most flexible.
# Connection URI pointing to a postgres instance
#
# This example uses peer authentication to obviate the need for creating,
# configuring, and managing passwords.
#
# For an explanation of how to use connection URIs, see [here][0] in
# PostgreSQL's documentation.
#
# [0]: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/libpq-connect.html#id-1.7.3.8.3.6
uri: "postgresql:///lemmy?user=lemmy&host=/var/run/postgresql"
# or
# Configure the database by specifying parts of a URI
#
# Note that specifying the `uri` field should be preferred since it provides
# greater control over how the connection is made. This merely exists for
# backwards-compatibility.
# Username to connect to postgres
user: "string"
# Password to connect to postgres
password: "string"
# Host where postgres is running
host: "string"
# Port where postgres can be accessed
port: 123
# Name of the postgres database for lemmy
database: "string"
# Maximum number of active sql connections
pool_size: 30
}
# Pictrs image server configuration.
pictrs: {
# Address where pictrs is available (for image hosting)
url: "http://localhost:8080/"
# Set a custom pictrs API key. ( Required for deleting images )
api_key: "string"
# Specifies how to handle remote images, so that users don't have to connect directly to remote
# servers.
image_mode:
# Leave images unchanged, don't generate any local thumbnails for post urls. Instead the
# Opengraph image is directly returned as thumbnail
"None"
# or
# Generate thumbnails for external post urls and store them persistently in pict-rs. This
# ensures that they can be reliably retrieved and can be resized using pict-rs APIs. However
# it also increases storage usage.
#
# This behaviour matches Lemmy 0.18.
"StoreLinkPreviews"
# or
# If enabled, all images from remote domains are rewritten to pass through
# `/api/v3/image_proxy`, including embedded images in markdown. Images are stored temporarily
# in pict-rs for caching. This improves privacy as users don't expose their IP to untrusted
# servers, and decreases load on other servers. However it increases bandwidth use for the
# local server.
#
# Requires pict-rs 0.5
"ProxyAllImages"
# Timeout for uploading images to pictrs (in seconds)
upload_timeout: 30
# Resize post thumbnails to this maximum width/height.
max_thumbnail_size: 256
}
# Email sending configuration. All options except login/password are mandatory
email: {
# Hostname and port of the smtp server
smtp_server: "localhost:25"
# Login name for smtp server
smtp_login: "string"
# Password to login to the smtp server
smtp_password: "string"
# Address to send emails from, eg "noreply@your-instance.com"
smtp_from_address: "noreply@example.com"
# Whether or not smtp connections should use tls. Can be none, tls, or starttls
tls_type: "none"
}
# Parameters for automatic configuration of new instance (only used at first start)
setup: {
# Username for the admin user
admin_username: "admin"
# Password for the admin user. It must be between 10 and 60 characters.
admin_password: "tf6HHDS4RolWfFhk4Rq9"
# Name of the site, can be changed later. Maximum 20 characters.
site_name: "My Lemmy Instance"
# Email for the admin user (optional, can be omitted and set later through the website)
admin_email: "user@example.com"
}
# the domain name of your instance (mandatory)
hostname: "unset"
# Address where lemmy should listen for incoming requests
bind: "0.0.0.0"
# Port where lemmy should listen for incoming requests
port: 8536
# Whether the site is available over TLS. Needs to be true for federation to work.
tls_enabled: true
federation: {
# Limit to the number of concurrent outgoing federation requests per target instance.
# Set this to a higher value than 1 (e.g. 6) only if you have a huge instance (>10 activities
# per second) and if a receiving instance is not keeping up.
concurrent_sends_per_instance: 1
}
prometheus: {
bind: "127.0.0.1"
port: 10002
}
# Sets a response Access-Control-Allow-Origin CORS header
# https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Access-Control-Allow-Origin
cors_origin: "*"
}