618 lines
26 KiB
YAML
618 lines
26 KiB
YAML
# yamllint disable rule:comments-indentation
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---
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###############################################################################
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# Authelia Configuration #
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###############################################################################
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## The host and port to listen on.
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host: 0.0.0.0
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port: 9091
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## The TLS key and cert used with Authelia.
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# tls_key: /config/ssl/key.pem
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# tls_cert: /config/ssl/cert.pem
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## Certificates directory specifies where Authelia will load trusted certificates (public portion) from in addition to
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## the system certificates store.
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## They should be in base64 format, and have one of the following extensions: *.cer, *.crt, *.pem.
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# certificates_directory: /config/certificates
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## The theme to display: light, dark, grey.
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theme: light
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##
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## Server Configuration
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##
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server:
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## Buffers usually should be configured to be the same value.
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## Explanation at https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/server.html
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## Read buffer size adjusts the server's max incoming request size in bytes.
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## Write buffer size does the same for outgoing responses.
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read_buffer_size: 4096
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write_buffer_size: 4096
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## Set the single level path Authelia listens on.
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## Must be alphanumeric chars and should not contain any slashes.
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path: ""
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## Level of verbosity for logs: info, debug, trace.
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log_level: debug
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## Format the logs are written as: json, text.
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# log_format: json
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## File path where the logs will be written. If not set logs are written to stdout.
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# log_file_path: /config/authelia.log
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## Whether to also log to stdout when a log_file_path is defined.
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# log_keep_stdout: false
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## The secret used to generate JWT tokens when validating user identity by email confirmation. JWT Secret can also be
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## set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
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jwt_secret: a_very_important_secret
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## Default redirection URL
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##
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## If user tries to authenticate without any referer, Authelia does not know where to redirect the user to at the end
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## of the authentication process. This parameter allows you to specify the default redirection URL Authelia will use
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## in such a case.
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##
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## Note: this parameter is optional. If not provided, user won't be redirected upon successful authentication.
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default_redirection_url: https://home.example.com:8080/
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##
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## TOTP Configuration
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##
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## Parameters used for TOTP generation.
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totp:
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## The issuer name displayed in the Authenticator application of your choice
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## See: https://github.com/google/google-authenticator/wiki/Key-Uri-Format for more info on issuer names
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issuer: authelia.com
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## The period in seconds a one-time password is current for. Changing this will require all users to register
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## their TOTP applications again. Warning: before changing period read the docs link below.
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period: 30
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## The skew controls number of one-time passwords either side of the current one that are valid.
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## Warning: before changing skew read the docs link below.
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skew: 1
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## See: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/one-time-password.html#period-and-skew to read the documentation.
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##
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## Duo Push API Configuration
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##
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## Parameters used to contact the Duo API. Those are generated when you protect an application of type
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## "Partner Auth API" in the management panel.
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duo_api:
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hostname: api-123456789.example.com
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integration_key: ABCDEF
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## Secret can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
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secret_key: 1234567890abcdefghifjkl
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##
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## Authentication Backend Provider Configuration
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##
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## Used for verifying user passwords and retrieve information such as email address and groups users belong to.
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##
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## The available providers are: `file`, `ldap`. You must use only one of these providers.
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authentication_backend:
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## Disable both the HTML element and the API for reset password functionality.
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disable_reset_password: false
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## The amount of time to wait before we refresh data from the authentication backend. Uses duration notation.
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## To disable this feature set it to 'disable', this will slightly reduce security because for Authelia, users will
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## always belong to groups they belonged to at the time of login even if they have been removed from them in LDAP.
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## To force update on every request you can set this to '0' or 'always', this will increase processor demand.
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## See the below documentation for more information.
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## Duration Notation docs: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/index.html#duration-notation-format
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## Refresh Interval docs: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/authentication/ldap.html#refresh-interval
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refresh_interval: 5m
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##
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## LDAP (Authentication Provider)
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##
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## This is the recommended Authentication Provider in production
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## because it allows Authelia to offload the stateful operations
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## onto the LDAP service.
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ldap:
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## The LDAP implementation, this affects elements like the attribute utilised for resetting a password.
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## Acceptable options are as follows:
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## - 'activedirectory' - For Microsoft Active Directory.
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## - 'custom' - For custom specifications of attributes and filters.
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## This currently defaults to 'custom' to maintain existing behaviour.
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##
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## Depending on the option here certain other values in this section have a default value, notably all of the
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## attribute mappings have a default value that this config overrides, you can read more about these default values
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## at https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/authentication/ldap.html#defaults
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implementation: custom
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## The url to the ldap server. Format: <scheme>://<address>[:<port>].
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## Scheme can be ldap or ldaps in the format (port optional).
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url: ldap://127.0.0.1
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## Use StartTLS with the LDAP connection.
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start_tls: false
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tls:
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## Server Name for certificate validation (in case it's not set correctly in the URL).
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# server_name: ldap.example.com
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## Skip verifying the server certificate (to allow a self-signed certificate).
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## In preference to setting this we strongly recommend you add the public portion of the certificate to the
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## certificates directory which is defined by the `certificates_directory` option at the top of the config.
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skip_verify: false
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## Minimum TLS version for either Secure LDAP or LDAP StartTLS.
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minimum_version: TLS1.2
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## The distinguished name of the container searched for objects in the directory information tree.
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## See also: additional_users_dn, additional_groups_dn.
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base_dn: dc=example,dc=com
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## The attribute holding the username of the user. This attribute is used to populate the username in the session
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## information. It was introduced due to #561 to handle case insensitive search queries. For you information,
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## Microsoft Active Directory usually uses 'sAMAccountName' and OpenLDAP usually uses 'uid'. Beware that this
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## attribute holds the unique identifiers for the users binding the user and the configuration stored in database.
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## Therefore only single value attributes are allowed and the value must never be changed once attributed to a user
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## otherwise it would break the configuration for that user. Technically, non-unique attributes like 'mail' can also
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## be used but we don't recommend using them, we instead advise to use the attributes mentioned above
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## (sAMAccountName and uid) to follow https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2307.txt.
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# username_attribute: uid
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## The additional_users_dn is prefixed to base_dn and delimited by a comma when searching for users.
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## i.e. with this set to OU=Users and base_dn set to DC=a,DC=com; OU=Users,DC=a,DC=com is searched for users.
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additional_users_dn: ou=users
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## The users filter used in search queries to find the user profile based on input filled in login form.
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## Various placeholders are available in the user filter:
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## - {input} is a placeholder replaced by what the user inputs in the login form.
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## - {username_attribute} is a mandatory placeholder replaced by what is configured in `username_attribute`.
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## - {mail_attribute} is a placeholder replaced by what is configured in `mail_attribute`.
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##
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## Recommended settings are as follows:
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## - Microsoft Active Directory: (&({username_attribute}={input})(objectCategory=person)(objectClass=user))
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## - OpenLDAP:
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## - (&({username_attribute}={input})(objectClass=person))
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## - (&({username_attribute}={input})(objectClass=inetOrgPerson))
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##
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## To allow sign in both with username and email, one can use a filter like
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## (&(|({username_attribute}={input})({mail_attribute}={input}))(objectClass=person))
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users_filter: (&({username_attribute}={input})(objectClass=person))
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## The additional_groups_dn is prefixed to base_dn and delimited by a comma when searching for groups.
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## i.e. with this set to OU=Groups and base_dn set to DC=a,DC=com; OU=Groups,DC=a,DC=com is searched for groups.
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additional_groups_dn: ou=groups
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## The groups filter used in search queries to find the groups of the user.
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## - {input} is a placeholder replaced by what the user inputs in the login form.
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## - {username} is a placeholder replace by the username stored in LDAP (based on `username_attribute`).
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## - {dn} is a matcher replaced by the user distinguished name, aka, user DN.
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## - {username_attribute} is a placeholder replaced by what is configured in `username_attribute`.
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## - {mail_attribute} is a placeholder replaced by what is configured in `mail_attribute`.
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##
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## If your groups use the `groupOfUniqueNames` structure use this instead:
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## (&(uniquemember={dn})(objectclass=groupOfUniqueNames))
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groups_filter: (&(member={dn})(objectclass=groupOfNames))
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## The attribute holding the name of the group.
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# group_name_attribute: cn
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## The attribute holding the mail address of the user. If multiple email addresses are defined for a user, only the
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## first one returned by the LDAP server is used.
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# mail_attribute: mail
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## The attribute holding the display name of the user. This will be used to greet an authenticated user.
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# display_name_attribute: displayname
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## The username and password of the admin user.
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user: cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com
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## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
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password: password
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##
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## File (Authentication Provider)
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##
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## With this backend, the users database is stored in a file which is updated when users reset their passwords.
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## Therefore, this backend is meant to be used in a dev environment and not in production since it prevents Authelia
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## to be scaled to more than one instance. The options under 'password' have sane defaults, and as it has security
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## implications it is highly recommended you leave the default values. Before considering changing these settings
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## please read the docs page below:
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## https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/authentication/file.html#password-hash-algorithm-tuning
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##
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## Important: Kubernetes (or HA) users must read https://www.authelia.com/docs/features/statelessness.html
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##
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# file:
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# path: /config/users_database.yml
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# password:
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# algorithm: argon2id
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# iterations: 1
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# key_length: 32
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# salt_length: 16
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# memory: 1024
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# parallelism: 8
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##
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## Access Control Configuration
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##
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## Access control is a list of rules defining the authorizations applied for one resource to users or group of users.
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##
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## If 'access_control' is not defined, ACL rules are disabled and the 'bypass' rule is applied, i.e., access is allowed
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## to anyone. Otherwise restrictions follow the rules defined.
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##
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## Note: One can use the wildcard * to match any subdomain.
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## It must stand at the beginning of the pattern. (example: *.mydomain.com)
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##
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## Note: You must put patterns containing wildcards between simple quotes for the YAML to be syntactically correct.
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##
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## Definition: A 'rule' is an object with the following keys: 'domain', 'subject', 'policy' and 'resources'.
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##
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## - 'domain' defines which domain or set of domains the rule applies to.
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##
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## - 'subject' defines the subject to apply authorizations to. This parameter is optional and matching any user if not
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## provided. If provided, the parameter represents either a user or a group. It should be of the form
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## 'user:<username>' or 'group:<groupname>'.
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##
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## - 'policy' is the policy to apply to resources. It must be either 'bypass', 'one_factor', 'two_factor' or 'deny'.
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##
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## - 'resources' is a list of regular expressions that matches a set of resources to apply the policy to. This parameter
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## is optional and matches any resource if not provided.
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##
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## Note: the order of the rules is important. The first policy matching (domain, resource, subject) applies.
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access_control:
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## Default policy can either be 'bypass', 'one_factor', 'two_factor' or 'deny'. It is the policy applied to any
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## resource if there is no policy to be applied to the user.
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default_policy: deny
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networks:
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- name: internal
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networks:
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- 10.10.0.0/16
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- 192.168.2.0/24
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- name: VPN
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networks: 10.9.0.0/16
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rules:
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## Rules applied to everyone
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- domain: public.example.com
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policy: bypass
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- domain: secure.example.com
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policy: one_factor
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## Network based rule, if not provided any network matches.
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networks:
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- internal
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- VPN
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- 192.168.1.0/24
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- 10.0.0.1
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- domain:
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- secure.example.com
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- private.example.com
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policy: two_factor
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- domain: singlefactor.example.com
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policy: one_factor
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## Rules applied to 'admins' group
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- domain: "mx2.mail.example.com"
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subject: "group:admins"
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policy: deny
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- domain: "*.example.com"
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subject:
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- "group:admins"
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- "group:moderators"
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policy: two_factor
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## Rules applied to 'dev' group
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- domain: dev.example.com
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resources:
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- "^/groups/dev/.*$"
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subject: "group:dev"
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policy: two_factor
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## Rules applied to user 'john'
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- domain: dev.example.com
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resources:
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- "^/users/john/.*$"
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subject: "user:john"
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policy: two_factor
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## Rules applied to user 'harry'
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- domain: dev.example.com
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resources:
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- "^/users/harry/.*$"
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subject: "user:harry"
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policy: two_factor
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## Rules applied to user 'bob'
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- domain: "*.mail.example.com"
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subject: "user:bob"
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policy: two_factor
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- domain: "dev.example.com"
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resources:
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- "^/users/bob/.*$"
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subject: "user:bob"
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policy: two_factor
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##
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## Session Provider Configuration
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##
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## The session cookies identify the user once logged in.
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## The available providers are: `memory`, `redis`. Memory is the provider unless redis is defined.
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session:
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## The name of the session cookie.
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name: authelia_session
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## The domain to protect.
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## Note: the authenticator must also be in that domain.
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## If empty, the cookie is restricted to the subdomain of the issuer.
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domain: example.com
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## Sets the Cookie SameSite value. Possible options are none, lax, or strict.
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## Please read https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/session.html#same_site
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same_site: lax
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## The secret to encrypt the session data. This is only used with Redis / Redis Sentinel.
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## Secret can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
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secret: insecure_session_secret
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## The value for expiration, inactivity, and remember_me_duration are in seconds or the duration notation format.
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## See: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/index.html#duration-notation-format
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## All three of these values affect the cookie/session validity period. Longer periods are considered less secure
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## because a stolen cookie will last longer giving attackers more time to spy or attack.
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## The time before the cookie expires and the session is destroyed if remember me IS NOT selected.
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expiration: 1h
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## The inactivity time before the session is reset. If expiration is set to 1h, and this is set to 5m, if the user
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## does not select the remember me option their session will get destroyed after 1h, or after 5m since the last time
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## Authelia detected user activity.
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inactivity: 5m
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## The time before the cookie expires and the session is destroyed if remember me IS selected.
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## Value of 0 disables remember me.
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remember_me_duration: 1M
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##
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## Redis Provider
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##
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## Important: Kubernetes (or HA) users must read https://www.authelia.com/docs/features/statelessness.html
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##
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redis:
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host: 127.0.0.1
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port: 6379
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## Use a unix socket instead
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# host: /var/run/redis/redis.sock
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## Username used for redis authentication. This is optional and a new feature in redis 6.0.
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# username: authelia
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## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
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password: authelia
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## This is the Redis DB Index https://redis.io/commands/select (sometimes referred to as database number, DB, etc).
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database_index: 0
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## The maximum number of concurrent active connections to Redis.
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maximum_active_connections: 8
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## The target number of idle connections to have open ready for work. Useful when opening connections is slow.
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minimum_idle_connections: 0
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## The Redis TLS configuration. If defined will require a TLS connection to the Redis instance(s).
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# tls:
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## Server Name for certificate validation (in case you are using the IP or non-FQDN in the host option).
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# server_name: myredis.example.com
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## Skip verifying the server certificate (to allow a self-signed certificate).
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## In preference to setting this we strongly recommend you add the public portion of the certificate to the
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## certificates directory which is defined by the `certificates_directory` option at the top of the config.
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# skip_verify: false
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## Minimum TLS version for the connection.
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# minimum_version: TLS1.2
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## The Redis HA configuration options.
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## This provides specific options to Redis Sentinel, sentinel_name must be defined (Master Name).
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# high_availability:
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## Sentinel Name / Master Name.
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# sentinel_name: mysentinel
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## Specific password for Redis Sentinel. The node username and password is configured above.
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# sentinel_password: sentinel_specific_pass
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## The additional nodes to pre-seed the redis provider with (for sentinel).
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## If the host in the above section is defined, it will be combined with this list to connect to sentinel.
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## For high availability to be used you must have either defined; the host above or at least one node below.
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# nodes:
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# - host: sentinel-node1
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# port: 6379
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# - host: sentinel-node2
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# port: 6379
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## Choose the host with the lowest latency.
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# route_by_latency: false
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## Choose the host randomly.
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# route_randomly: false
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##
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## Regulation Configuration
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##
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## This mechanism prevents attackers from brute forcing the first factor. It bans the user if too many attempts are made
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## in a short period of time.
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regulation:
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## The number of failed login attempts before user is banned. Set it to 0 to disable regulation.
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max_retries: 3
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## The time range during which the user can attempt login before being banned. The user is banned if the
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## authentication failed 'max_retries' times in a 'find_time' seconds window. Find Time accepts duration notation.
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## See: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/index.html#duration-notation-format
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find_time: 2m
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## The length of time before a banned user can login again. Ban Time accepts duration notation.
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## See: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/index.html#duration-notation-format
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ban_time: 5m
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##
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## Storage Provider Configuration
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##
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## The available providers are: `local`, `mysql`, `postgres`. You must use one and only one of these providers.
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storage:
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##
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## Local (Storage Provider)
|
|
##
|
|
## This stores the data in a SQLite3 Database.
|
|
## This is only recommended for lightweight non-stateful installations.
|
|
##
|
|
## Important: Kubernetes (or HA) users must read https://www.authelia.com/docs/features/statelessness.html
|
|
##
|
|
# local:
|
|
# path: /config/db.sqlite3
|
|
|
|
##
|
|
## MySQL / MariaDB (Storage Provider)
|
|
##
|
|
mysql:
|
|
host: 127.0.0.1
|
|
port: 3306
|
|
database: authelia
|
|
username: authelia
|
|
## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
|
|
password: mypassword
|
|
|
|
##
|
|
## PostgreSQL (Storage Provider)
|
|
##
|
|
# postgres:
|
|
# host: 127.0.0.1
|
|
# port: 5432
|
|
# database: authelia
|
|
# username: authelia
|
|
# ## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
|
|
# password: mypassword
|
|
# sslmode: disable
|
|
|
|
##
|
|
## Notification Provider
|
|
##
|
|
## Notifications are sent to users when they require a password reset, a U2F registration or a TOTP registration.
|
|
## The available providers are: filesystem, smtp. You must use only one of these providers.
|
|
notifier:
|
|
## You can disable the notifier startup check by setting this to true.
|
|
disable_startup_check: false
|
|
|
|
##
|
|
## File System (Notification Provider)
|
|
##
|
|
## Important: Kubernetes (or HA) users must read https://www.authelia.com/docs/features/statelessness.html
|
|
##
|
|
# filesystem:
|
|
# filename: /config/notification.txt
|
|
|
|
##
|
|
## SMTP (Notification Provider)
|
|
##
|
|
## Use a SMTP server for sending notifications. Authelia uses the PLAIN or LOGIN methods to authenticate.
|
|
## [Security] By default Authelia will:
|
|
## - force all SMTP connections over TLS including unauthenticated connections
|
|
## - use the disable_require_tls boolean value to disable this requirement
|
|
## (only works for unauthenticated connections)
|
|
## - validate the SMTP server x509 certificate during the TLS handshake against the hosts trusted certificates
|
|
## (configure in tls section)
|
|
smtp:
|
|
username: test
|
|
## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
|
|
password: password
|
|
host: 127.0.0.1
|
|
port: 1025
|
|
sender: admin@example.com
|
|
## HELO/EHLO Identifier. Some SMTP Servers may reject the default of localhost.
|
|
identifier: localhost
|
|
## Subject configuration of the emails sent. {title} is replaced by the text from the notifier.
|
|
subject: "[Authelia] {title}"
|
|
## This address is used during the startup check to verify the email configuration is correct.
|
|
## It's not important what it is except if your email server only allows local delivery.
|
|
startup_check_address: test@authelia.com
|
|
disable_require_tls: false
|
|
disable_html_emails: false
|
|
|
|
tls:
|
|
## Server Name for certificate validation (in case you are using the IP or non-FQDN in the host option).
|
|
# server_name: smtp.example.com
|
|
|
|
## Skip verifying the server certificate (to allow a self-signed certificate).
|
|
## In preference to setting this we strongly recommend you add the public portion of the certificate to the
|
|
## certificates directory which is defined by the `certificates_directory` option at the top of the config.
|
|
skip_verify: false
|
|
|
|
## Minimum TLS version for either StartTLS or SMTPS.
|
|
minimum_version: TLS1.2
|
|
|
|
## Sending an email using a Gmail account is as simple as the next section.
|
|
## You need to create an app password by following: https://support.google.com/accounts/answer/185833?hl=en
|
|
# smtp:
|
|
# username: myaccount@gmail.com
|
|
# ## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
|
|
# password: yourapppassword
|
|
# sender: admin@example.com
|
|
# host: smtp.gmail.com
|
|
# port: 587
|
|
|
|
##
|
|
## Identity Providers
|
|
##
|
|
# identity_providers:
|
|
|
|
##
|
|
## OpenID Connect (Identity Provider)
|
|
##
|
|
## It's recommended you read the documentation before configuration of this section:
|
|
## https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/identity-providers/oidc.html
|
|
# oidc:
|
|
## The hmac_secret is used to sign OAuth2 tokens (authorization code, access tokens and refresh tokens).
|
|
## HMAC Secret can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
|
|
# hmac_secret: this_is_a_secret_abc123abc123abc
|
|
|
|
## The issuer_private_key is used to sign the JWT forged by OpenID Connect.
|
|
## Issuer Private Key can also be set using a secret: https://docs.authelia.com/configuration/secrets.html
|
|
# issuer_private_key: |
|
|
# --- KEY START
|
|
# --- KEY END
|
|
|
|
## Clients is a list of known clients and their configuration.
|
|
# clients:
|
|
# -
|
|
## The ID is the OpenID Connect ClientID which is used to link an application to a configuration.
|
|
# id: myapp
|
|
|
|
## The description to show to users when they end up on the consent screen. Defaults to the ID above.
|
|
# description: My Application
|
|
|
|
## The client secret is a shared secret between Authelia and the consumer of this client.
|
|
# secret: this_is_a_secret
|
|
|
|
## The policy to require for this client; one_factor or two_factor.
|
|
# authorization_policy: two_factor
|
|
|
|
## Redirect URI's specifies a list of valid case-sensitive callbacks for this client.
|
|
# redirect_uris:
|
|
# - https://oidc.example.com:8080/oauth2/callback
|
|
|
|
## Scopes defines the valid scopes this client can request
|
|
# scopes:
|
|
# - openid
|
|
# - groups
|
|
# - email
|
|
# - profile
|
|
|
|
## Grant Types configures which grants this client can obtain.
|
|
## It's not recommended to define this unless you know what you're doing.
|
|
# grant_types:
|
|
# - refresh_token
|
|
# - "authorization_code
|
|
|
|
## Response Types configures which responses this client can be sent.
|
|
## It's not recommended to define this unless you know what you're doing.
|
|
# response_types:
|
|
# - code
|
|
...
|