cryptpad/config.js.dist

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/*
globals module
*/
module.exports = {
// the address you want to bind to, :: means all ipv4 and ipv6 addresses
// this may not work on all operating systems
httpAddress: '::',
// the port on which your httpd will listen
/* Cryptpad can be configured to send customized HTTP Headers
* These settings may vary widely depending on your needs
* Examples are provided below
*/
httpHeaders: {
"X-XSS-Protection": "1; mode=block",
"X-Content-Type-Options": "nosniff",
// 'X-Frame-Options': 'SAMEORIGIN',
},
contentSecurity: [
"default-src 'none'",
"style-src 'unsafe-inline' 'self'",
"script-src 'self'",
"font-src 'self'",
/* child-src is used to restrict iframes to a set of allowed domains.
* connect-src is used to restrict what domains can connect to the websocket.
*
* it is recommended that you configure these fields to match the
* domain which will serve your cryptpad instance.
*/
"connect-src 'self' ws://*",
"child-src 'self' *",
// data: is used by codemirror
"img-src 'self' data:",
].join('; '),
// CKEditor requires significantly more lax content security policy in order to function.
padContentSecurity: [
"default-src 'none'",
"style-src 'unsafe-inline' 'self'",
// Unsafe inline, unsafe-eval are needed for ckeditor :(
"script-src 'self' 'unsafe-eval' 'unsafe-inline'",
"font-src 'self'",
/* See above under 'contentSecurity' as to how these values should be
* configured for best effect.
*/
"child-src 'self' *",
"connect-src 'self' ws://*",
// (insecure remote) images are included by users of the wysiwyg who embed photos in their pads
"img-src *",
].join('; '),
httpPort: 3000,
/* your server's websocket url is configurable
* (default: '/cryptpad_websocket')
*
* websocketPath can be relative, of the form '/path/to/websocket'
* or absolute, specifying a particular URL
*
* 'wss://cryptpad.fr:3000/cryptpad_websocket'
*/
websocketPath: '/cryptpad_websocket',
/* it is assumed that your websocket will bind to the same port as http
* you can override this behaviour by supplying a number via websocketPort
*/
//websocketPort: 3000,
/* if you want to run a different version of cryptpad but using the same websocket
* server, you should use the other server port as websocketPort and disable
* the websockets on that server
*/
//useExternalWebsocket: false,
/* If Cryptpad is proxied without using https, the server needs to know.
* Specify 'useSecureWebsockets: true' so that it can send
* Content Security Policy Headers that prevent http and https from mixing
*/
useSecureWebsockets: false,
/* Cryptpad can log activity to stdout
* This may be useful for debugging
*/
logToStdout: false,
/* Cryptpad supports verbose logging
* (false by default)
*/
verbose: false,
/* Main pages
* add exceptions to the router so that we can access /privacy.html
* and other odd pages
*/
mainPages: [
'index',
'privacy',
'terms',
'about',
'contact',
],
/*
You have the option of specifying an alternative storage adaptor.
These status of these alternatives are specified in their READMEs,
which are available at the following URLs:
mongodb: a noSQL database
https://github.com/xwiki-labs/cryptpad-mongo-store
amnesiadb: in memory storage
https://github.com/xwiki-labs/cryptpad-amnesia-store
leveldb: a simple, fast, key-value store
https://github.com/xwiki-labs/cryptpad-level-store
sql: an adaptor for a variety of sql databases via knexjs
https://github.com/xwiki-labs/cryptpad-sql-store
For the most up to date solution, use the default storage adaptor.
*/
storage: './storage/file',
/*
Cryptpad stores each document in an individual file on your hard drive.
Specify a directory where files should be stored.
It will be created automatically if it does not already exist.
*/
filePath: './datastore/',
/* Cryptpad's file storage adaptor closes unused files after a configurale
* number of milliseconds (default 30000 (30 seconds))
*/
channelExpirationMs: 30000,
/* Cryptpad's file storage adaptor is limited by the number of open files.
* When the adaptor reaches openFileLimit, it will clean up older files
*/
openFileLimit: 2048,
/* Cryptpad's socket server can be extended to respond to RPC calls
* you can configure it to respond to custom RPC calls if you like.
* provide the path to your RPC module here, or `false` if you would
* like to disable the RPC interface completely
*/
rpc: './rpc.js',
/* RPC errors are shown by default, but if you really don't care,
* you can suppress them
*/
suppressRPCErrors: false,
/* it is recommended that you serve cryptpad over https
* the filepaths below are used to configure your certificates
*/
//privKeyAndCertFiles: [
// '/etc/apache2/ssl/my_secret.key',
// '/etc/apache2/ssl/my_public_cert.crt',
// '/etc/apache2/ssl/my_certificate_authorities_cert_chain.ca'
//],
};