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Diffstat (limited to 'unmaintained/yaws/yaws.conf.alpine')
-rw-r--r-- | unmaintained/yaws/yaws.conf.alpine | 150 |
1 files changed, 150 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/unmaintained/yaws/yaws.conf.alpine b/unmaintained/yaws/yaws.conf.alpine new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..c3a6d2832c --- /dev/null +++ b/unmaintained/yaws/yaws.conf.alpine @@ -0,0 +1,150 @@ + +# conf for yaws + +# First we have a set of globals that apply to all virtual servers + +# This is the directory where all logfiles for +# all virtual servers will be written. +logdir = /var/log/yaws + +# These are the paths to directories where additional +# beam code can be placed. The daemon will add these +# directories to its search path. +ebin_dir = /usr/lib/yaws/examples/ebin +ebin_dir = /var/yaws/ebin + +# This is a directory where application specific .hrl +# files can be placed. Application-specific .yaws code can +# then include these .hrl files. +include_dir = /usr/lib/yaws/examples/include + +# Set this to an integer value to control +# max number of connections from clients into the server. +max_connections = nolimit + +# Normally, yaws does not restrict the number of times a connection is +# kept alive using keepalive. Setting this parameter to an integer X +# will ensure that connections are closed once they have been used X times. +# This can be a useful to guard against long running connections +# collecting too much garbage in the Erlang VM. +keepalive_maxuses = nolimit + +# Override the garbage collection option parameters for processes +# that handle new connections. Useful for systems expecting long-lived +# connections that handle a lot of data. The default value is Erlang's +# default. Valid options are {fullsweep_after, X} and/or {min_heap_size, Y} where +# X and Y are integers. See Erlang's erlang:spawn_opt/4 function for more +# details. The value type is a quoted string containing an Erlang proplist or +# the atom undefined. +process_options = "[]" + +# Set the size of the cached acceptor process pool. The value must be an +# integer greater than or equal to 0. The default pool size is 8. Setting +# the pool size to 0 effectively disables the pool. +#acceptor_pool_size = 8 + +# This is a debug variable, possible values are http | traffic | false +# It is also possible to set the trace (possibly to the tty) while +# invoking yaws from the shell as in +# yaws -i -T -x (see man yaws). +trace = false + +# Enable this if we want to use the old OTP ssl implementation +# OTP R13B03 is known to work with this flag set to false (default). +use_old_ssl = false + +# It is possible to have yaws start additional application-specific code at +# startup. Set runmod to the name of the module you want yaws to start. It +# assumes the module has an exported function start/0. To have multiple +# runmods just add more "runmod = xyz" lines. +# +# runmod = mymodule + +# By default yaws will copy the erlang error_log and +# append it to a wrap log called report.log (in the logdir). +# This feature can be turned off. This would typically +# be the case when yaws runs within another larger app. +copy_error_log = true + +# Logs are wrap logs +log_wrap_size = 1000000 + +# Possibly resolve all hostnames in logfiles so webalizer +# can produce the nice geography piechart +log_resolve_hostname = false + +# Fail completely or not if yaws fails to bind a listen socket. +fail_on_bind_err = true + +# If HTTP auth is used, it is possible to have a specific +# auth log. As of release 1.90 the global auth_log is +# deprecated and ignored. Now, this variable must be set in +# server part +#auth_log = true + +# When we're running multiple yaws systems on the same +# host, we need to give each yaws system an individual +# name. Yaws will write a number of runtime files under +# ${HOME}/.yaws/yaws/${id} +# The default value is "default" +# If we're not planning to run multiple webservers on the +# same host it's much better to leave this value unset since +# then all the ctl function (--stop et.el) work without having +# to supply the id. +# +# id = myname + +# Earlier versions of Yaws picked the first virtual host +# in a list of hosts with the same IP/PORT when the Host: +# header doesn't match any name on any Host. +# This is often nice in testing environments but not +# acceptable in real-world hosting scenarios; +# think http://porn.bigcompany.com +pick_first_virthost_on_nomatch = true + +# If the HTTP client session is to be kept alive, wait this many +# milliseconds for a new request before timing out the connection. Note +# that infinity is a valid value but it's not recommended. +keepalive_timeout = 30000 + +# Now, a set of virtual servers. +# The examples below first show two virthosted servers on the same IP (0.0.0.0) +# in this case, but an explicit IP can be given as well. + +#<server localhost> +# port = 80 +# listen = 0.0.0.0 +# docroot = /var/yaws/www +# auth_log = true +# appmods = <cgi-bin, yaws_appmod_cgi> +#</server> + +<server localhost> + port = 80 + listen = 0.0.0.0 + docroot = /tmp + dir_listings = true + auth_log = true + statistics = true + <auth> + realm = foobar + dir = / + user = foo:bar + user = baz:bar + </auth> +</server> + +# Now an SSL server + +<server localhost> + port = 443 + docroot = /tmp + listen = 0.0.0.0 + dir_listings = true + auth_log = true + <ssl> + keyfile = /etc/yaws/yaws-key.pem + certfile = /etc/yaws/yaws-cert.pem + depth = 0 + </ssl> +</server> |