Advertisement
Guest User

Untitled

a guest
Aug 14th, 2018
230
0
Never
Not a member of Pastebin yet? Sign Up, it unlocks many cool features!
text 10.88 KB | None | 0 0
  1. /**
  2. * Copyright JS Foundation and other contributors, http://js.foundation
  3. *
  4. * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
  5. * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
  6. * You may obtain a copy of the License at
  7. *
  8. * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
  9. *
  10. * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
  11. * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
  12. * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
  13. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
  14. * limitations under the License.
  15. **/
  16.  
  17. // The `https` setting requires the `fs` module. Uncomment the following
  18. // to make it available:
  19. //var fs = require("fs");
  20.  
  21. module.exports = {
  22. // the tcp port that the Node-RED web server is listening on
  23. uiPort: process.env.PORT || 1880,
  24.  
  25. // By default, the Node-RED UI accepts connections on all IPv4 interfaces.
  26. // To listen on all IPv6 addresses, set uiHost to "::",
  27. // The following property can be used to listen on a specific interface. For
  28. // example, the following would only allow connections from the local machine.
  29. //uiHost: "127.0.0.1",
  30.  
  31. // Retry time in milliseconds for MQTT connections
  32. mqttReconnectTime: 15000,
  33.  
  34. // Retry time in milliseconds for Serial port connections
  35. serialReconnectTime: 15000,
  36.  
  37. // Retry time in milliseconds for TCP socket connections
  38. //socketReconnectTime: 10000,
  39.  
  40. // Timeout in milliseconds for TCP server socket connections
  41. // defaults to no timeout
  42. //socketTimeout: 120000,
  43.  
  44. // Timeout in milliseconds for HTTP request connections
  45. // defaults to 120 seconds
  46. //httpRequestTimeout: 120000,
  47.  
  48. // The maximum length, in characters, of any message sent to the debug sidebar tab
  49. debugMaxLength: 1000,
  50.  
  51. // The maximum number of messages nodes will buffer internally as part of their
  52. // operation. This applies across a range of nodes that operate on message sequences.
  53. // defaults to no limit. A value of 0 also means no limit is applied.
  54. //nodeMaxMessageBufferLength: 0,
  55.  
  56. // To disable the option for using local files for storing keys and certificates in the TLS configuration
  57. // node, set this to true
  58. //tlsConfigDisableLocalFiles: true,
  59.  
  60. // Colourise the console output of the debug node
  61. //debugUseColors: true,
  62.  
  63. // The file containing the flows. If not set, it defaults to flows_<hostname>.json
  64. //flowFile: 'flows.json',
  65.  
  66. // To enabled pretty-printing of the flow within the flow file, set the following
  67. // property to true:
  68. //flowFilePretty: true,
  69.  
  70. // By default, credentials are encrypted in storage using a generated key. To
  71. // specify your own secret, set the following property.
  72. // If you want to disable encryption of credentials, set this property to false.
  73. // Note: once you set this property, do not change it - doing so will prevent
  74. // node-red from being able to decrypt your existing credentials and they will be
  75. // lost.
  76. //credentialSecret: "a-secret-key",
  77.  
  78. // By default, all user data is stored in the Node-RED install directory. To
  79. // use a different location, the following property can be used
  80. //userDir: '/home/nol/.node-red/',
  81.  
  82. // Node-RED scans the `nodes` directory in the install directory to find nodes.
  83. // The following property can be used to specify an additional directory to scan.
  84. //nodesDir: '/home/nol/.node-red/nodes',
  85.  
  86. // By default, the Node-RED UI is available at http://localhost:1880/
  87. // The following property can be used to specify a different root path.
  88. // If set to false, this is disabled.
  89. //httpAdminRoot: '/admin',
  90.  
  91. // Some nodes, such as HTTP In, can be used to listen for incoming http requests.
  92. // By default, these are served relative to '/'. The following property
  93. // can be used to specifiy a different root path. If set to false, this is
  94. // disabled.
  95. //httpNodeRoot: '/red-nodes',
  96.  
  97. // The following property can be used in place of 'httpAdminRoot' and 'httpNodeRoot',
  98. // to apply the same root to both parts.
  99. //httpRoot: '/red',
  100.  
  101. // When httpAdminRoot is used to move the UI to a different root path, the
  102. // following property can be used to identify a directory of static content
  103. // that should be served at http://localhost:1880/.
  104. //httpStatic: '/home/nol/node-red-static/',
  105.  
  106. // The maximum size of HTTP request that will be accepted by the runtime api.
  107. // Default: 5mb
  108. //apiMaxLength: '5mb',
  109.  
  110. // If you installed the optional node-red-dashboard you can set it's path
  111. // relative to httpRoot
  112. //ui: { path: "ui" },
  113.  
  114. // Securing Node-RED
  115. // -----------------
  116. // To password protect the Node-RED editor and admin API, the following
  117. // property can be used. See http://nodered.org/docs/security.html for details.
  118. adminAuth: {
  119. type: "credentials",
  120. users: [{
  121. username: "user",
  122. password: "pwhash",
  123. permissions: "*"
  124. }]
  125.  
  126. // To password protect the node-defined HTTP endpoints (httpNodeRoot), or
  127. // the static content (httpStatic), the following properties can be used.
  128. // The pass field is a bcrypt hash of the password.
  129. // See http://nodered.org/docs/security.html#generating-the-password-hash
  130. //httpNodeAuth: {user:"user",pass:"$2a$08$zZWtXTja0fB1pzD4sHCMyOCMYz2Z6dNbM6tl8sJogENOMcxWV9DN."},
  131. //httpStaticAuth: {user:"user",pass:"$2a$08$zZWtXTja0fB1pzD4sHCMyOCMYz2Z6dNbM6tl8sJogENOMcxWV9DN."},
  132.  
  133. // The following property can be used to enable HTTPS
  134. // See http://nodejs.org/api/https.html#https_https_createserver_options_requestlistener
  135. // for details on its contents.
  136. // See the comment at the top of this file on how to load the `fs` module used by
  137. // this setting.
  138. //
  139. //https: {
  140. // key: fs.readFileSync('privatekey.pem'),
  141. // cert: fs.readFileSync('certificate.pem')
  142. //},
  143.  
  144. // The following property can be used to cause insecure HTTP connections to
  145. // be redirected to HTTPS.
  146. //requireHttps: true
  147.  
  148. // The following property can be used to disable the editor. The admin API
  149. // is not affected by this option. To disable both the editor and the admin
  150. // API, use either the httpRoot or httpAdminRoot properties
  151. //disableEditor: false,
  152.  
  153. // The following property can be used to configure cross-origin resource sharing
  154. // in the HTTP nodes.
  155. // See https://github.com/troygoode/node-cors#configuration-options for
  156. // details on its contents. The following is a basic permissive set of options:
  157. //httpNodeCors: {
  158. // origin: "*",
  159. // methods: "GET,PUT,POST,DELETE"
  160. //},
  161.  
  162. // If you need to set an http proxy please set an environment variable
  163. // called http_proxy (or HTTP_PROXY) outside of Node-RED in the operating system.
  164. // For example - http_proxy=http://myproxy.com:8080
  165. // (Setting it here will have no effect)
  166. // You may also specify no_proxy (or NO_PROXY) to supply a comma separated
  167. // list of domains to not proxy, eg - no_proxy=.acme.co,.acme.co.uk
  168.  
  169. // The following property can be used to add a custom middleware function
  170. // in front of all http in nodes. This allows custom authentication to be
  171. // applied to all http in nodes, or any other sort of common request processing.
  172. //httpNodeMiddleware: function(req,res,next) {
  173. // // Handle/reject the request, or pass it on to the http in node by calling next();
  174. // // Optionally skip our rawBodyParser by setting this to true;
  175. // //req.skipRawBodyParser = true;
  176. // next();
  177. //},
  178.  
  179. // The following property can be used to verify websocket connection attempts.
  180. // This allows, for example, the HTTP request headers to be checked to ensure
  181. // they include valid authentication information.
  182. //webSocketNodeVerifyClient: function(info) {
  183. // // 'info' has three properties:
  184. // // - origin : the value in the Origin header
  185. // // - req : the HTTP request
  186. // // - secure : true if req.connection.authorized or req.connection.encrypted is set
  187. // //
  188. // // The function should return true if the connection should be accepted, false otherwise.
  189. // //
  190. // // Alternatively, if this function is defined to accept a second argument, callback,
  191. // // it can be used to verify the client asynchronously.
  192. // // The callback takes three arguments:
  193. // // - result : boolean, whether to accept the connection or not
  194. // // - code : if result is false, the HTTP error status to return
  195. // // - reason: if result is false, the HTTP reason string to return
  196. //},
  197.  
  198. // Anything in this hash is globally available to all functions.
  199. // It is accessed as context.global.
  200. // eg:
  201. // functionGlobalContext: { os:require('os') }
  202. // can be accessed in a function block as:
  203. // context.global.os
  204.  
  205. functionGlobalContext: {
  206. //os:require('os'),
  207. // jfive:require("johnny-five"),
  208. // j5board:require("johnny-five").Board({repl:false})
  209. },
  210.  
  211. // The following property can be used to order the categories in the editor
  212. // palette. If a node's category is not in the list, the category will get
  213. // added to the end of the palette.
  214. // If not set, the following default order is used:
  215. //paletteCategories: ['subflows', 'input', 'output', 'function', 'social', 'mobile', 'storage', 'analysis', 'advanced'],
  216.  
  217. // Configure the logging output
  218. logging: {
  219. // Only console logging is currently supported
  220. console: {
  221. // Level of logging to be recorded. Options are:
  222. // fatal - only those errors which make the application unusable should be recorded
  223. // error - record errors which are deemed fatal for a particular request + fatal errors
  224. // warn - record problems which are non fatal + errors + fatal errors
  225. // info - record information about the general running of the application + warn + error + fatal errors
  226. // debug - record information which is more verbose than info + info + warn + error + fatal errors
  227. // trace - record very detailed logging + debug + info + warn + error + fatal errors
  228. // off - turn off all logging (doesn't affect metrics or audit)
  229. level: "info",
  230. // Whether or not to include metric events in the log output
  231. metrics: false,
  232. // Whether or not to include audit events in the log output
  233. audit: false
  234. }
  235. },
  236.  
  237. // Customising the editor
  238. editorTheme: {
  239. projects: {
  240. // To enable the Projects feature, set this value to true
  241. enabled: false
  242. }
  243. }
  244. }
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement