* Allow specifying port through LD_SERVER_PORT environment variable Co-authored-by: Christoph Schmatzler <christoph@medium.place> Co-authored-by: Sascha Ißbrücker <sascha.issbruecker@googlemail.com>
2.3 KiB
Options
This document lists the options that linkding can be configured with and explains how to use them in the individual install scenarios.
Using options
Docker
Options are passed as environment variables to the Docker container by using the -e
argument when using docker run
. For example:
docker run --name linkding -p 9090:9090 -d -e LD_DISABLE_URL_VALIDATION=True sissbruecker/linkding:latest
For multiple options, use one -e
argument per option.
Docker-compose
For docker-compose options are configured using an .env
file.
Follow the docker-compose setup in the README and copy .env.sample
to .env
. Then modify the options in .env
.
Manual setup
All options need to be defined as environment variables in the environment that linkding runs in.
List of options
LD_DISABLE_BACKGROUND_TASKS
Values: True
, False
| Default = False
Disables background tasks, such as creating snapshots for bookmarks on the web archive. Enabling this flag will prevent the background task processor from starting up, and prevents scheduling tasks. This might be useful if you are experiencing performance issues or other problematic behaviour due to background task processing.
LD_DISABLE_URL_VALIDATION
Values: True
, False
| Default = False
Completely disables URL validation for bookmarks.
This can be useful if you intend to store non fully qualified domain name URLs, such as network paths, or you want to store URLs that use another protocol than http
or https
.
LD_REQUEST_TIMEOUT
Values: Integer
as seconds | Default = 60
Configures the request timeout in the uwsgi application server. This can be useful if you want to import a bookmark file with a high number of bookmarks and run into request timeouts.
LD_SERVER_PORT
Values: Valid port number | Default = 9090
Allows to set a custom port for the UWSGI server running in the container. While Docker containers have their own IP address namespace and port collisions are impossible to achieve, there are other container solutions that share one. Podman, for example, runs all containers in a pod under one namespace, which results in every port only being allowed to be assigned once. This option allows to set a custom port in order to avoid collisions with other containers.