travelynx/examples/travelynx.conf
Birte Kristina Friesel 52c0da3f46
Traewelling: replace legacy password login with OAuth2
This is a breaking change insofar as that traewelling support is no longer
provided automatically, but must be enabled by providing a traewelling.de
application ID and secret in travelynx.conf. However, as traewelling.de
password login is deprecated and wil soon be disabled, travelynx would break
either way. So we might or might not see travelynx 2.0.0 in the next days.

Automatic token refresh is still todo, but that was the case for password
login as well.

Closes #64
2023-08-07 21:17:10 +02:00

142 lines
5.5 KiB
Perl

# vim:ft=perl
# travelynx.conf must be a valid perl hash reference. String values must be
# quoted and hash items must end with a comma. You can access environment
# variables via $ENV, e.g. by writing $ENV{TRAVELYNX_DB_HOST} instead of
# 'localhost'. You can validate via 'perl -c travelynx.conf'.
{
# Optional announcement, e.g. to indicate maintenance or backend issues.
#announcement => 'The IRIS backend is flaky. Real-time data may not be available.',
# Base URL of this travelynx installation, e.g. "https://travelynx.de" for
# travelynx.de. Used to identify this travelynx instance when performing API
# requests (so API providers know whom to contact case of issues) and for
# imprint and other links in travelynx E-Mails. Note that this entry is
# only used when travelynx is performing requests or sending E-mails from
# a "work", "worker", or "maintenance" job. Otherwise, it will infer the
# base URL from the HTTP request. If your travelynx instance is reachable
# via multiple URLs, use any one of them.
base_url => Mojo::URL->new('https://FIXME.local'),
# Cache directories for schedule and realtime data. Mandatory. The parent
# directory ('/var/cache/travelynx' in this case) must already exist.
cache => {
schedule => '/var/cache/travelynx/iris',
realtime => '/var/cache/travelynx/iris-rt',
},
# Database configuration. host and port are optional
# (defaulting to localhost:5432), the rest is mandatory.
db => {
host => 'localhost',
port => 5432,
database => 'travelynx',
user => 'travelynx',
password => die("Changeme!"),
},
# These settings control the amount and (re)spawn behaviour of travelynx
# worker processes as well as IP, port, and PID file. They are suitable for
# up to a few dozen concurrent users. If your site has more traffic, you
# may want to increase the number of worker processes.
# See the Mojo::Server::Hypnotoad manual for details.
hypnotoad => {
accepts => 100,
clients => 10,
listen => [ 'http://127.0.0.1:8093' ],
pid_file => '/tmp/travelynx.pid',
workers => 2,
spare => 2,
},
influxdb => {
# travelynx can log statistics and performance attributes to InfluxDB.
# To do so, create a travelynx database in your InfluxDB, and point url
# (below) to the corresponding write URL. The URL may use anything from
# plain HTTP to HTTPS with password authentication.
## url => 'https://user:password@host/write?db=travelynx',
},
mail => {
# To disable outgoing mail for development purposes, uncomment the
# following line. Mails will instead be logged as Mojolicious "info"
# messages, causing their content to be printed on stdout.
## disabled => 1,
# Otherwise, specify the sender ("From" field) for mail sent by travelynx
# here. E.g. 'Travelynx <mail@example.org>'
from => die("Changeme!"),
},
registration => {
# To disable registration for your instance, uncomment the following
# line.
## disabled => 1,
# To block registration from certain IPs, uncomment the following line
# and point it to a file containing one IPv4 or IPv6 address per line.
# Blocking IP ranges is not supported.
## denylist => "denylist.txt",
},
# Links to source code and issue tracker shown on the about page.
# Please change them if you are using a fork.
ref => {
# Optional
issues => 'https://github.com/derf/travelynx/issues',
# Mandatory
source => 'https://github.com/derf/travelynx',
},
# Secrets used for cookie signing and verification. Must contain at least
# one random string. If you specify several strings, the first one will
# be used for signing new cookies, and the remaining ones will still be
# accepted for cookie validation.
secrets => [
die("Changeme!"),
],
# optionally, users can link travelynx and traewelling accounts, and
# automatically synchronize check-ins.
# To do so, you need to create a travelynx application on
# <https://traewelling.de/settings/applications>. The application
# must be marked as "Confidential" and have a redirect URL that matches
# $base_url/oauth/traewelling, where $base_url refers to the URL configured
# above. For instance, travelynx.de uses
# 'https://travelynx.de/oauth/traewelling'. An incorrect redirect URL will
# cause OAuth2 to fail with unsupported_grant_type.
#
# Note that the travelynx/traewelling OAuth2 integration does not support
# travelynx installations that are reachable on multiple URLs at the
# moment -- linking a traewelling account is only possible when accessing
# travelynx via the base URL.
traewelling => {
# Uncomment the following block and insert the application ID and
# secret obtained from https://traewelling.de/settings/applications
# -> your application -> Edit.
#oauth => {
# id => 1234,
# secret => 'mysecret',
#}
# By default, the "work" or "worker" command does not just update
# real-time data of active journeys, but also performs push and pull
# synchronization with traewelling for accounts that have configured it.
# Traewelling pull synchronization currently relies on polling the user
# status on traewelling.de, so large travelynx instances may want to
# run pull synchronization less frequently than regular "work" commands
# and traewelling push synchronization.
#
# To do so, uncomment "separate_worker" below and create a cronjob that
# periodically runs "perl index.pl traewelling" (push and pull) or
# two separate cronjobs that run "perl index.pl traewelling push" and
# "perl index.pl traewelling pull", respectively.
# separate_worker => 1,
},
version => qx{git describe --dirty} // 'experimental',
};