pkgsrc/www/yaws/files/yaws.conf
cheusov 1941d84d6a Import from wip/yaws requested and tested under
DragonflyBSD by Andrey N. Oktyabski.

Yaws is a HTTP high perfomance 1.1 webserver particularly well suited for
dynamic-content webapplications. Two separate modes of operations are
supported:
 * Standalone mode where Yaws runs as a regular webserver daemon.
   This is the default mode.
 * Embedded mode where Yaws runs as an embedded webserver in another
   erlang application.

Yaws is entirely written in Erlang furthermore it is a multithreaded
webserver
where one Erlang light weight process is used to handle each client.

The main advantages of yaws compared to other Web technologies are
performance
and elegance. The performance comes from the underlying Erlang system and
its
ability to handle concurrent processes in an efficent way. Its elegance
comes
from Erlang as well. Web applications dont have to be written in ugly adhoc
languages.
2011-08-26 13:46:43 +00:00

127 lines
3.2 KiB
Text

# 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 = @VARBASE@/log/yaws
# This the path to a directory where additional
# beam code can be placed. The daemon will add this
# directory to its search path
ebin_dir = @PREFIX@/lib/yaws/ebin
# This is a directory where application specific .hrl
# files can be placed. application specifig .yaws code can
# then include these .hrl files
include_dir = @PREFIX@/lib/yaws/include
# 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
# it is possible to have yaws start additional
# application specific code at startup
#
# runmod = mymodule
# By default yaws will copy the erlang error_log and
# end write 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 yaws is started as root, it can, once it has opened
# all relevant sockets for listening, change the uid to a
# user with lower accessrights than root
# username = nobody
# If HTTP auth is used, it is possible to have a specific
# auth log.
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
# /tmp/yaws/${id}
# The default value is "default"
# 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 live hosting scenarios
pick_first_virthost_on_nomatch = true
# All unices are broken since it's not possible to bind to
# a privileged port (< 1024) unless uid==0
# There is a contrib in jungerl which makes it possible by means
# of an external setuid root programm called fdsrv to listen to
# to privileged port.
# If we use this feature, it requires fdsrv to be properly installed.
# Doesn't yet work with SSL.
use_fdsrv = false
# end then a set of virtual servers
# First 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 = @PREFIX@/share/yaws/www
</server>
#<server localhost-dav>
# port = 80
# listen = 0.0.0.0
# docroot = /tmp
# dir_listings = true
# dav = true
# <auth>
# realm = foobar
# dir = /
# user = foo:bar
# user = baz:bar
# </auth>
#</server>
# And then an ssl server
#<server localhost-ssl>
# port = 443
# docroot = @PREFIX@/share/yaws/www
# listen = 0.0.0.0
# dir_listings = true
# <ssl>
# keyfile = @PKG_SYSCONFDIR@/yaws/yaws-key.pem
# certfile = @PKG_SYSCONFDIR@/yaws/yaws-cert.pem
# </ssl>
#</server>