Path = require('path') # These credentials are used for authenticating api requests # between services that may need to go over public channels httpAuthUser = "sharelatex" httpAuthPass = "CRYPTO_RANDOM" # Randomly generated for you httpAuthUsers = {} httpAuthUsers[httpAuthUser] = httpAuthPass DATA_DIR = Path.resolve(Path.join(__dirname, "..", "data")) TMP_DIR = Path.resolve(Path.join(__dirname, "..", "tmp")) module.exports = # Databases # --------- # ShareLaTeX's main persistant data store is MongoDB (http://www.mongodb.org/) # Documentation about the URL connection string format can be found at: # # http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/connection-string/ # # The following works out of the box with Mongo's default settings: mongo: url : 'mongodb://127.0.0.1/sharelatex' # Redis is used in ShareLaTeX for high volume queries, like real-time # editing, and session management. # # The following config will work with Redis's default settings: redis: web: host: "localhost" port: "6379" password: "" # The compile server (the clsi) uses a SQL database to cache files and # meta-data. sqllite is the default, and the load is low enough that this will # be fine in production (we use sqllite at sharelatex.com). # # If you want to configure a different database, see the Sequelize documentation # for available options: # # https://github.com/sequelize/sequelize/wiki/API-Reference-Sequelize#example-usage # mysql: clsi: database: "clsi" username: "clsi" password: "" dialect: "sqlite" storage: Path.join(DATA_DIR, "db.sqlite") # File storage # ------------ # ShareLaTeX can store binary files like images either locally or in Amazon # S3. The default is locally: filestore: backend: "fs" stores: user_files: Path.join(DATA_DIR, "user_files") # To use Amazon S3 as a storage backend, comment out the above config, and # uncomment the following, filling in your key, secret, and bucket name: # # filestore: # backend: "s3" # stores: # user_files: "BUCKET_NAME" # s3: # key: "AWS_KEY" # secret: "AWS_SECRET" # # Local disk caching # ------------------ path: # If we ever need to write something to disk (e.g. incoming requests # that need processing but may be too big for memory), then write # them to disk here: dumpFolder: Path.join(TMP_DIR, "dumpFolder") # Where to write uploads before they are processed uploadFolder: Path.join(TMP_DIR, "uploads") # Where to write the project to disk before running LaTeX on it compilesDir: Path.join(DATA_DIR, "compiles") # Where to cache downloaded URLs for the CLSI clsiCacheDir: Path.join(DATA_DIR, "cache") # Server Config # ------------- # Where your instance of ShareLaTeX can be found publicly. This is used # when emails are sent out and in generated links: siteUrl : 'http://localhost:3000' # If provided, a sessionSecret is used to sign cookies so that they cannot be # spoofed. This is recommended. security: sessionSecret: "CRYPTO_RANDOM" # This was randomly generated for you # These credentials are used for authenticating api requests # between services that may need to go over public channels httpAuthUsers: httpAuthUsers # Should javascript assets be served minified or not. Note that you will # need to run `grunt compile:minify` within the web-sharelatex directory # to generate these. useMinifiedJs: false # Should static assets be sent with a header to tell the browser to cache # them. This should be false in development where changes are being made, # but should be set to true in production. cacheStaticAssets: false # If you are running ShareLaTeX over https, set this to true to send the # cookie with a secure flag (recommended). secureCookie: false # If you are running ShareLaTeX behind a proxy (like Apache, Nginx, etc) # then set this to true to allow it to correctly detect the forwarded IP # address and http/https protocol information. behindProxy: false # Sending Email # ------------- # # You must configure a mail server to be able to send invite emails from # ShareLaTeX. The config settings are passed to nodemailer. See the nodemailer # documentation for available options: # # http://www.nodemailer.com/docs/transports # # email: # fromAddress: "" # replyTo: "" # transport: "SES" # parameters: # AWSAccessKeyID: "" # AWSSecretKey: "" # Spell Check Languages # --------------------- # # You must have the corresponding aspell dictionary installed to # be able to use a language. Run `grunt check:aspell` to check which # dictionaries you have installed. These should be set for the `code` for # each language. languages: [ {name: "English", code: "en"} ] # Service locations # ----------------- # ShareLaTeX is comprised of many small services, which each expose # an HTTP API running on a different port. Generally you # can leave these as they are unless you have some other services # running which conflict, or want to run the web process on port 80. # internal: # web: # port: webPort = 3000 # host: "localhost" # documentupdater: # port: docUpdaterPort = 3003 # host: "localhost" # filestore: # port: filestorePort = 3009 # host: "localhost" # chat: # port: chatPort = 3010 # host: "localhost" # tags: # port: tagsPort = 3012 # host: "localhost" # clsi: # port: clsiPort = 3013 # host: "localhost" # trackchanges: # port: trackchangesPort = 3015 # host: "localhost" # docstore: # port: docstorePort = 3016 # host: "localhost" # spelling: # port: spellingPort = 3005 # host: "localhost" # If you change the above config, or run some services on remote servers, # you need to tell the other services where to find them: apis: web: url: "http://localhost:3000" user: httpAuthUser pass: httpAuthPass # documentupdater: # url : "http://localhost:#{docUpdaterPort}" # clsi: # url: "http://localhost:#{clsiPort}" # filestore: # url: "http://localhost:#{filestorePort}" # trackchanges: # url: "http://localhost:#{trackchangesPort}" # docstore: # url: "http://localhost:#{docstorePort}" # tags: # url: "http://localhost:#{tagsPort}" # spelling: # url: "http://localhost:#{spellingPort}" # chat: # url: "http://localhost:#{chatPort}" # With lots of incoming and outgoing HTTP connections to different services, # sometimes long running, it is a good idea to increase the default number # of sockets that Node will hold open. http = require('http') http.globalAgent.maxSockets = 300 https = require('https') https.globalAgent.maxSockets = 300