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DEFAULT_CONFIG.json5
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DEFAULT_CONFIG.json5
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/// This file attempts to list and document available configuration elements.
/// For a more complete view of the configuration's structure, check out `zenoh/src/config.rs`'s `Config` structure.
/// Note that the values here are correctly typed, but may not be sensible, so copying this file to change only the parts that matter to you is not good practice.
{
/// The identifier (as unsigned 128bit integer in hexadecimal lowercase - leading zeros are not accepted)
/// that zenoh runtime will use.
/// If not set, a random unsigned 128bit integer will be used.
/// WARNING: this id must be unique in your zenoh network.
// id: "1234567890abcdef",
/// The node's mode (router, peer or client)
mode: "peer",
/// The node's metadata (name, location, DNS name, etc.) Arbitrary JSON data not interpreted by zenohd and available in admin space @/router/<id>
metadata: {
name: "strawberry",
location: "Penny Lane"
},
/// Which endpoints to connect to. E.g. tcp/localhost:7447.
/// By configuring the endpoints, it is possible to tell zenoh which router/peer to connect to at startup.
connect: {
endpoints: [
// "<proto>/<address>"
],
},
/// Which endpoints to listen on. E.g. tcp/localhost:7447.
/// By configuring the endpoints, it is possible to tell zenoh which are the endpoints that other routers,
/// peers, or client can use to establish a zenoh session.
listen: {
endpoints: [
// "<proto>/<address>"
],
},
/// Configure the scouting mechanisms and their behaviours
scouting: {
/// In client mode, the period dedicated to scouting for a router before failing
timeout: 3000,
/// In peer mode, the period dedicated to scouting remote peers before attempting other operations
delay: 200,
/// The multicast scouting configuration.
multicast: {
/// Whether multicast scouting is enabled or not
enabled: true,
/// The socket which should be used for multicast scouting
address: "224.0.0.224:7446",
/// The network interface which should be used for multicast scouting
interface: "auto", // If not set or set to "auto" the interface if picked automatically
/// Which type of Zenoh instances to automatically establish sessions with upon discovery on UDP multicast.
/// Accepts a single value or different values for router, peer and client.
/// Each value is bit-or-like combinations of "peer", "router" and "client".
autoconnect: { router: "", peer: "router|peer" },
/// Whether or not to listen for scout messages on UDP multicast and reply to them.
listen: true,
},
/// The gossip scouting configuration.
gossip: {
/// Whether gossip scouting is enabled or not
enabled: true,
/// When true, gossip scouting informations are propagated multiple hops to all nodes in the local network.
/// When false, gossip scouting informations are only propagated to the next hop.
/// Activating multihop gossip implies more scouting traffic and a lower scalability.
/// It mostly makes sense when using "linkstate" routing mode where all nodes in the subsystem don't have
/// direct connectivity with each other.
multihop: false,
/// Which type of Zenoh instances to automatically establish sessions with upon discovery on gossip.
/// Accepts a single value or different values for router, peer and client.
/// Each value is bit-or-like combinations of "peer", "router" and "client".
autoconnect: { router: "", peer: "router|peer" },
},
},
/// Configuration of data messages timestamps management.
timestamping: {
/// Whether data messages should be timestamped if not already.
/// Accepts a single boolean value or different values for router, peer and client.
enabled: { router: true, peer: false, client: false },
/// Whether data messages with timestamps in the future should be dropped or not.
/// If set to false (default), messages with timestamps in the future are retimestamped.
/// Timestamps are ignored if timestamping is disabled.
drop_future_timestamp: false,
},
/// The default timeout to apply to queries in milliseconds.
queries_default_timeout: 10000,
/// The routing strategy to use and it's configuration.
routing: {
/// The routing strategy to use in routers and it's configuration.
router: {
/// When set to true a router will forward data between two peers
/// directly connected to it if it detects that those peers are not
/// connected to each other.
/// The failover brokering only works if gossip discovery is enabled.
peers_failover_brokering: true,
},
/// The routing strategy to use in peers and it's configuration.
peer: {
/// The routing strategy to use in peers. ("peer_to_peer" or "linkstate").
mode: "peer_to_peer",
},
},
// /// The declarations aggregation strategy.
// aggregation: {
// /// A list of key-expressions for which all included subscribers will be aggregated into.
// subscribers: [
// // key_expression
// ],
// /// A list of key-expressions for which all included publishers will be aggregated into.
// publishers: [
// // key_expression
// ],
// },
/// Configure internal transport parameters
transport: {
unicast: {
/// Timeout in milliseconds when opening a link
accept_timeout: 10000,
/// Maximum number of zenoh session in pending state while accepting
accept_pending: 100,
/// Maximum number of sessions that can be simultaneously alive
max_sessions: 1000,
/// Maximum number of incoming links that are admitted per session
max_links: 1,
/// Enables the LowLatency transport
/// This option does not make LowLatency transport mandatory, the actual implementation of transport
/// used will depend on Establish procedure and other party's settings
///
/// NOTE: Currently, the LowLatency transport doesn't preserve QoS prioritization.
/// NOTE: Due to the note above, 'lowlatency' is incompatible with 'qos' option, so in order to
/// enable 'lowlatency' you need to explicitly disable 'qos'.
lowlatency: false,
},
qos: {
enabled: true,
},
link: {
/// An optional whitelist of protocols to be used for accepting and opening sessions.
/// If not configured, all the supported protocols are automatically whitelisted.
/// The supported protocols are: ["tcp" , "udp", "tls", "quic", "ws", "unixsock-stream"]
/// For example, to only enable "tls" and "quic":
// protocols: ["tls", "quic"],
/// Configure the zenoh TX parameters of a link
tx: {
/// The resolution in bits to be used for the message sequence numbers.
/// When establishing a session with another Zenoh instance, the lowest value of the two instances will be used.
/// Accepted values: 8bit, 16bit, 32bit, 64bit.
sequence_number_resolution: "32bit",
/// Link lease duration in milliseconds to announce to other zenoh nodes
lease: 10000,
/// Number of keep-alive messages in a link lease duration. If no data is sent, keep alive
/// messages will be sent at the configured time interval.
/// NOTE: In order to consider eventual packet loss and transmission latency and jitter,
/// set the actual keep_alive timeout to one fourth of the lease time.
/// This is in-line with the ITU-T G.8013/Y.1731 specification on continous connectivity
/// check which considers a link as failed when no messages are received in 3.5 times the
/// target interval.
keep_alive: 4,
/// Batch size in bytes is expressed as a 16bit unsigned integer.
/// Therefore, the maximum batch size is 2^16-1 (i.e. 65535).
/// The default batch size value is the maximum batch size: 65535.
batch_size: 65535,
/// Each zenoh link has a transmission queue that can be configured
queue: {
/// The size of each priority queue indicates the number of batches a given queue can contain.
/// The amount of memory being allocated for each queue is then SIZE_XXX * BATCH_SIZE.
/// In the case of the transport link MTU being smaller than the ZN_BATCH_SIZE,
/// then amount of memory being allocated for each queue is SIZE_XXX * LINK_MTU.
/// If qos is false, then only the DATA priority will be allocated.
size: {
control: 1,
real_time: 1,
interactive_high: 1,
interactive_low: 1,
data_high: 2,
data: 4,
data_low: 4,
background: 4,
},
/// The initial exponential backoff time in nanoseconds to allow the batching to eventually progress.
/// Higher values lead to a more aggressive batching but it will introduce additional latency.
backoff: 100,
},
},
/// Configure the zenoh RX parameters of a link
rx: {
/// Receiving buffer size in bytes for each link
/// The default the rx_buffer_size value is the same as the default batch size: 65335.
/// For very high throughput scenarios, the rx_buffer_size can be increased to accomodate
/// more in-flight data. This is particularly relevant when dealing with large messages.
/// E.g. for 16MiB rx_buffer_size set the value to: 16777216.
buffer_size: 65535,
/// Maximum size of the defragmentation buffer at receiver end.
/// Fragmented messages that are larger than the configured size will be dropped.
/// The default value is 1GiB. This would work in most scenarios.
/// NOTE: reduce the value if you are operating on a memory constrained device.
max_message_size: 1073741824,
},
/// Configure TLS specific parameters
tls: {
/// Path to the certificate of the certificate authority used to validate either the server
/// or the client's keys and certificates, depending on the node's mode. If not specified
/// on router mode then the default WebPKI certificates are used instead.
root_ca_certificate: null,
/// Path to the TLS server private key
server_private_key: null,
/// Path to the TLS server public certificate
server_certificate: null,
/// Client authentication, if true enables mTLS (mutual authentication)
client_auth: false,
/// Path to the TLS client private key
client_private_key: null,
/// Path to the TLS client public certificate
client_certificate: null,
// Whether or not to use server name verification, if set to false zenoh will disregard the common names of the certificates when verifying servers.
// This could be dangerous because your CA can have signed a server cert for foo.com, that's later being used to host a server at baz.com. If you wan't your
// ca to verify that the server at baz.com is actually baz.com, let this be true (default).
server_name_verification: null,
},
/// **Experimental** compression feature.
/// Will compress the batches hop to hop (as opposed to end to end).
/// The features "transport_compression" and "unstable" need to be enabled to handle
/// compression on the integrality of the network.
compression: {
/// When 'enabled' is true, batches will be sent compressed.
enabled: false,
},
},
/// Shared memory configuration
shared_memory: {
enabled: false,
},
/// Access control configuration
auth: {
/// The configuration of authentification.
/// A password implies a username is required.
usrpwd: {
user: null,
password: null,
/// The path to a file containing the user password dictionary
dictionary_file: null,
},
pubkey: {
public_key_pem: null,
private_key_pem: null,
public_key_file: null,
private_key_file: null,
key_size: null,
known_keys_file: null,
},
},
},
/// Configure the Admin Space
/// Unstable: this configuration part works as advertised, but may change in a future release
adminspace: {
// read and/or write permissions on the admin space
permissions: {
read: true,
write: false,
},
},
///
/// Plugins configurations
///
// /// Directories where plugins configured by name should be looked for. Plugins configured by __path__ are not subject to lookup
// plugins_search_dirs: [],
// /// Plugins are only loaded if present in the configuration. When starting
// /// Once loaded, they may react to changes in the configuration made through the zenoh instance's adminspace.
// plugins: {
// /// If no `__path__` is given to a plugin, zenohd will automatically search for a shared library matching the plugin's name (here, `libzenoh_plugin_rest.so` would be searched for on linux)
//
// /// Plugin settings may contain field `__config__`
// /// - If `__config__` is specified, it's content is merged into plugin configuration
// /// - Properties loaded from `__config__` file overrides existing properties
// /// - If json objects in loaded file contains `__config__` properties, they are processed recursively
// /// This is used in the 'storcge_manager' which supports subplugins, each with it's own config
// ///
// /// See below exapmle of plugin configuration using `__config__` property
//
// /// Configure the REST API plugin
// rest: {
// /// Setting this option to true allows zenohd to panic should it detect issues with this plugin. Setting it to false politely asks the plugin not to panic.
// __required__: true, // defaults to false
// /// load configuration from the file
// __config__: "./plugins/zenoh-plugin-rest/config.json5",
// /// http port to answer to rest requests
// http_port: 8000,
// },
//
// /// Configure the storage manager plugin
// storage_manager: {
// /// When a path is present, automatic search is disabled, and zenohd will instead select the first path which manages to load.
// __path__: [
// "./target/release/libzenoh_plugin_storage_manager.so",
// "./target/release/libzenoh_plugin_storage_manager.dylib",
// ],
// /// Directories where plugins configured by name should be looked for. Plugins configured by __path__ are not subject to lookup
// backend_search_dirs: [],
// /// The "memory" volume is always available, but you may create other volumes here, with various backends to support the actual storing.
// volumes: {
// /// An influxdb backend is also available at https://github.com/eclipse-zenoh/zenoh-backend-influxdb
// influxdb: {
// url: "https://myinfluxdb.example",
// /// Some plugins may need passwords in their configuration.
// /// To avoid leaking them through the adminspace, they may be masked behind a privacy barrier.
// /// any value held at the key "private" will not be shown in the adminspace.
// private: {
// username: "user1",
// password: "pw1",
// },
// },
// influxdb2: {
// /// A second backend of the same type can be spawned using `__path__`, for examples when different DBs are needed.
// backend: "influxdb",
// private: {
// username: "user2",
// password: "pw2",
// },
// url: "https://localhost:8086",
// },
// },
//
// /// Configure the storages supported by the volumes
// storages: {
// demo: {
// /// Storages always need to know what set of keys they must work with. These sets are defined by a key expression.
// key_expr: "demo/memory/**",
// /// Storages also need to know which volume will be used to actually store their key-value pairs.
// /// The "memory" volume is always available, and doesn't require any per-storage options, so requesting "memory" by string is always sufficient.
// volume: "memory",
// },
// demo2: {
// key_expr: "demo/memory2/**",
// volume: "memory",
// /// Storage manager plugin handles metadata in order to ensure convergence of distributed storages configured in Zenoh.
// /// Metadata includes the set of wild card updates and deletions (tombstones).
// /// Once the samples are guaranteed to be delivered, the metadata can be garbage collected.
// garbage_collection: {
// /// The garbage collection event will be periodic with this duration.
// /// The duration is specified in seconds.
// period: 30,
// /// Metadata older than this parameter will be garbage collected.
// /// The duration is specified in seconds.
// lifespan: 86400,
// },
// /// If multiple storages subscribing to the same key_expr should be synchronized, declare them as replicas.
// /// In the absence of this configuration, a normal storage is initialized
// /// Note: all the samples to be stored in replicas should be timestamped
// replica_config: {
// /// Specifying the parameters is optional, by default the values provided will be used.
// /// Time interval between different synchronization attempts in seconds
// publication_interval: 5,
// /// Expected propagation delay of the network in milliseconds
// propagation_delay: 200,
// /// This is the chunk that you would like your data to be divide into in time, in milliseconds.
// /// Higher the frequency of updates, lower the delta should be chosen
// /// To be efficient, delta should be the time containing no more than 100,000 samples
// delta: 1000,
// }
// },
// demo3: {
// key_expr: "demo/memory3/**",
// volume: "memory",
// /// A complete storage advertises itself as containing all the known keys matching the configured key expression.
// /// If not configured, complete defaults to false.
// complete: "true",
// },
// influx_demo: {
// key_expr: "demo/influxdb/**",
// /// This prefix will be stripped of the received keys when storing.
// strip_prefix: "demo/influxdb",
// /// influxdb-backed volumes need a bit more configuration, which is passed like-so:
// volume: {
// id: "influxdb",
// db: "example",
// },
// },
// influx_demo2: {
// key_expr: "demo/influxdb2/**",
// strip_prefix: "demo/influxdb2",
// volume: {
// id: "influxdb2",
// db: "example",
// },
// },
// },
// },
// },
// /// Plugin configuration example using `__config__` property
// plugins: {
// rest: {
// __config__: "./plugins/zenoh-plugin-rest/config.json5",
// },
// storage_manager: {
// __config__: "./plugins/zenoh-plugin-storage-manager/config.json5",
// }
// },
}