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janus.transport.http.jcfg
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janus.transport.http.jcfg
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# Web server stuff: whether any should be enabled, which ports they
# should use, whether security should be handled directly or demanded to
# an external application (e.g., web frontend) and what should be the
# base path for the Janus API protocol. Notice that by default
# all the web servers will try and bind on both IPv4 and IPv6: if you
# want to only bind to IPv4 addresses (e.g., because your system does not
# support IPv6), you should set the web server 'ip' property to '0.0.0.0'.
# To see debug logs from the HTTP server library, set 'mhd_debug'.
general: {
#events = true # Whether to notify event handlers about transport events (default=true)
json = "indented" # Whether the JSON messages should be indented (default),
# plain (no indentation) or compact (no indentation and no spaces)
base_path = "/janus" # Base path to bind to in the web server (plain HTTP only)
http = true # Whether to enable the plain HTTP interface
port = 8088 # Web server HTTP port
#interface = "eth0" # Whether we should bind this server to a specific interface only
#ip = "192.168.0.1" # Whether we should bind this server to a specific IP address (v4 or v6) only
https = false # Whether to enable HTTPS (default=false)
#secure_port = 8089 # Web server HTTPS port, if enabled
#secure_interface = "eth0" # Whether we should bind this server to a specific interface only
#secure_ip = "192.168.0.1" # Whether we should bind this server to a specific IP address (v4 or v6) only
#acl = "127.,192.168.0." # Only allow requests coming from this comma separated list of addresses
mhd_connection_limit = 10200 # Open connections limit in libmicrohttpd (default=1020)
#mhd_debug = false # Ask libmicrohttpd to write warning and error messages to stderr (default=false)
}
# Janus can also expose an admin/monitor endpoint, to allow you to check
# which sessions are up, which handles they're managing, their current
# status and so on. This provides a useful aid when debugging potential
# issues in Janus. The configuration is pretty much the same as the one
# already presented above for the webserver stuff, as the API is very
# similar: choose the base bath for the admin/monitor endpoint (/admin
# by default), ports, etc. Besides, you can specify
# a secret that must be provided in all requests as a crude form of
# authorization mechanism, and partial or full source IPs if you want to
# limit access basing on IP addresses. For security reasons, this
# endpoint is disabled by default, enable it by setting admin_http=true.
admin: {
admin_base_path = "/admin" # Base path to bind to in the admin/monitor web server (plain HTTP only)
admin_http = false # Whether to enable the plain HTTP interface
admin_port = 7088 # Admin/monitor web server HTTP port
#admin_interface = "eth0" # Whether we should bind this server to a specific interface only
#admin_ip = "192.168.0.1" # Whether we should bind this server to a specific IP address (v4 or v6) only
admin_https = false # Whether to enable HTTPS (default=false)
#admin_secure_port = 7889 # Admin/monitor web server HTTPS port, if enabled
#admin_secure_interface = "eth0" # Whether we should bind this server to a specific interface only
#admin_secure_ip = "192.168.0.1 # Whether we should bind this server to a specific IP address (v4 or v6) only
#admin_acl = "127.,192.168.0." # Only allow requests coming from this comma separated list of addresses
}
# The HTTP servers created in Janus support CORS out of the box, but by
# default they return a wildcard (*) in the 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin'
# header. This works fine in most situations, except when we have to
# respond to a credential request (withCredentials=true in the XHR). If
# you need that, uncomment and set the 'allow_origin' below to specify
# what must be returned in 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin'. More details:
# https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Access_control_CORS
# In case you want to enforce the Origin validation, rather than leave
# it to browsers, you can set 'enforce_cors' to 'true' to have Janus
# return a '403 Forbidden' for all requests that don't comply.
cors: {
#allow_origin = "http://foo.example"
#enforce_cors = true
}
# Certificate and key to use for HTTPS, if enabled (and passphrase if needed).
# You can also disable insecure protocols and ciphers by configuring the
# 'ciphers' property accordingly (no limitation by default).
certificates: {
#cert_pem = "/path/to/cert.pem"
#cert_key = "/path/to/key.pem"
#cert_pwd = "secretpassphrase"
#ciphers = "PFS:-VERS-TLS1.0:-VERS-TLS1.1:-3DES-CBC:-ARCFOUR-128"
}