forked from authelia/authelia
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
config.template.yml
702 lines (582 loc) · 27.9 KB
/
config.template.yml
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
# yamllint disable rule:comments-indentation
---
###############################################################################
# Authelia Configuration #
###############################################################################
## Certificates directory specifies where Authelia will load trusted certificates (public portion) from in addition to
## the system certificates store.
## They should be in base64 format, and have one of the following extensions: *.cer, *.crt, *.pem.
# certificates_directory: /config/certificates
## The theme to display: light, dark, grey, auto.
theme: light
## The secret used to generate JWT tokens when validating user identity by email confirmation. JWT Secret can also be
## set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
jwt_secret: a_very_important_secret
## Default redirection URL
##
## If user tries to authenticate without any referer, Authelia does not know where to redirect the user to at the end
## of the authentication process. This parameter allows you to specify the default redirection URL Authelia will use
## in such a case.
##
## Note: this parameter is optional. If not provided, user won't be redirected upon successful authentication.
default_redirection_url: https://home.example.com/
##
## Server Configuration
##
server:
## The address to listen on.
host: 0.0.0.0
## The port to listen on.
port: 9091
## Set the single level path Authelia listens on.
## Must be alphanumeric chars and should not contain any slashes.
path: ""
## Buffers usually should be configured to be the same value.
## Explanation at https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/server.html
## Read buffer size adjusts the server's max incoming request size in bytes.
## Write buffer size does the same for outgoing responses.
read_buffer_size: 4096
write_buffer_size: 4096
## Enables the pprof endpoint.
enable_pprof: false
## Enables the expvars endpoint.
enable_expvars: false
## Disables writing the health check vars to /app/.healthcheck.env which makes healthcheck.sh return exit code 0.
## This is disabled by default if either /app/.healthcheck.env or /app/healthcheck.sh do not exist.
disable_healthcheck: false
## Authelia by default doesn't accept TLS communication on the server port. This section overrides this behaviour.
tls:
## The path to the DER base64/PEM format private key.
key: ""
## The path to the DER base64/PEM format public certificate.
certificate: ""
##
## Log Configuration
##
log:
## Level of verbosity for logs: info, debug, trace.
level: debug
## Format the logs are written as: json, text.
# format: json
## File path where the logs will be written. If not set logs are written to stdout.
# file_path: /config/authelia.log
## Whether to also log to stdout when a log_file_path is defined.
# keep_stdout: false
##
## TOTP Configuration
##
## Parameters used for TOTP generation.
totp:
## The issuer name displayed in the Authenticator application of your choice
## See: https://github.com/google/google-authenticator/wiki/Key-Uri-Format for more info on issuer names
issuer: authelia.com
## The period in seconds a one-time password is current for. Changing this will require all users to register
## their TOTP applications again. Warning: before changing period read the docs link below.
period: 30
## The skew controls number of one-time passwords either side of the current one that are valid.
## Warning: before changing skew read the docs link below.
skew: 1
## See: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/one-time-password.html#period-and-skew to read the documentation.
##
## Duo Push API Configuration
##
## Parameters used to contact the Duo API. Those are generated when you protect an application of type
## "Partner Auth API" in the management panel.
duo_api:
hostname: api-123456789.example.com
integration_key: ABCDEF
## Secret can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
secret_key: 1234567890abcdefghifjkl
##
## NTP Configuration
##
## This is used to validate the servers time is accurate enough to validate TOTP.
ntp:
## NTP server address.
address: "time.cloudflare.com:123"
## NTP version.
version: 4
## Maximum allowed time offset between the host and the NTP server.
max_desync: 3s
## Disables the NTP check on startup entirely. This means Authelia will not contact a remote service at all if you
## set this to true, and can operate in a truly offline mode.
disable_startup_check: false
## The default of false will prevent startup only if we can contact the NTP server and the time is out of sync with
## the NTP server more than the configured max_desync. If you set this to true, an error will be logged but startup
## will continue regardless of results.
disable_failure: false
##
## Authentication Backend Provider Configuration
##
## Used for verifying user passwords and retrieve information such as email address and groups users belong to.
##
## The available providers are: `file`, `ldap`. You must use only one of these providers.
authentication_backend:
## Disable both the HTML element and the API for reset password functionality.
disable_reset_password: false
## The amount of time to wait before we refresh data from the authentication backend. Uses duration notation.
## To disable this feature set it to 'disable', this will slightly reduce security because for Authelia, users will
## always belong to groups they belonged to at the time of login even if they have been removed from them in LDAP.
## To force update on every request you can set this to '0' or 'always', this will increase processor demand.
## See the below documentation for more information.
## Duration Notation docs: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/index.html#duration-notation-format
## Refresh Interval docs: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/authentication/ldap.html#refresh-interval
refresh_interval: 5m
##
## LDAP (Authentication Provider)
##
## This is the recommended Authentication Provider in production
## because it allows Authelia to offload the stateful operations
## onto the LDAP service.
ldap:
## The LDAP implementation, this affects elements like the attribute utilised for resetting a password.
## Acceptable options are as follows:
## - 'activedirectory' - For Microsoft Active Directory.
## - 'custom' - For custom specifications of attributes and filters.
## This currently defaults to 'custom' to maintain existing behaviour.
##
## Depending on the option here certain other values in this section have a default value, notably all of the
## attribute mappings have a default value that this config overrides, you can read more about these default values
## at https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/authentication/ldap.html#defaults
implementation: custom
## The url to the ldap server. Format: <scheme>://<address>[:<port>].
## Scheme can be ldap or ldaps in the format (port optional).
url: ldap://127.0.0.1
## The dial timeout for LDAP.
timeout: 5s
## Use StartTLS with the LDAP connection.
start_tls: false
tls:
## Server Name for certificate validation (in case it's not set correctly in the URL).
# server_name: ldap.example.com
## Skip verifying the server certificate (to allow a self-signed certificate).
## In preference to setting this we strongly recommend you add the public portion of the certificate to the
## certificates directory which is defined by the `certificates_directory` option at the top of the config.
skip_verify: false
## Minimum TLS version for either Secure LDAP or LDAP StartTLS.
minimum_version: TLS1.2
## The distinguished name of the container searched for objects in the directory information tree.
## See also: additional_users_dn, additional_groups_dn.
base_dn: dc=example,dc=com
## The attribute holding the username of the user. This attribute is used to populate the username in the session
## information. It was introduced due to #561 to handle case insensitive search queries. For you information,
## Microsoft Active Directory usually uses 'sAMAccountName' and OpenLDAP usually uses 'uid'. Beware that this
## attribute holds the unique identifiers for the users binding the user and the configuration stored in database.
## Therefore only single value attributes are allowed and the value must never be changed once attributed to a user
## otherwise it would break the configuration for that user. Technically, non-unique attributes like 'mail' can also
## be used but we don't recommend using them, we instead advise to use the attributes mentioned above
## (sAMAccountName and uid) to follow https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2307.txt.
# username_attribute: uid
## The additional_users_dn is prefixed to base_dn and delimited by a comma when searching for users.
## i.e. with this set to OU=Users and base_dn set to DC=a,DC=com; OU=Users,DC=a,DC=com is searched for users.
additional_users_dn: ou=users
## The users filter used in search queries to find the user profile based on input filled in login form.
## Various placeholders are available in the user filter which you can read about in the documentation which can
## be found at: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/authentication/ldap.html#users-filter-replacements
##
## Recommended settings are as follows:
## - Microsoft Active Directory: (&({username_attribute}={input})(objectCategory=person)(objectClass=user))
## - OpenLDAP:
## - (&({username_attribute}={input})(objectClass=person))
## - (&({username_attribute}={input})(objectClass=inetOrgPerson))
##
## To allow sign in both with username and email, one can use a filter like
## (&(|({username_attribute}={input})({mail_attribute}={input}))(objectClass=person))
users_filter: (&({username_attribute}={input})(objectClass=person))
## The additional_groups_dn is prefixed to base_dn and delimited by a comma when searching for groups.
## i.e. with this set to OU=Groups and base_dn set to DC=a,DC=com; OU=Groups,DC=a,DC=com is searched for groups.
additional_groups_dn: ou=groups
## The groups filter used in search queries to find the groups based on relevant authenticated user.
## Various placeholders are available in the groups filter which you can read about in the documentation which can
## be found at: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/authentication/ldap.html#groups-filter-replacements
##
## If your groups use the `groupOfUniqueNames` structure use this instead:
## (&(uniqueMember={dn})(objectClass=groupOfUniqueNames))
groups_filter: (&(member={dn})(objectClass=groupOfNames))
## The attribute holding the name of the group.
# group_name_attribute: cn
## The attribute holding the mail address of the user. If multiple email addresses are defined for a user, only the
## first one returned by the LDAP server is used.
# mail_attribute: mail
## The attribute holding the display name of the user. This will be used to greet an authenticated user.
# display_name_attribute: displayName
## The username and password of the admin user.
user: cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com
## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
password: password
##
## File (Authentication Provider)
##
## With this backend, the users database is stored in a file which is updated when users reset their passwords.
## Therefore, this backend is meant to be used in a dev environment and not in production since it prevents Authelia
## to be scaled to more than one instance. The options under 'password' have sane defaults, and as it has security
## implications it is highly recommended you leave the default values. Before considering changing these settings
## please read the docs page below:
## https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/authentication/file.html#password-hash-algorithm-tuning
##
## Important: Kubernetes (or HA) users must read https://www.authelia.com/docs/features/statelessness.html
##
# file:
# path: /config/users_database.yml
# password:
# algorithm: argon2id
# iterations: 1
# key_length: 32
# salt_length: 16
# memory: 1024
# parallelism: 8
##
## Access Control Configuration
##
## Access control is a list of rules defining the authorizations applied for one resource to users or group of users.
##
## If 'access_control' is not defined, ACL rules are disabled and the 'bypass' rule is applied, i.e., access is allowed
## to anyone. Otherwise restrictions follow the rules defined.
##
## Note: One can use the wildcard * to match any subdomain.
## It must stand at the beginning of the pattern. (example: *.mydomain.com)
##
## Note: You must put patterns containing wildcards between simple quotes for the YAML to be syntactically correct.
##
## Definition: A 'rule' is an object with the following keys: 'domain', 'subject', 'policy' and 'resources'.
##
## - 'domain' defines which domain or set of domains the rule applies to.
##
## - 'subject' defines the subject to apply authorizations to. This parameter is optional and matching any user if not
## provided. If provided, the parameter represents either a user or a group. It should be of the form
## 'user:<username>' or 'group:<groupname>'.
##
## - 'policy' is the policy to apply to resources. It must be either 'bypass', 'one_factor', 'two_factor' or 'deny'.
##
## - 'resources' is a list of regular expressions that matches a set of resources to apply the policy to. This parameter
## is optional and matches any resource if not provided.
##
## Note: the order of the rules is important. The first policy matching (domain, resource, subject) applies.
access_control:
## Default policy can either be 'bypass', 'one_factor', 'two_factor' or 'deny'. It is the policy applied to any
## resource if there is no policy to be applied to the user.
default_policy: deny
networks:
- name: internal
networks:
- 10.10.0.0/16
- 192.168.2.0/24
- name: VPN
networks: 10.9.0.0/16
rules:
## Rules applied to everyone
- domain: public.example.com
policy: bypass
- domain: secure.example.com
policy: one_factor
## Network based rule, if not provided any network matches.
networks:
- internal
- VPN
- 192.168.1.0/24
- 10.0.0.1
- domain:
- secure.example.com
- private.example.com
policy: two_factor
- domain: singlefactor.example.com
policy: one_factor
## Rules applied to 'admins' group
- domain: "mx2.mail.example.com"
subject: "group:admins"
policy: deny
- domain: "*.example.com"
subject:
- "group:admins"
- "group:moderators"
policy: two_factor
## Rules applied to 'dev' group
- domain: dev.example.com
resources:
- "^/groups/dev/.*$"
subject: "group:dev"
policy: two_factor
## Rules applied to user 'john'
- domain: dev.example.com
resources:
- "^/users/john/.*$"
subject: "user:john"
policy: two_factor
## Rules applied to user 'harry'
- domain: dev.example.com
resources:
- "^/users/harry/.*$"
subject: "user:harry"
policy: two_factor
## Rules applied to user 'bob'
- domain: "*.mail.example.com"
subject: "user:bob"
policy: two_factor
- domain: "dev.example.com"
resources:
- "^/users/bob/.*$"
subject: "user:bob"
policy: two_factor
##
## Session Provider Configuration
##
## The session cookies identify the user once logged in.
## The available providers are: `memory`, `redis`. Memory is the provider unless redis is defined.
session:
## The name of the session cookie.
name: authelia_session
## The domain to protect.
## Note: the authenticator must also be in that domain.
## If empty, the cookie is restricted to the subdomain of the issuer.
domain: example.com
## Sets the Cookie SameSite value. Possible options are none, lax, or strict.
## Please read https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/session/#same_site
same_site: lax
## The secret to encrypt the session data. This is only used with Redis / Redis Sentinel.
## Secret can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
secret: insecure_session_secret
## The value for expiration, inactivity, and remember_me_duration are in seconds or the duration notation format.
## See: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/index.html#duration-notation-format
## All three of these values affect the cookie/session validity period. Longer periods are considered less secure
## because a stolen cookie will last longer giving attackers more time to spy or attack.
## The time before the cookie expires and the session is destroyed if remember me IS NOT selected.
expiration: 1h
## The inactivity time before the session is reset. If expiration is set to 1h, and this is set to 5m, if the user
## does not select the remember me option their session will get destroyed after 1h, or after 5m since the last time
## Authelia detected user activity.
inactivity: 5m
## The time before the cookie expires and the session is destroyed if remember me IS selected.
## Value of 0 disables remember me.
remember_me_duration: 1M
##
## Redis Provider
##
## Important: Kubernetes (or HA) users must read https://www.authelia.com/docs/features/statelessness.html
##
redis:
host: 127.0.0.1
port: 6379
## Use a unix socket instead
# host: /var/run/redis/redis.sock
## Username used for redis authentication. This is optional and a new feature in redis 6.0.
# username: authelia
## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
password: authelia
## This is the Redis DB Index https://redis.io/commands/select (sometimes referred to as database number, DB, etc).
database_index: 0
## The maximum number of concurrent active connections to Redis.
maximum_active_connections: 8
## The target number of idle connections to have open ready for work. Useful when opening connections is slow.
minimum_idle_connections: 0
## The Redis TLS configuration. If defined will require a TLS connection to the Redis instance(s).
# tls:
## Server Name for certificate validation (in case you are using the IP or non-FQDN in the host option).
# server_name: myredis.example.com
## Skip verifying the server certificate (to allow a self-signed certificate).
## In preference to setting this we strongly recommend you add the public portion of the certificate to the
## certificates directory which is defined by the `certificates_directory` option at the top of the config.
# skip_verify: false
## Minimum TLS version for the connection.
# minimum_version: TLS1.2
## The Redis HA configuration options.
## This provides specific options to Redis Sentinel, sentinel_name must be defined (Master Name).
# high_availability:
## Sentinel Name / Master Name.
# sentinel_name: mysentinel
## Specific username for Redis Sentinel. The node username and password is configured above.
# sentinel_username: sentinel_specific_user
## Specific password for Redis Sentinel. The node username and password is configured above.
# sentinel_password: sentinel_specific_pass
## The additional nodes to pre-seed the redis provider with (for sentinel).
## If the host in the above section is defined, it will be combined with this list to connect to sentinel.
## For high availability to be used you must have either defined; the host above or at least one node below.
# nodes:
# - host: sentinel-node1
# port: 6379
# - host: sentinel-node2
# port: 6379
## Choose the host with the lowest latency.
# route_by_latency: false
## Choose the host randomly.
# route_randomly: false
##
## Regulation Configuration
##
## This mechanism prevents attackers from brute forcing the first factor. It bans the user if too many attempts are made
## in a short period of time.
regulation:
## The number of failed login attempts before user is banned. Set it to 0 to disable regulation.
max_retries: 3
## The time range during which the user can attempt login before being banned. The user is banned if the
## authentication failed 'max_retries' times in a 'find_time' seconds window. Find Time accepts duration notation.
## See: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/index.html#duration-notation-format
find_time: 2m
## The length of time before a banned user can login again. Ban Time accepts duration notation.
## See: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/index.html#duration-notation-format
ban_time: 5m
##
## Storage Provider Configuration
##
## The available providers are: `local`, `mysql`, `postgres`. You must use one and only one of these providers.
storage:
##
## Local (Storage Provider)
##
## This stores the data in a SQLite3 Database.
## This is only recommended for lightweight non-stateful installations.
##
## Important: Kubernetes (or HA) users must read https://www.authelia.com/docs/features/statelessness.html
##
# local:
# path: /config/db.sqlite3
##
## MySQL / MariaDB (Storage Provider)
##
mysql:
host: 127.0.0.1
port: 3306
database: authelia
username: authelia
## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
password: mypassword
timeout: 5s
##
## PostgreSQL (Storage Provider)
##
# postgres:
# host: 127.0.0.1
# port: 5432
# database: authelia
# username: authelia
# ## Password can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
# password: mypassword
# timeout: 5s
# sslmode: disable
##
## Notification Provider
##
## Notifications are sent to users when they require a password reset, a U2F registration or a TOTP registration.
## The available providers are: filesystem, smtp. You must use only one of these providers.
notifier:
## You can disable the notifier startup check by setting this to true.
disable_startup_check: false
##
## File System (Notification Provider)
##
## Important: Kubernetes (or HA) users must read https://www.authelia.com/docs/features/statelessness.html
##
# filesystem:
# filename: /config/notification.txt
##
## SMTP (Notification Provider)
##
## Use a SMTP server for sending notifications. Authelia uses the PLAIN or LOGIN methods to authenticate.
## [Security] By default Authelia will:
## - force all SMTP connections over TLS including unauthenticated connections
## - use the disable_require_tls boolean value to disable this requirement
## (only works for unauthenticated connections)
## - validate the SMTP server x509 certificate during the TLS handshake against the hosts trusted certificates
## (configure in tls section)
smtp:
## The SMTP host to connect to.
host: 127.0.0.1
## The port to connect to the SMTP host on.
port: 1025
## The connection timeout.
timeout: 5s
## The username used for SMTP authentication.
username: test
## The password used for SMTP authentication.
## Can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
password: password
## The address to send the email FROM.
sender: [email protected]
## HELO/EHLO Identifier. Some SMTP Servers may reject the default of localhost.
identifier: localhost
## Subject configuration of the emails sent. {title} is replaced by the text from the notifier.
subject: "[Authelia] {title}"
## This address is used during the startup check to verify the email configuration is correct.
## It's not important what it is except if your email server only allows local delivery.
startup_check_address: [email protected]
## By default we require some form of TLS. This disables this check though is not advised.
disable_require_tls: false
## Disables sending HTML formatted emails.
disable_html_emails: false
tls:
## Server Name for certificate validation (in case you are using the IP or non-FQDN in the host option).
# server_name: smtp.example.com
## Skip verifying the server certificate (to allow a self-signed certificate).
## In preference to setting this we strongly recommend you add the public portion of the certificate to the
## certificates directory which is defined by the `certificates_directory` option at the top of the config.
skip_verify: false
## Minimum TLS version for either StartTLS or SMTPS.
minimum_version: TLS1.2
##
## Identity Providers
##
# identity_providers:
##
## OpenID Connect (Identity Provider)
##
## It's recommended you read the documentation before configuration of this section:
## https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/identity-providers/oidc.html
# oidc:
## The hmac_secret is used to sign OAuth2 tokens (authorization code, access tokens and refresh tokens).
## HMAC Secret can also be set using a secret: https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/secrets.html
# hmac_secret: this_is_a_secret_abc123abc123abc
## The issuer_private_key is used to sign the JWT forged by OpenID Connect.
## Issuer Private Key can also be set using a secret: https://docs.authelia.com/configuration/secrets.html
# issuer_private_key: |
# --- KEY START
# --- KEY END
## The lifespans configure the expiration for these token types.
# access_token_lifespan: 1h
# authorize_code_lifespan: 1m
# id_token_lifespan: 1h
# refresh_token_lifespan: 90m
## Enables additional debug messages.
# enable_client_debug_messages: false
## SECURITY NOTICE: It's not recommended changing this option, and highly discouraged to have it below 8 for
## security reasons.
# minimum_parameter_entropy: 8
## Clients is a list of known clients and their configuration.
# clients:
# -
## The ID is the OpenID Connect ClientID which is used to link an application to a configuration.
# id: myapp
## The description to show to users when they end up on the consent screen. Defaults to the ID above.
# description: My Application
## The client secret is a shared secret between Authelia and the consumer of this client.
# secret: this_is_a_secret
## Sets the client to public. This should typically not be set, please see the documentation for usage.
# public: false
## The policy to require for this client; one_factor or two_factor.
# authorization_policy: two_factor
## Audience this client is allowed to request.
# audience: []
## Scopes this client is allowed to request.
# scopes:
# - openid
# - groups
# - email
# - profile
## Redirect URI's specifies a list of valid case-sensitive callbacks for this client.
# redirect_uris:
# - https://oidc.example.com:8080/oauth2/callback
## Grant Types configures which grants this client can obtain.
## It's not recommended to define this unless you know what you're doing.
# grant_types:
# - refresh_token
# - authorization_code
## Response Types configures which responses this client can be sent.
## It's not recommended to define this unless you know what you're doing.
# response_types:
# - code
## Response Modes configures which response modes this client supports.
# response_modes:
# - form_post
# - query
# - fragment
## The algorithm used to sign userinfo endpoint responses for this client, either none or RS256.
# userinfo_signing_algorithm: none
...