authelia/docs/content/en/configuration/prologue/common.md
James Elliott df016be29e
fix(notification): incorrect date header format (#3684)
* fix(notification): incorrect date header format

The date header in the email envelopes was incorrectly formatted missing a space between the `Date:` header and the value of this header. This also refactors the notification templates system allowing people to manually override the envelope itself.

* test: fix tests and linting issues

* fix: misc issues

* refactor: misc refactoring

* docs: add example for envelope with message id

* refactor: organize smtp notifier

* refactor: move subject interpolation

* refactor: include additional placeholders

* docs: fix missing link

* docs: gravity

* fix: rcpt to command

* refactor: remove mid

* refactor: apply suggestions

Co-authored-by: Amir Zarrinkafsh <nightah@me.com>

* refactor: include pid

Co-authored-by: Amir Zarrinkafsh <nightah@me.com>
2022-07-18 10:56:09 +10:00

4.7 KiB

title description lead date draft images menu weight toc aliases
Common Common configuration options and notations. This section details common configuration elements within the Authelia configuration. This section is mainly used as a reference for other sections as necessary. 2022-06-15T17:51:47+10:00 false
configuration
parent
prologue
100200 true
/c/common

Duration Notation Format

We have implemented a string/integer based notation for configuration options that take a duration of time. This section describes the implementation of this. You can use this implementation in various areas of configuration such as:

  • session:
    • expiration
    • inactivity
    • remember_me_duration
  • regulation:
    • ban_time
    • find_time
  • ntp:
    • max_desync
  • webauthn:
    • timeout

The way this format works is you can either configure an integer or a string in the specific configuration areas. If you supply an integer, it is considered a representation of seconds. If you supply a string, it parses the string in blocks of quantities and units (number followed by a unit letter). For example 5h indicates a quantity of 5 units of h.

While you can use multiple of these blocks in combination, ee suggest keeping it simple and use a single value.

Unit Legend

Unit Associated Letter
Years y
Months M
Weeks w
Days d
Hours h
Minutes m
Seconds s

Examples

Desired Value Configuration Examples
1 hour and 30 minutes 90m or 1h30m or 5400 or 5400s
1 day 1d or 24h or 86400 or 86400s
10 hours 10h or 600m or 9h60m or 36000

Address

The address type is a string that takes the following format:

[<scheme>://]<ip>[:<port>]

The square brackets indicate optional sections, and the angled brackets indicate required sections. The following sections elaborate on this. Sections may only be optional for the purposes of parsing, there may be a configuration requirement that one of these is provided.

scheme

The entire scheme is optional, but if the scheme host delimiter :// is in the string, the scheme must be present. The scheme must be one of tcp://, or udp://. The default scheme is tcp://.

ip

The IP is required. If specifying an IPv6 it should be wrapped in square brackets. For example for the IPv6 address ::1 with the tcp:// scheme and port 80: tcp://[::1]:80.

port

The entire port is optional, but if the host port delimiter : exists it must also include a numeric port.

Regular Expressions

We have several sections of configuration that utilize regular expressions. It's recommended to validate your regex manually either via tools like Regex 101 (ensure you pick the Golang option) or some other means.

It's important when attempting to utilize a backslash that it's utilized correctly. The YAML parser is likely to parse this as you trying to use YAML escape syntax instead of regex escape syntax. To avoid this use single quotes instead of no quotes or double quotes.

Good Example:

domain_regex: '^(admin|secure)\.example\.com$'

Bad Example:

domain_regex: "^(admin|secure)\.example\.com$"

TLS Configuration

Various sections of the configuration use a uniform configuration section called TLS. Notably LDAP and SMTP. This section documents the usage.

server_name

{{< confkey type="string" required="no" >}}

The key server_name overrides the name checked against the certificate in the verification process. Useful if you require an IP address for the host of the backend service but want to verify a specific certificate server name.

skip_verify

{{< confkey type="boolean" default="false" required="no" >}}

The key skip_verify completely negates validating the certificate of the backend service. This is not recommended, instead you should tweak the server_name option, and the global option certificates directory.

minimum_version

{{< confkey type="string" default="TLS1.2" required="no" >}}

The key minimum_version controls the minimum TLS version Authelia will use when opening TLS connections. The possible values are TLS1.3, TLS1.2, TLS1.1, TLS1.0. Anything other than TLS1.3 or TLS1.2 are very old and deprecated. You should avoid using these and upgrade your backend service instead of decreasing this value.