3.7 KiB
Configuring WriteFreely
WriteFreely is configured through an .ini
file. By default, WriteFreely will look for the configuration file config.ini
in the current directory. However, you can supply a different file or location by running WriteFreely with the -c [filename]
flag, for example:
writefreely -c /var/lib/writefreely/config.ini
Server
The following fields are valid in the [server]
section of your configuration file. They affect how the application runs.
Field | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
port |
Port for the application to serve HTTP requests on | None |
bind |
Address to bind the application to | localhost |
tls_cert_path |
TLS certificate path. If supplied with tls_key_path , requests will be served on port 443. |
None |
tls_key_path |
TLS private key path. If supplied with tls_cert_path , requests will be served on port 443. |
None |
templates_parent_dir |
The parent directory containing the templates directory |
(current directory) |
static_parent_dir |
The parent directory containing the static directory |
(current directory) |
pages_parent_dir |
The parent directory containing the pages directory |
(current directory) |
keys_parent_dir |
The parent directory containing the keys directory |
(current directory) |
Database
The following fields are valid in the [database]
section of your configuration file. They affect how the application stores and retrieves data.
Field | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
type |
Database driver type. Valid choices: mysql or sqlite3 |
None |
These fields only apply to instances using MySQL.
Field | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
username |
Database username | None |
password |
Database password | None |
database |
Database name | None |
host |
Database hostname to connect to | localhost |
port |
Database host port to connect to | 3306 |
These fields only apply to instances using SQLite.
Field | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
filename |
Database file | None |
App
The following fields are valid in the [app]
section of your configuration file. They affect how the application functions, especially in user-facing ways.
Field | Description | Example value |
---|---|---|
site_name |
Name of the website, publicly shown in several places | Our Community |
site_description |
Site description, shown in NodeInfo | A place to write freely. |
host |
Full hostname (including scheme) users will see | https://pencil.writefree.ly |
single_user |
Whether or not the instance is for one blog | false |
min_username_len |
Minimum required length of usernames | 3 |
federation |
Whether or not federation via ActivityPub is enabled | true |
public_stats |
Whether or not usage stats are made public via NodeInfo | true |
private |
Whether or not the entire instance is private. Right now, this sets a private flag in NodeInfo; in the future, this will probably affect discoverability, access to blogs, etc. |
false |
These fields can always be set, but only apply to multi-user instances.
Field | Description | Example value |
---|---|---|
open_registration |
Whether or not anyone can register via the landing page | true |
max_blogs |
Maximum number of blogs a single user can create under one account | 5 |
local_timeline |
Whether or not the instance reader (and the Public option on blogs) is enabled | true |
user_invites |
Who is allowed to send user invites, if anyone. A blank value disables invites for all users. Valid choices: empty, user , or admin |
user |