1 # Copyright (C) The Arvados Authors. All rights reserved.
3 # SPDX-License-Identifier: AGPL-3.0
5 # Do not use this file for site configuration. Create
6 # /etc/arvados/config.yml instead.
8 # The order of precedence (highest to lowest):
9 # 1. Legacy component-specific config files (deprecated)
10 # 2. /etc/arvados/config.yml
11 # 3. config.default.yml
15 # Token used internally by Arvados components to authenticate to
16 # one another. Use a string of at least 50 random alphanumerics.
19 # Token to be included in all healthcheck requests. Disabled by default.
20 # Server expects request header of the format "Authorization: Bearer xxx"
25 # Each of the service sections below specifies InternalURLs
26 # (each with optional ListenURL) and ExternalURL.
28 # InternalURLs specify how other Arvados service processes will
29 # connect to the service. Typically these use internal hostnames
30 # and high port numbers. Example:
33 # "http://host1.internal.example:12345": {}
34 # "http://host2.internal.example:12345": {}
36 # ListenURL specifies the address and port the service process's
37 # HTTP server should listen on, if different from the
38 # InternalURL itself. Example, using an intermediate TLS proxy:
41 # "https://host1.internal.example":
42 # ListenURL: "http://10.0.0.7:12345"
44 # When there are multiple InternalURLs configured, the service
45 # process will try listening on each InternalURLs (using
46 # ListenURL if provided) until one works. If you use a ListenURL
47 # like "0.0.0.0" which can be bound on any machine, use an
48 # environment variable
49 # ARVADOS_SERVICE_INTERNAL_URL=http://host1.internal.example to
50 # control which entry to use.
52 # ExternalURL specifies how applications/clients will connect to
53 # the service, regardless of whether they are inside or outside
54 # the cluster. Example:
56 # ExternalURL: "https://keep.zzzzz.example.com/"
58 # To avoid routing internal traffic through external networks,
59 # use split-horizon DNS for ExternalURL host names: inside the
60 # cluster's private network "host.zzzzz.example.com" resolves to
61 # the host's private IP address, while outside the cluster
62 # "host.zzzzz.example.com" resolves to the host's public IP
63 # address (or its external gateway or load balancer).
66 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
69 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
72 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
75 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
78 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
81 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
84 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
87 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
90 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
93 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
96 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
97 # Base URL for Workbench inline preview. If blank, use
98 # WebDAVDownload instead, and disable inline preview.
99 # If both are empty, downloading collections from workbench
100 # will be impossible.
102 # It is important to properly configure the download service
103 # to migitate cross-site-scripting (XSS) attacks. A HTML page
104 # can be stored in collection. If an attacker causes a victim
105 # to visit that page through Workbench, it will be rendered by
106 # the browser. If all collections are served at the same
107 # domain, the browser will consider collections as coming from
108 # the same origin and having access to the same browsing data,
109 # enabling malicious Javascript on that page to access Arvados
110 # on behalf of the victim.
112 # This is mitigating by having separate domains for each
113 # collection, or limiting preview to circumstances where the
114 # collection is not accessed with the user's regular
117 # Serve preview links using uuid or pdh in subdomain
118 # (requires wildcard DNS and TLS certificate)
119 # https://*.collections.uuid_prefix.arvadosapi.com
121 # Serve preview links using uuid or pdh in main domain
122 # (requires wildcard DNS and TLS certificate)
123 # https://*--collections.uuid_prefix.arvadosapi.com
125 # Serve preview links by setting uuid or pdh in the path.
126 # This configuration only allows previews of public data or
127 # collection-sharing links, because these use the anonymous
128 # user token or the token is already embedded in the URL.
129 # Other data must be handled as downloads via WebDAVDownload:
130 # https://collections.uuid_prefix.arvadosapi.com
135 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
136 # Base URL for download links. If blank, serve links to WebDAV
137 # with disposition=attachment query param. Unlike preview links,
138 # browsers do not render attachments, so there is no risk of XSS.
140 # If WebDAVDownload is blank, and WebDAV uses a
141 # single-origin form, then Workbench will show an error page
143 # Serve download links by setting uuid or pdh in the path:
144 # https://download.uuid_prefix.arvadosapi.com
152 # Rendezvous is normally empty/omitted. When changing the
153 # URL of a Keepstore service, Rendezvous should be set to
154 # the old URL (with trailing slash omitted) to preserve
155 # rendezvous ordering.
159 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
162 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
163 # ShellInABox service endpoint URL for a given VM. If empty, do not
164 # offer web shell logins.
166 # E.g., using a path-based proxy server to forward connections to shell hosts:
167 # https://webshell.uuid_prefix.arvadosapi.com
169 # E.g., using a name-based proxy server to forward connections to shell hosts:
170 # https://*.webshell.uuid_prefix.arvadosapi.com
173 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
176 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
179 InternalURLs: {SAMPLE: {ListenURL: ""}}
183 # max concurrent connections per arvados server daemon
186 # All parameters here are passed to the PG client library in a connection string;
187 # see https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-connect.html#LIBPQ-PARAMKEYWORDS
195 # Limits for how long a client token created by regular users can be valid,
196 # and also is used as a default expiration policy when no expiration date is
198 # Default value zero means token expirations don't get clamped and no
199 # default expiration is set.
202 # Maximum size (in bytes) allowed for a single API request. This
203 # limit is published in the discovery document for use by clients.
204 # Note: You must separately configure the upstream web server or
205 # proxy to actually enforce the desired maximum request size on the
207 MaxRequestSize: 134217728
209 # Limit the number of bytes read from the database during an index
210 # request (by retrieving and returning fewer rows than would
211 # normally be returned in a single response).
212 # Note 1: This setting never reduces the number of returned rows to
213 # zero, no matter how big the first data row is.
214 # Note 2: Currently, this is only checked against a specific set of
215 # columns that tend to get large (collections.manifest_text,
216 # containers.mounts, workflows.definition). Other fields (e.g.,
217 # "properties" hashes) are not counted against this limit.
218 MaxIndexDatabaseRead: 134217728
220 # Maximum number of items to return when responding to a APIs that
221 # can return partial result sets using limit and offset parameters
222 # (e.g., *.index, groups.contents). If a request specifies a "limit"
223 # parameter higher than this value, this value is used instead.
224 MaxItemsPerResponse: 1000
226 # Maximum number of concurrent requests to process concurrently
227 # in a single service process, or 0 for no limit.
228 MaxConcurrentRequests: 64
230 # Maximum number of incoming requests to hold in a priority
231 # queue waiting for one of the MaxConcurrentRequests slots to be
232 # free. When the queue is longer than this, respond 503 to the
233 # lowest priority request.
235 # If MaxQueuedRequests is 0, respond 503 immediately to
236 # additional requests while at the MaxConcurrentRequests limit.
237 MaxQueuedRequests: 64
239 # Maximum time a "lock container" request is allowed to wait in
240 # the incoming request queue before returning 503.
241 MaxQueueTimeForLockRequests: 2s
243 # Fraction of MaxConcurrentRequests that can be "log create"
244 # messages at any given time. This is to prevent logging
245 # updates from crowding out more important requests.
246 LogCreateRequestFraction: 0.50
248 # Maximum number of 64MiB memory buffers per Keepstore server process, or
249 # 0 for no limit. When this limit is reached, up to
250 # (MaxConcurrentRequests - MaxKeepBlobBuffers) HTTP requests requiring
251 # buffers (like GET and PUT) will wait for buffer space to be released.
252 # Any HTTP requests beyond MaxConcurrentRequests will receive an
253 # immediate 503 response.
255 # MaxKeepBlobBuffers should be set such that (MaxKeepBlobBuffers * 64MiB
256 # * 1.1) fits comfortably in memory. On a host dedicated to running
257 # Keepstore, divide total memory by 88MiB to suggest a suitable value.
258 # For example, if grep MemTotal /proc/meminfo reports MemTotal: 7125440
259 # kB, compute 7125440 / (88 * 1024)=79 and set MaxKeepBlobBuffers: 79
260 MaxKeepBlobBuffers: 128
262 # API methods to disable. Disabled methods are not listed in the
263 # discovery document, and respond 404 to all requests.
264 # Example: {"jobs.create":{}, "pipeline_instances.create": {}}
267 # Interval (seconds) between asynchronous permission view updates. Any
268 # permission-updating API called with the 'async' parameter schedules a an
269 # update on the permission view in the future, if not already scheduled.
270 AsyncPermissionsUpdateInterval: 20s
272 # Maximum number of concurrent outgoing requests to make while
273 # serving a single incoming multi-cluster (federated) request.
274 MaxRequestAmplification: 4
276 # Maximum wall clock time to spend handling an incoming request.
279 # Websocket will send a periodic empty event after 'SendTimeout'
280 # if there is no other activity to maintain the connection /
281 # detect dropped connections.
284 WebsocketClientEventQueue: 64
285 WebsocketServerEventQueue: 4
287 # Timeout on requests to internal Keep services.
288 KeepServiceRequestTimeout: 15s
290 # Vocabulary file path, local to the node running the controller.
291 # This JSON file should contain the description of what's allowed
292 # as object's metadata. Its format is described at:
293 # https://doc.arvados.org/admin/metadata-vocabulary.html
296 # If true, a project must have a non-empty description field in
297 # order to be frozen.
298 FreezeProjectRequiresDescription: false
300 # Project properties that must have non-empty values in order to
301 # freeze a project. Example: "property_name": {}
302 FreezeProjectRequiresProperties:
305 # If true, only an admin user can un-freeze a project. If false,
306 # any user with "manage" permission can un-freeze.
307 UnfreezeProjectRequiresAdmin: false
309 # (Experimental) Use row-level locking on update API calls.
310 LockBeforeUpdate: false
313 # Config parameters to automatically setup new users. If enabled,
314 # this users will be able to self-activate. Enable this if you want
315 # to run an open instance where anyone can create an account and use
316 # the system without requiring manual approval.
318 # The params AutoSetupNewUsersWith* are meaningful only when AutoSetupNewUsers is turned on.
319 # AutoSetupUsernameBlacklist is a list of usernames to be blacklisted for auto setup.
320 AutoSetupNewUsers: false
321 AutoSetupNewUsersWithVmUUID: ""
322 AutoSetupNewUsersWithRepository: false
323 AutoSetupUsernameBlacklist:
332 # When NewUsersAreActive is set to true, new users will be active
333 # immediately. This skips the "self-activate" step which enforces
334 # user agreements. Should only be enabled for development.
335 NewUsersAreActive: false
337 # Newly activated users (whether set up by an admin or via
338 # AutoSetupNewUsers) immediately become visible to other active
341 # On a multi-tenant cluster, where the intent is for users to be
342 # invisible to one another unless they have been added to the
343 # same group(s) via Workbench admin interface, change this to
345 ActivatedUsersAreVisibleToOthers: true
347 # The e-mail address of the user you would like to become marked as an admin
348 # user on their first login.
349 AutoAdminUserWithEmail: ""
351 # If AutoAdminFirstUser is set to true, the first user to log in when no
352 # other admin users exist will automatically become an admin user.
353 AutoAdminFirstUser: false
355 # Email address to notify whenever a user creates a profile for the
357 UserProfileNotificationAddress: ""
358 AdminNotifierEmailFrom: arvados@example.com
359 EmailSubjectPrefix: "[ARVADOS] "
360 UserNotifierEmailFrom: arvados@example.com
361 UserNotifierEmailBcc: {}
362 NewUserNotificationRecipients: {}
363 NewInactiveUserNotificationRecipients: {}
365 # Set AnonymousUserToken to enable anonymous user access. Populate this
366 # field with a random string at least 50 characters long.
367 AnonymousUserToken: ""
369 # If a new user has an alternate email address (local@domain)
370 # with the domain given here, its local part becomes the new
371 # user's default username. Otherwise, the user's primary email
373 PreferDomainForUsername: ""
376 <% if not @user.full_name.empty? -%>
377 <%= @user.full_name %>,
382 Your Arvados account has been set up. You can log in at
384 <%= Rails.configuration.Services.Workbench1.ExternalURL %>
387 Your Arvados administrator.
389 # If RoleGroupsVisibleToAll is true, all role groups are visible
390 # to all active users.
392 # If false, users must be granted permission to role groups in
393 # order to see them. This is more appropriate for a multi-tenant
395 RoleGroupsVisibleToAll: true
397 # If CanCreateRoleGroups is true, regular (non-admin) users can
398 # create new role groups.
400 # If false, only admins can create new role groups.
401 CanCreateRoleGroups: true
403 # During each period, a log entry with event_type="activity"
404 # will be recorded for each user who is active during that
405 # period. The object_uuid attribute will indicate the user's
408 # Multiple log entries for the same user may be generated during
409 # a period if there are multiple controller processes or a
410 # controller process is restarted.
412 # Use 0 to disable activity logging.
413 ActivityLoggingPeriod: 24h
416 # Time to keep audit logs, in seconds. (An audit log is a row added
417 # to the "logs" table in the PostgreSQL database each time an
418 # Arvados object is created, modified, or deleted.)
420 # Currently, websocket event notifications rely on audit logs, so
421 # this should not be set lower than 300 (5 minutes).
424 # Maximum number of log rows to delete in a single SQL transaction.
426 # If MaxDeleteBatch is 0, log entries will never be
427 # deleted by Arvados. Cleanup can be done by an external process
428 # without affecting any Arvados system processes, as long as very
429 # recent (<5 minutes old) logs are not deleted.
431 # 100000 is a reasonable batch size for most sites.
434 # Attributes to suppress in events and audit logs. Notably,
435 # specifying {"manifest_text": {}} here typically makes the database
436 # smaller and faster.
438 # Warning: Using any non-empty value here can have undesirable side
439 # effects for any client or component that relies on event logs.
440 # Use at your own risk.
441 UnloggedAttributes: {}
445 # Logging threshold: panic, fatal, error, warn, info, debug, or
449 # Logging format: json or text
452 # Maximum characters of (JSON-encoded) query parameters to include
453 # in each request log entry. When params exceed this size, they will
454 # be JSON-encoded, truncated to this size, and logged as
456 MaxRequestLogParamsSize: 2000
458 # In all services except RailsAPI, periodically check whether
459 # the incoming HTTP request queue is nearly full (see
460 # MaxConcurrentRequests) and, if so, write a snapshot of the
461 # request queue to {service}-requests.json in the specified
464 # Leave blank to disable.
465 RequestQueueDumpDirectory: ""
469 # Enable access controls for data stored in Keep. This should
470 # always be set to true on a production cluster.
473 # BlobSigningKey is a string of alphanumeric characters used to
474 # generate permission signatures for Keep locators. It must be
475 # identical to the permission key given to Keep. IMPORTANT: This
476 # is a site secret. It should be at least 50 characters.
478 # Modifying BlobSigningKey will invalidate all existing
479 # signatures, which can cause programs to fail (e.g., arv-put,
480 # arv-get, and Crunch jobs). To avoid errors, rotate keys only
481 # when no such processes are running.
484 # Enable garbage collection of unreferenced blobs in Keep.
487 # Time to leave unreferenced blobs in "trashed" state before
488 # deleting them, or 0 to skip the "trashed" state entirely and
489 # delete unreferenced blobs.
491 # If you use any Amazon S3 buckets as storage volumes, this
492 # must be at least 24h to avoid occasional data loss.
493 BlobTrashLifetime: 336h
495 # How often to check for (and delete) trashed blocks whose
496 # BlobTrashLifetime has expired.
497 BlobTrashCheckInterval: 24h
499 # Maximum number of concurrent "trash blob" and "delete trashed
500 # blob" operations conducted by a single keepstore process. Each
501 # of these can be set to 0 to disable the respective operation.
503 # If BlobTrashLifetime is zero, "trash" and "delete trash"
504 # happen at once, so only the lower of these two values is used.
505 BlobTrashConcurrency: 4
506 BlobDeleteConcurrency: 4
508 # Maximum number of concurrent "create additional replica of
509 # existing blob" operations conducted by a single keepstore
511 BlobReplicateConcurrency: 4
513 # Default replication level for collections. This is used when a
514 # collection's replication_desired attribute is nil.
515 DefaultReplication: 2
517 # BlobSigningTTL determines the minimum lifetime of transient
518 # data, i.e., blocks that are not referenced by
519 # collections. Unreferenced blocks exist for two reasons:
521 # 1) A data block must be written to a disk/cloud backend device
522 # before a collection can be created/updated with a reference to
525 # 2) Deleting or updating a collection can remove the last
526 # remaining reference to a data block.
528 # If BlobSigningTTL is too short, long-running
529 # processes/containers will fail when they take too long (a)
530 # between writing blocks and writing collections that reference
531 # them, or (b) between reading collections and reading the
534 # If BlobSigningTTL is too long, data will still be stored long
535 # after the referring collections are deleted, and you will
536 # needlessly fill up disks or waste money on cloud storage.
538 # Modifying BlobSigningTTL invalidates existing signatures; see
539 # BlobSigningKey note above.
541 # The default is 2 weeks.
544 # When running keep-balance, this is the destination filename for
545 # the list of lost block hashes if there are any, one per line.
546 # Updated automically during each successful run.
547 BlobMissingReport: ""
549 # keep-balance operates periodically, i.e.: do a
550 # scan/balance operation, sleep, repeat.
552 # BalancePeriod determines the interval between start times of
553 # successive scan/balance operations. If a scan/balance operation
554 # takes longer than BalancePeriod, the next one will follow it
557 # If SIGUSR1 is received during an idle period between operations,
558 # the next operation will start immediately.
561 # Limits the number of collections retrieved by keep-balance per
562 # API transaction. If this is zero, page size is
563 # determined by the API server's own page size limits (see
564 # API.MaxItemsPerResponse and API.MaxIndexDatabaseRead).
565 BalanceCollectionBatch: 0
567 # The size of keep-balance's internal queue of
568 # collections. Higher values may improve throughput by allowing
569 # keep-balance to fetch collections from the database while the
570 # current collection are still being processed, at the expense of
571 # using more memory. If this is zero or omitted, pages are
572 # processed serially.
573 BalanceCollectionBuffers: 4
575 # Maximum time for a rebalancing run. This ensures keep-balance
576 # eventually gives up and retries if, for example, a network
577 # error causes a hung connection that is never closed by the
578 # OS. It should be long enough that it doesn't interrupt a
579 # long-running balancing operation.
582 # Maximum number of replication_confirmed /
583 # storage_classes_confirmed updates to write to the database
584 # after a rebalancing run. When many updates are needed, this
585 # spreads them over a few runs rather than applying them all at
587 BalanceUpdateLimit: 100000
589 # Default lifetime for ephemeral collections: 2 weeks. This must not
590 # be less than BlobSigningTTL.
591 DefaultTrashLifetime: 336h
593 # Interval (seconds) between trash sweeps. During a trash sweep,
594 # collections are marked as trash if their trash_at time has
595 # arrived, and deleted if their delete_at time has arrived.
596 TrashSweepInterval: 60s
598 # If true, enable collection versioning.
599 # When a collection's preserve_version field is true or the current version
600 # is older than the amount of seconds defined on PreserveVersionIfIdle,
601 # a snapshot of the collection's previous state is created and linked to
602 # the current collection.
603 CollectionVersioning: true
605 # 0s = auto-create a new version on every update.
606 # -1s = never auto-create new versions.
607 # > 0s = auto-create a new version when older than the specified number of seconds.
608 PreserveVersionIfIdle: 10s
610 # If non-empty, allow project and collection names to contain
611 # the "/" character (slash/stroke/solidus), and replace "/" with
612 # the given string in the filesystem hierarchy presented by
613 # WebDAV. Example values are "%2f" and "{slash}". Names that
614 # contain the substitution string itself may result in confusing
615 # behavior, so a value like "_" is not recommended.
617 # If the default empty value is used, the server will reject
618 # requests to create or rename a collection when the new name
621 # If the value "/" is used, project and collection names
622 # containing "/" will be allowed, but they will not be
623 # accessible via WebDAV.
625 # Use of this feature is not recommended, if it can be avoided.
626 ForwardSlashNameSubstitution: ""
628 # Include "folder objects" in S3 ListObjects responses.
629 S3FolderObjects: true
631 # Managed collection properties. At creation time, if the client didn't
632 # provide the listed keys, they will be automatically populated following
633 # one of the following behaviors:
635 # * UUID of the user who owns the containing project.
636 # responsible_person_uuid: {Function: original_owner, Protected: true}
638 # * Default concrete value.
639 # foo_bar: {Value: baz, Protected: false}
641 # If Protected is true, only an admin user can modify its value.
643 SAMPLE: {Function: original_owner, Protected: true}
645 # In "trust all content" mode, Workbench will redirect download
646 # requests to WebDAV preview link, even in the cases when
647 # WebDAV would have to expose XSS vulnerabilities in order to
648 # handle the redirect (see discussion on Services.WebDAV).
650 # This setting has no effect in the recommended configuration, where the
651 # WebDAV service is configured to have a separate domain for every
652 # collection and XSS protection is provided by browsers' same-origin
655 # The default setting (false) is appropriate for a multi-user site.
656 TrustAllContent: false
658 # Cache parameters for WebDAV content serving:
660 # Time to cache manifests, permission checks, and sessions.
663 # Block cache entries. Each block consumes up to 64 MiB RAM.
666 # Approximate memory limit (in bytes) for session cache.
668 # Note this applies to the in-memory representation of
669 # projects and collections -- metadata, block locators,
670 # filenames, etc. -- excluding cached file content, which is
671 # limited by MaxBlockEntries.
672 MaxCollectionBytes: 100000000
674 # Persistent sessions.
677 # Selectively set permissions for regular users and admins to
678 # download or upload data files using the upload/download
679 # features for Workbench, WebDAV and S3 API support.
688 # Selectively set permissions for regular users and admins to be
689 # able to download or upload blocks using arv-put and
690 # arv-get from outside the cluster.
699 # Post upload / download events to the API server logs table, so
700 # that they can be included in the arv-user-activity report.
701 # You can disable this if you find that it is creating excess
702 # load on the API server and you don't need it.
703 WebDAVLogEvents: true
706 # One of the following mechanisms (Google, PAM, LDAP, or
707 # LoginCluster) should be enabled; see
708 # https://doc.arvados.org/install/setup-login.html
711 # Authenticate with Google.
714 # Use the Google Cloud console to enable the People API (APIs
715 # and Services > Enable APIs and services > Google People API
716 # > Enable), generate a Client ID and secret (APIs and
717 # Services > Credentials > Create credentials > OAuth client
718 # ID > Web application) and add your controller's /login URL
719 # (e.g., "https://zzzzz.example.com/login") as an authorized
724 # Allow users to log in to existing accounts using any verified
725 # email address listed by their Google account. If true, the
726 # Google People API must be enabled in order for Google login to
727 # work. If false, only the primary email address will be used.
728 AlternateEmailAddresses: true
730 # Send additional parameters with authentication requests. See
731 # https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/oauth2/openid-connect#authenticationuriparameters
732 # for a list of supported parameters.
733 AuthenticationRequestParameters:
734 # Show the "choose which Google account" page, even if the
735 # client is currently logged in to exactly one Google
737 prompt: select_account
742 # Authenticate with an OpenID Connect provider.
745 # Issuer URL, e.g., "https://login.example.com".
747 # This must be exactly equal to the URL returned by the issuer
748 # itself in its config response ("isser" key). If the
749 # configured value is "https://example" and the provider
750 # returns "https://example:443" or "https://example/" then
751 # login will fail, even though those URLs are equivalent
755 # Your client ID and client secret (supplied by the provider).
759 # OpenID claim field containing the user's email
760 # address. Normally "email"; see
761 # https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html#StandardClaims
764 # OpenID claim field containing the email verification
765 # flag. Normally "email_verified". To accept every returned
766 # email address without checking a "verified" field at all,
767 # use the empty string "".
768 EmailVerifiedClaim: "email_verified"
770 # OpenID claim field containing the user's preferred
771 # username. If empty, use the mailbox part of the user's email
775 # Send additional parameters with authentication requests,
776 # like {display: page, prompt: consent}. See
777 # https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html#AuthRequest
778 # and refer to your provider's documentation for supported
780 AuthenticationRequestParameters:
783 # Accept an OIDC access token as an API token if the OIDC
784 # provider's UserInfo endpoint accepts it.
786 # AcceptAccessTokenScope should also be used when enabling
788 AcceptAccessToken: false
790 # Before accepting an OIDC access token as an API token, first
791 # check that it is a JWT whose "scope" value includes this
792 # value. Example: "https://zzzzz.example.com/" (your Arvados
795 # If this value is empty and AcceptAccessToken is true, all
796 # access tokens will be accepted regardless of scope,
797 # including non-JWT tokens. This is not recommended.
798 AcceptAccessTokenScope: ""
801 # Use PAM to authenticate users.
804 # PAM service name. PAM will apply the policy in the
805 # corresponding config file (e.g., /etc/pam.d/arvados) or, if
806 # there is none, the default "other" config.
809 # Domain name (e.g., "example.com") to use to construct the
810 # user's email address if PAM authentication returns a
811 # username with no "@". If empty, use the PAM username as the
812 # user's email address, whether or not it contains "@".
814 # Note that the email address is used as the primary key for
815 # user records when logging in. Therefore, if you change
816 # PAMDefaultEmailDomain after the initial installation, you
817 # should also update existing user records to reflect the new
818 # domain. Otherwise, next time those users log in, they will
819 # be given new accounts instead of accessing their existing
821 DefaultEmailDomain: ""
824 # Use an LDAP service to authenticate users.
827 # Server URL, like "ldap://ldapserver.example.com:389" or
828 # "ldaps://ldapserver.example.com:636".
829 URL: "ldap://ldap:389"
831 # Use StartTLS upon connecting to the server.
834 # Skip TLS certificate name verification.
837 # Mininum TLS version to negotiate when connecting to server
838 # (ldaps://... or StartTLS). It may be necessary to set this
839 # to "1.1" for compatibility with older LDAP servers that fail
840 # with 'LDAP Result Code 200 "Network Error": TLS handshake
841 # failed (tls: server selected unsupported protocol version
844 # If blank, use the recommended minimum version (1.2).
847 # Strip the @domain part if a user supplies an email-style
848 # username with this domain. If "*", strip any user-provided
849 # domain. If "", never strip the domain part. Example:
853 # If, after applying StripDomain, the username contains no "@"
854 # character, append this domain to form an email-style
855 # username. Example: "example.com"
858 # The LDAP attribute to filter on when looking up a username
859 # (after applying StripDomain and AppendDomain).
862 # Bind with this username (DN or UPN) and password when
863 # looking up the user record.
865 # Example user: "cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com"
867 SearchBindPassword: ""
869 # Directory base for username lookup. Example:
870 # "ou=Users,dc=example,dc=com"
873 # Additional filters to apply when looking up users' LDAP
874 # entries. This can be used to restrict access to a subset of
875 # LDAP users, or to disambiguate users from other directory
876 # entries that have the SearchAttribute present.
878 # Special characters in assertion values must be escaped (see
881 # Example: "(objectClass=person)"
884 # LDAP attribute to use as the user's email address.
886 # Important: This must not be an attribute whose value can be
887 # edited in the directory by the users themselves. Otherwise,
888 # users can take over other users' Arvados accounts trivially
889 # (email address is the primary key for Arvados accounts.)
892 # LDAP attribute to use as the preferred Arvados username. If
893 # no value is found (or this config is empty) the username
894 # originally supplied by the user will be used.
895 UsernameAttribute: uid
898 # Authenticate users listed here in the config file. This
899 # feature is intended to be used in test environments, and
900 # should not be used in production.
904 Email: alice@example.com
907 # The cluster ID to delegate the user database. When set,
908 # logins on this cluster will be redirected to the login cluster
909 # (login cluster must appear in RemoteClusters with Proxy: true)
912 # How long a cached token belonging to a remote cluster will
913 # remain valid before it needs to be revalidated.
914 RemoteTokenRefresh: 5m
916 # How long a client token created from a login flow will be valid without
917 # asking the user to re-login. Example values: 60m, 8h.
918 # Default value zero means tokens don't have expiration.
921 # If true (default) tokens issued through login are allowed to create
923 # If false, tokens issued through login are not allowed to
924 # viewing/creating other tokens. New tokens can only be created
925 # by going through login again.
926 IssueTrustedTokens: true
928 # Origins (scheme://host[:port]) of clients trusted to receive
929 # new tokens via login process. The ExternalURLs of the local
930 # Workbench1 and Workbench2 are trusted implicitly and do not
931 # need to be listed here. If this is a LoginCluster, you
932 # probably want to include the other Workbench instances in the
933 # federation in this list.
935 # A wildcard like "https://*.example" will match client URLs
936 # like "https://a.example" and "https://a.b.c.example".
941 # "https://workbench.other-cluster.example": {}
942 # "https://workbench2.other-cluster.example": {}
946 # Treat any origin whose host part is "localhost" or a private
947 # IP address (e.g., http://10.0.0.123:3000/) as if it were
948 # listed in TrustedClients.
950 # Intended only for test/development use. Not appropriate for
952 TrustPrivateNetworks: false
955 # Path to git or gitolite-shell executable. Each authenticated
956 # request will execute this program with the single argument "http-backend"
957 GitCommand: /usr/bin/git
959 # Path to Gitolite's home directory. If a non-empty path is given,
960 # the CGI environment will be set up to support the use of
961 # gitolite-shell as a GitCommand: for example, if GitoliteHome is
962 # "/gh", then the CGI environment will have GITOLITE_HTTP_HOME=/gh,
963 # PATH=$PATH:/gh/bin, and GL_BYPASS_ACCESS_CHECKS=1.
966 # Git repositories must be readable by api server, or you won't be
967 # able to submit crunch jobs. To pass the test suites, put a clone
968 # of the arvados tree in {git_repositories_dir}/arvados.git or
969 # {git_repositories_dir}/arvados/.git
970 Repositories: /var/lib/arvados/git/repositories
973 # Use "file:///var/lib/acme/live/example.com/cert" and
974 # ".../privkey" to load externally managed certificates.
978 # Accept invalid certificates when connecting to servers. Never
979 # use this in production.
983 # Obtain certificates automatically for ExternalURL domains
984 # using an ACME server and http-01 validation.
986 # To use Let's Encrypt, specify "LE". To use the Let's
987 # Encrypt staging environment, specify "LE-staging". To use a
988 # different ACME server, specify the full directory URL
991 # Note: this feature is not yet implemented in released
992 # versions, only in the alpha/prerelease arvados-server-easy
995 # Implies agreement with the server's terms of service.
999 # List of supported Docker Registry image formats that compute nodes
1000 # are able to use. `arv keep docker` will error out if a user tries
1001 # to store an image with an unsupported format. Use an empty array
1002 # to skip the compatibility check (and display a warning message to
1005 # Example for sites running docker < 1.10: {"v1": {}}
1006 # Example for sites running docker >= 1.10: {"v2": {}}
1007 # Example for disabling check: {}
1008 SupportedDockerImageFormats:
1012 # Include details about job reuse decisions in the server log. This
1013 # causes additional database queries to run, so it should not be
1014 # enabled unless you expect to examine the resulting logs for
1015 # troubleshooting purposes.
1016 LogReuseDecisions: false
1018 # Default value for keep_cache_ram of a container's
1019 # runtime_constraints. Note: this gets added to the RAM request
1020 # used to allocate a VM or submit an HPC job.
1022 # If this is zero, container requests that don't specify RAM or
1023 # disk cache size will use a disk cache, sized to the
1024 # container's RAM requirement (but with minimum 2 GiB and
1027 # Note: If you change this value, containers that used the previous
1028 # default value will only be reused by container requests that
1029 # explicitly specify the previous value in their keep_cache_ram
1030 # runtime constraint.
1031 DefaultKeepCacheRAM: 0
1033 # Number of times a container can be unlocked before being
1034 # automatically cancelled.
1035 MaxDispatchAttempts: 5
1037 # Default value for container_count_max for container requests. This is the
1038 # number of times Arvados will create a new container to satisfy a container
1039 # request. If a container is cancelled it will retry a new container if
1040 # container_count < container_count_max on any container requests associated
1041 # with the cancelled container.
1044 # Schedule all child containers on preemptible instances (e.g. AWS
1045 # Spot Instances) even if not requested by the submitter.
1047 # If false, containers are scheduled on preemptible instances
1048 # only when requested by the submitter.
1050 # This flag is ignored if no preemptible instance types are
1051 # configured, and has no effect on top-level containers.
1052 AlwaysUsePreemptibleInstances: false
1054 # Automatically add a preemptible variant for every
1055 # non-preemptible entry in InstanceTypes below. The maximum bid
1056 # price for the preemptible variant will be the non-preemptible
1057 # price multiplied by PreemptiblePriceFactor. If 0, preemptible
1058 # variants are not added automatically.
1060 # A price factor of 1.0 is a reasonable starting point.
1061 PreemptiblePriceFactor: 0
1063 # PEM encoded SSH key (RSA, DSA, or ECDSA) used by the
1064 # cloud dispatcher for executing containers on worker VMs.
1065 # Begins with "-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\n"
1066 # and ends with "\n-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\n".
1068 # Use "file:///absolute/path/to/key" to load the key from a
1069 # separate file instead of embedding it in the configuration
1071 DispatchPrivateKey: ""
1073 # Maximum time to wait for workers to come up before abandoning
1074 # stale locks from a previous dispatch process.
1075 StaleLockTimeout: 1m
1077 # The crunch-run command used to start a container on a worker node.
1079 # When dispatching to cloud VMs, this is used only if
1080 # DeployRunnerBinary in the CloudVMs section is set to the empty
1082 CrunchRunCommand: "crunch-run"
1084 # Extra arguments to add to crunch-run invocation
1085 # Example: ["--cgroup-parent-subsystem=memory"]
1086 CrunchRunArgumentsList: []
1088 # Extra RAM to reserve on the node, in addition to
1089 # the amount specified in the container's RuntimeConstraints
1090 ReserveExtraRAM: 550MiB
1092 # Minimum time between two attempts to run the same container
1095 # Container runtime: "docker" (default) or "singularity"
1096 RuntimeEngine: docker
1098 # When running a container, run a dedicated keepstore process,
1099 # using the specified number of 64 MiB memory buffers per
1100 # allocated CPU core (VCPUs in the container's runtime
1101 # constraints). The dedicated keepstore handles I/O for
1102 # collections mounted in the container, as well as saving
1105 # A zero value disables this feature.
1107 # In order for this feature to be activated, no volume may use
1108 # AccessViaHosts, and no writable volume may have Replication
1109 # lower than Collections.DefaultReplication. If these
1110 # requirements are not satisfied, the feature is disabled
1111 # automatically regardless of the value given here.
1113 # When an HPC dispatcher is in use (see SLURM and LSF sections),
1114 # this feature depends on the operator to ensure an up-to-date
1115 # cluster configuration file (/etc/arvados/config.yml) is
1116 # available on all compute nodes. If it is missing or not
1117 # readable by the crunch-run user, the feature will be disabled
1118 # automatically. To read it from a different location, add a
1119 # "-config=/path/to/config.yml" argument to
1120 # CrunchRunArgumentsList above.
1122 # When the cloud dispatcher is in use (see CloudVMs section) and
1123 # this configuration is enabled, the entire cluster
1124 # configuration file, including the system root token, is copied
1125 # to the worker node and held in memory for the duration of the
1127 LocalKeepBlobBuffersPerVCPU: 1
1129 # When running a dedicated keepstore process for a container
1130 # (see LocalKeepBlobBuffersPerVCPU), write keepstore log
1131 # messages to keepstore.txt in the container's log collection.
1133 # These log messages can reveal some volume configuration
1134 # details, error messages from the cloud storage provider, etc.,
1135 # which are not otherwise visible to users.
1138 # * "none" -- no keepstore.txt file
1139 # * "all" -- all logs, including request and response lines
1140 # * "errors" -- all logs except "response" logs with 2xx
1141 # response codes and "request" logs
1142 LocalKeepLogsToContainerLog: none
1145 # Periodically (see SweepInterval) Arvados will check for
1146 # containers that have been finished for at least this long,
1147 # and delete their stdout, stderr, arv-mount, crunch-run, and
1148 # crunchstat logs from the logs table.
1151 # How often to delete cached log entries for finished
1152 # containers (see MaxAge).
1155 # These two settings control how frequently log events are flushed to the
1156 # database. Log lines are buffered until either crunch_log_bytes_per_event
1157 # has been reached or crunch_log_seconds_between_events has elapsed since
1159 LogBytesPerEvent: 4096
1160 LogSecondsBetweenEvents: 5s
1162 # The sample period for throttling logs.
1163 LogThrottlePeriod: 60s
1165 # Maximum number of bytes that job can log over crunch_log_throttle_period
1166 # before being silenced until the end of the period.
1167 LogThrottleBytes: 65536
1169 # Maximum number of lines that job can log over crunch_log_throttle_period
1170 # before being silenced until the end of the period.
1171 LogThrottleLines: 1024
1173 # Maximum bytes that may be logged by a single job. Log bytes that are
1174 # silenced by throttling are not counted against this total.
1175 # If you set this to zero, each container will only create a single
1176 # log on the API server, noting for users that logging is throttled.
1177 LimitLogBytesPerJob: 67108864
1179 LogPartialLineThrottlePeriod: 5s
1181 # Container logs are written to Keep and saved in a
1182 # collection, which is updated periodically while the
1183 # container runs. This value sets the interval between
1184 # collection updates.
1185 LogUpdatePeriod: 30m
1187 # The log collection is also updated when the specified amount of
1188 # log data (given in bytes) is produced in less than one update
1190 LogUpdateSize: 32MiB
1193 # An admin user can use "arvados-client shell" to start an
1194 # interactive shell (with any user ID) in any running
1198 # Any user can use "arvados-client shell" to start an
1199 # interactive shell (with any user ID) in any running
1200 # container that they started, provided it isn't also
1201 # associated with a different user's container request.
1203 # Interactive sessions make it easy to alter the container's
1204 # runtime environment in ways that aren't recorded or
1205 # reproducible. Consider the implications for automatic
1206 # container reuse before enabling and using this feature. In
1207 # particular, note that starting an interactive session does
1208 # not disqualify a container from being reused by a different
1209 # user/workflow in the future.
1214 SbatchArgumentsList: []
1215 SbatchEnvironmentVariables:
1218 # Path to dns server configuration directory
1219 # (e.g. /etc/unbound.d/conf.d). If false, do not write any config
1220 # files or touch restart.txt (see below).
1221 DNSServerConfDir: ""
1223 # Template file for the dns server host snippets. See
1224 # unbound.template in this directory for an example. If false, do
1225 # not write any config files.
1226 DNSServerConfTemplate: ""
1228 # String to write to {dns_server_conf_dir}/restart.txt (with a
1229 # trailing newline) after updating local data. If false, do not
1230 # open or write the restart.txt file.
1231 DNSServerReloadCommand: ""
1233 # Command to run after each DNS update. Template variables will be
1234 # substituted; see the "unbound" example below. If false, do not run
1236 DNSServerUpdateCommand: ""
1238 ComputeNodeDomain: ""
1239 ComputeNodeNameservers:
1243 # Hostname to assign to a compute node when it sends a "ping" and the
1244 # hostname in its Node record is nil.
1245 # During bootstrapping, the "ping" script is expected to notice the
1246 # hostname given in the ping response, and update its unix hostname
1248 # If false, leave the hostname alone (this is appropriate if your compute
1249 # nodes' hostnames are already assigned by some other mechanism).
1251 # One way or another, the hostnames of your node records should agree
1252 # with your DNS records and your /etc/slurm-llnl/slurm.conf files.
1254 # Example for compute0000, compute0001, ....:
1255 # assign_node_hostname: compute%<slot_number>04d
1256 # (See http://ruby-doc.org/core-2.2.2/Kernel.html#method-i-format for more.)
1257 AssignNodeHostname: "compute%<slot_number>d"
1260 # Arguments to bsub when submitting Arvados containers as LSF jobs.
1262 # Template variables starting with % will be substituted as follows:
1265 # %C number of VCPUs
1268 # %G number of GPU devices (runtime_constraints.cuda.device_count)
1270 # Use %% to express a literal %. The %%J in the default will be changed
1271 # to %J, which is interpreted by bsub itself.
1273 # Note that the default arguments cause LSF to write two files
1274 # in /tmp on the compute node each time an Arvados container
1275 # runs. Ensure you have something in place to delete old files
1276 # from /tmp, or adjust the "-o" and "-e" arguments accordingly.
1277 BsubArgumentsList: ["-o", "/tmp/crunch-run.%%J.out", "-e", "/tmp/crunch-run.%%J.err", "-J", "%U", "-n", "%C", "-D", "%MMB", "-R", "rusage[mem=%MMB:tmp=%TMB] span[hosts=1]", "-R", "select[mem>=%MMB]", "-R", "select[tmp>=%TMB]", "-R", "select[ncpus>=%C]"]
1279 # Arguments that will be appended to the bsub command line
1280 # when submitting Arvados containers as LSF jobs with
1281 # runtime_constraints.cuda.device_count > 0
1282 BsubCUDAArguments: ["-gpu", "num=%G"]
1284 # Use sudo to switch to this user account when submitting LSF
1287 # This account must exist on the hosts where LSF jobs run
1288 # ("execution hosts"), as well as on the host where the
1289 # Arvados LSF dispatcher runs ("submission host").
1290 BsubSudoUser: "crunch"
1293 # Enable the legacy 'jobs' API (crunch v1). This value must be a string.
1295 # Note: this only enables read-only access, creating new
1296 # legacy jobs and pipelines is not supported.
1298 # 'auto' -- (default) enable the Jobs API only if it has been used before
1299 # (i.e., there are job records in the database)
1300 # 'true' -- enable the Jobs API despite lack of existing records.
1301 # 'false' -- disable the Jobs API despite presence of existing records.
1304 # Git repositories must be readable by api server, or you won't be
1305 # able to submit crunch jobs. To pass the test suites, put a clone
1306 # of the arvados tree in {git_repositories_dir}/arvados.git or
1307 # {git_repositories_dir}/arvados/.git
1308 GitInternalDir: /var/lib/arvados/internal.git
1311 # Enable the cloud scheduler.
1314 # Name/number of port where workers' SSH services listen.
1317 # Interval between queue polls.
1320 # Shell command to execute on each worker to determine whether
1321 # the worker is booted and ready to run containers. It should
1322 # exit zero if the worker is ready.
1323 BootProbeCommand: "systemctl is-system-running"
1325 # Minimum interval between consecutive probes to a single
1329 # Maximum probes per second, across all workers in a pool.
1330 MaxProbesPerSecond: 10
1332 # Time before repeating SIGTERM when killing a container.
1335 # Time to give up on a process (most likely arv-mount) that
1336 # still holds a container lockfile after its main supervisor
1337 # process has exited, and declare the instance broken.
1338 TimeoutStaleRunLock: 5s
1340 # Time to give up on SIGTERM and write off the worker.
1343 # Maximum create/destroy-instance operations per second (0 =
1345 MaxCloudOpsPerSecond: 10
1347 # Maximum concurrent instance creation operations (0 = unlimited).
1349 # MaxConcurrentInstanceCreateOps limits the number of instance creation
1350 # requests that can be in flight at any one time, whereas
1351 # MaxCloudOpsPerSecond limits the number of create/destroy operations
1352 # that can be started per second.
1354 # Because the API for instance creation on Azure is synchronous, it is
1355 # recommended to increase MaxConcurrentInstanceCreateOps when running
1356 # on Azure. When using managed images, a value of 20 would be
1357 # appropriate. When using Azure Shared Image Galeries, it could be set
1358 # higher. For more information, see
1359 # https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/linux/capture-image
1361 # MaxConcurrentInstanceCreateOps can be increased for other cloud
1362 # providers too, if desired.
1363 MaxConcurrentInstanceCreateOps: 1
1365 # The maximum number of instances to run at a time, or 0 for
1368 # If more instances than this are already running and busy
1369 # when the dispatcher starts up, the running containers will
1370 # be allowed to finish before the excess instances are shut
1374 # Maximum fraction of CloudVMs.MaxInstances allowed to run
1375 # "supervisor" containers at any given time. A supervisor is a
1376 # container whose purpose is mainly to submit and manage other
1377 # containers, such as arvados-cwl-runner workflow runner.
1379 # If there is a hard limit on the amount of concurrent
1380 # containers that the cluster can run, it is important to
1381 # avoid crowding out the containers doing useful work with
1382 # containers who just create more work.
1384 # For example, with the default MaxInstances of 64, it will
1385 # schedule at most floor(64*0.30) = 19 concurrent workflows,
1386 # ensuring 45 slots are available for work.
1387 SupervisorFraction: 0.30
1389 # Interval between cloud provider syncs/updates ("list all
1393 # Time to leave an idle worker running (in case new containers
1394 # appear in the queue that it can run) before shutting it
1398 # Time to wait for a new worker to boot (i.e., pass
1399 # BootProbeCommand) before giving up and shutting it down.
1402 # Maximum time a worker can stay alive with no successful
1403 # probes before being automatically shut down.
1406 # Time after shutting down a worker to retry the
1407 # shutdown/destroy operation.
1408 TimeoutShutdown: 10s
1410 # Worker VM image ID.
1411 # (aws) AMI identifier
1412 # (azure) managed disks: the name of the managed disk image
1413 # (azure) shared image gallery: the name of the image definition. Also
1414 # see the SharedImageGalleryName and SharedImageGalleryImageVersion fields.
1415 # (azure) unmanaged disks (deprecated): the complete URI of the VHD, e.g.
1416 # https://xxxxx.blob.core.windows.net/system/Microsoft.Compute/Images/images/xxxxx.vhd
1419 # Shell script to run on new instances using the cloud
1420 # provider's UserData (EC2) or CustomData (Azure) feature.
1422 # It is not necessary to include a #!/bin/sh line.
1423 InstanceInitCommand: ""
1425 # An executable file (located on the dispatcher host) to be
1426 # copied to cloud instances at runtime and used as the
1427 # container runner/supervisor. The default value is the
1428 # dispatcher program itself.
1430 # Use the empty string to disable this step: nothing will be
1431 # copied, and cloud instances are assumed to have a suitable
1432 # version of crunch-run installed; see CrunchRunCommand above.
1433 DeployRunnerBinary: "/proc/self/exe"
1435 # Install the Dispatcher's SSH public key (derived from
1436 # DispatchPrivateKey) when creating new cloud
1437 # instances. Change this to false if you are using a different
1438 # mechanism to pre-install the public key on new instances.
1439 DeployPublicKey: true
1441 # Tags to add on all resources (VMs, NICs, disks) created by
1442 # the container dispatcher. (Arvados's own tags --
1443 # InstanceType, IdleBehavior, and InstanceSecret -- will also
1448 # Prefix for predefined tags used by Arvados (InstanceSetID,
1449 # InstanceType, InstanceSecret, IdleBehavior). With the
1450 # default value "Arvados", tags are "ArvadosInstanceSetID",
1451 # "ArvadosInstanceSecret", etc.
1453 # This should only be changed while no cloud resources are in
1454 # use and the cloud dispatcher is not running. Otherwise,
1455 # VMs/resources that were added using the old tag prefix will
1456 # need to be detected and cleaned up manually.
1457 TagKeyPrefix: Arvados
1459 # Cloud driver: "azure" (Microsoft Azure), "ec2" (Amazon AWS),
1460 # or "loopback" (run containers on dispatch host for testing
1464 # Cloud-specific driver parameters.
1467 # (ec2) Credentials. Omit or leave blank if using IAM role.
1471 # (ec2) Instance configuration.
1477 AdminUsername: debian
1478 # (ec2) name of the IAMInstanceProfile for instances started by
1479 # the cloud dispatcher. Leave blank when not needed.
1480 IAMInstanceProfile: ""
1482 # (ec2) how often to look up spot instance pricing data
1483 # (only while running spot instances) for the purpose of
1484 # calculating container cost estimates. A value of 0
1485 # disables spot price lookups entirely.
1486 SpotPriceUpdateInterval: 24h
1488 # (ec2) per-GiB-month cost of EBS volumes. Matches
1489 # EBSVolumeType. Used to account for AddedScratch when
1490 # calculating container cost estimates. Note that
1491 # https://aws.amazon.com/ebs/pricing/ defines GB to mean
1492 # GiB, so an advertised price $0.10/GB indicates a real
1493 # price of $0.10/GiB and can be entered here as 0.10.
1496 # (azure) Credentials.
1502 # (azure) Instance configuration.
1503 CloudEnvironment: AzurePublicCloud
1506 # (azure) The resource group where the VM and virtual NIC will be
1510 # (azure) The resource group of the Network to use for the virtual
1511 # NIC (if different from ResourceGroup)
1512 NetworkResourceGroup: ""
1516 # (azure) managed disks: The resource group where the managed disk
1517 # image can be found (if different from ResourceGroup).
1518 ImageResourceGroup: ""
1520 # (azure) shared image gallery: the name of the gallery
1521 SharedImageGalleryName: ""
1522 # (azure) shared image gallery: the version of the image definition
1523 SharedImageGalleryImageVersion: ""
1525 # (azure) unmanaged disks (deprecated): Where to store the VM VHD blobs
1529 # (azure) How long to wait before deleting VHD and NIC
1530 # objects that are no longer being used.
1531 DeleteDanglingResourcesAfter: 20s
1533 # Account (that already exists in the VM image) that will be
1534 # set up with an ssh authorized key to allow the compute
1535 # dispatcher to connect.
1536 AdminUsername: arvados
1540 # Use the instance type name as the key (in place of "SAMPLE" in
1541 # this sample entry).
1543 # Cloud provider's instance type. Defaults to the configured type name.
1547 IncludedScratch: 16GB
1549 # Hourly price ($), used to select node types for containers,
1550 # and to calculate estimated container costs. For spot
1551 # instances on EC2, this is also used as the maximum price
1552 # when launching spot instances, while the estimated container
1553 # cost is computed based on the current spot price according
1554 # to AWS. On Azure, and on-demand instances on EC2, the price
1555 # given here is used to compute container cost estimates.
1558 # Include this section if the node type includes GPU (CUDA) support
1560 DriverVersion: "11.0"
1561 HardwareCapability: "9.0"
1566 # If you use multiple storage classes, specify them here, using
1567 # the storage class name as the key (in place of "SAMPLE" in
1568 # this sample entry).
1570 # Further info/examples:
1571 # https://doc.arvados.org/admin/storage-classes.html
1574 # Priority determines the order volumes should be searched
1575 # when reading data, in cases where a keepstore server has
1576 # access to multiple volumes with different storage classes.
1579 # Default determines which storage class(es) should be used
1580 # when a user/client writes data or saves a new collection
1581 # without specifying storage classes.
1583 # If any StorageClasses are configured, at least one of them
1584 # must have Default: true.
1589 # AccessViaHosts specifies which keepstore processes can read
1590 # and write data on the volume.
1592 # For a local filesystem, AccessViaHosts has one entry,
1593 # indicating which server the filesystem is located on.
1595 # For a network-attached backend accessible by all keepstore
1596 # servers, like a cloud storage bucket or an NFS mount,
1597 # AccessViaHosts can be empty/omitted.
1599 # Further info/examples:
1600 # https://doc.arvados.org/install/configure-fs-storage.html
1601 # https://doc.arvados.org/install/configure-s3-object-storage.html
1602 # https://doc.arvados.org/install/configure-azure-blob-storage.html
1606 "http://host1.example:25107": {}
1610 # If you have configured storage classes (see StorageClasses
1611 # section above), add an entry here for each storage class
1612 # satisfied by this volume.
1616 # for s3 driver -- see
1617 # https://doc.arvados.org/install/configure-s3-object-storage.html
1620 SecretAccessKey: aaaaa
1624 LocationConstraint: false
1632 # For S3 driver, potentially unsafe tuning parameter,
1633 # intentionally excluded from main documentation.
1635 # Enable deletion (garbage collection) even when the
1636 # configured BlobTrashLifetime is zero. WARNING: eventual
1637 # consistency may result in race conditions that can cause
1638 # data loss. Do not enable this unless you understand and
1642 # for azure driver -- see
1643 # https://doc.arvados.org/install/configure-azure-blob-storage.html
1644 StorageAccountName: aaaaa
1645 StorageAccountKey: aaaaa
1646 StorageBaseURL: core.windows.net
1647 ContainerName: aaaaa
1649 ListBlobsRetryDelay: 10s
1650 ListBlobsMaxAttempts: 10
1652 WriteRaceInterval: 15s
1653 WriteRacePollTime: 1s
1655 # for local directory driver -- see
1656 # https://doc.arvados.org/install/configure-fs-storage.html
1657 Root: /var/lib/arvados/keep-data
1659 # For local directory driver, potentially confusing tuning
1660 # parameter, intentionally excluded from main documentation.
1662 # When true, read and write operations (for whole 64MiB
1663 # blocks) on an individual volume will queued and issued
1664 # serially. When false, read and write operations will be
1665 # issued concurrently.
1667 # May possibly improve throughput if you have physical spinning disks
1668 # and experience contention when there are multiple requests
1669 # to the same volume.
1671 # Otherwise, when using SSDs, RAID, or a shared network filesystem, you
1672 # should leave this alone.
1678 SendUserSetupNotificationEmail: true
1680 # Bug/issue report notification to and from addresses
1681 IssueReporterEmailFrom: "arvados@example.com"
1682 IssueReporterEmailTo: "arvados@example.com"
1683 SupportEmailAddress: "arvados@example.com"
1685 # Generic issue email from
1686 EmailFrom: "arvados@example.com"
1693 ActivateUsers: false
1695 # API endpoint host or host:port; default is {id}.arvadosapi.com
1696 Host: sample.arvadosapi.com
1698 # Perform a proxy request when a local client requests an
1699 # object belonging to this remote.
1702 # Default "https". Can be set to "http" for testing.
1705 # Disable TLS verify. Can be set to true for testing.
1708 # When users present tokens issued by this remote cluster, and
1709 # their accounts are active on the remote cluster, activate
1710 # them on this cluster too.
1711 ActivateUsers: false
1714 # Workbench1 configs
1716 ActivationContactLink: mailto:info@arvados.org
1717 ArvadosDocsite: https://doc.arvados.org
1718 ArvadosPublicDataDocURL: https://playground.arvados.org/projects/public
1719 ShowUserAgreementInline: false
1722 # Set this configuration to true to avoid providing an easy way for users
1723 # to share data with unauthenticated users; this may be necessary on
1724 # installations where strict data access controls are needed.
1725 DisableSharingURLsUI: false
1727 # Scratch directory used by the remote repository browsing
1728 # feature. If it doesn't exist, it (and any missing parents) will be
1729 # created using mkdir_p.
1730 RepositoryCache: /var/www/arvados-workbench/current/tmp/git
1732 # Below is a sample setting of user_profile_form_fields config parameter.
1733 # This configuration parameter should be set to either false (to disable) or
1734 # to a map as shown below.
1735 # Configure the map of input fields to be displayed in the profile page
1736 # using the attribute "key" for each of the input fields.
1737 # This sample shows configuration with one required and one optional form fields.
1738 # For each of these input fields:
1739 # You can specify "Type" as "text" or "select".
1740 # List the "Options" to be displayed for each of the "select" menu.
1741 # Set "Required" as "true" for any of these fields to make them required.
1742 # If any of the required fields are missing in the user's profile, the user will be
1743 # redirected to the profile page before they can access any Workbench features.
1744 UserProfileFormFields:
1747 FormFieldTitle: Best color
1748 FormFieldDescription: your favorite color
1757 # exampleTextValue: # key that will be set in properties
1759 # FormFieldTitle: ""
1760 # FormFieldDescription: ""
1763 # exampleOptionsValue:
1765 # FormFieldTitle: ""
1766 # FormFieldDescription: ""
1774 # Use "UserProfileFormMessage to configure the message you want
1775 # to display on the profile page.
1776 UserProfileFormMessage: 'Welcome to Arvados. All <span style="color:red">required fields</span> must be completed before you can proceed.'
1778 # Mimetypes of applications for which the view icon
1779 # would be enabled in a collection's show page.
1780 # It is sufficient to list only applications here.
1781 # No need to list text and image types.
1782 ApplicationMimetypesWithViewIcon:
1800 # The maximum number of bytes to load in the log viewer
1801 LogViewerMaxBytes: 1M
1803 # When anonymous_user_token is configured, show public projects page
1804 EnablePublicProjectsPage: true
1806 # By default, disable the "Getting Started" popup which is specific to Arvados playground
1807 EnableGettingStartedPopup: false
1809 # Ask Arvados API server to compress its response payloads.
1810 APIResponseCompression: true
1812 # Timeouts for API requests.
1813 APIClientConnectTimeout: 2m
1814 APIClientReceiveTimeout: 5m
1816 # Maximum number of historic log records of a running job to fetch
1817 # and display in the Log tab, while subscribing to web sockets.
1818 RunningJobLogRecordsToFetch: 2000
1820 # In systems with many shared projects, loading of dashboard and topnav
1821 # can be slow due to collections indexing; use the following parameters
1822 # to suppress these properties
1823 ShowRecentCollectionsOnDashboard: true
1824 ShowUserNotifications: true
1826 # Enable/disable "multi-site search" in top nav ("true"/"false"), or
1827 # a link to the multi-site search page on a "home" Workbench site.
1830 # https://workbench.zzzzz.arvadosapi.com/collections/multisite
1833 # Should workbench allow management of local git repositories? Set to false if
1834 # the jobs api is disabled and there are no local git repositories.
1837 SiteName: Arvados Workbench
1838 ProfilingEnabled: false
1840 # This is related to obsolete Google OpenID 1.0 login
1841 # but some workbench stuff still expects it to be set.
1842 DefaultOpenIdPrefix: "https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id"
1844 # Workbench2 configs
1845 FileViewersConfigURL: ""
1847 # Idle time after which the user's session will be auto closed.
1848 # This feature is disabled when set to zero.
1851 # UUID of a collection. This collection should be shared with
1852 # all users. Workbench will look for a file "banner.html" in
1853 # this collection and display its contents (should be
1854 # HTML-formatted text) when users first log in to Workbench.
1857 # Workbench welcome screen, this is HTML text that will be
1858 # incorporated directly onto the page.
1860 <img src="/arvados-logo-big.png" style="width: 20%; float: right; padding: 1em;" />
1861 <h2>Please log in.</h2>
1863 <p>If you have never used Arvados Workbench before, logging in
1864 for the first time will automatically create a new
1867 <i>Arvados Workbench uses your information only for
1868 identification, and does not retrieve any other personal
1871 # Workbench screen displayed to inactive users. This is HTML
1872 # text that will be incorporated directly onto the page.
1874 <img src="/arvados-logo-big.png" style="width: 20%; float: right; padding: 1em;" />
1875 <h3>Hi! You're logged in, but...</h3>
1876 <p>Your account is inactive.</p>
1877 <p>An administrator must activate your account before you can get
1880 # Connecting to Arvados shell VMs tends to be site-specific.
1881 # Put any special instructions here. This is HTML text that will
1882 # be incorporated directly onto the Workbench page.
1884 <a href="https://doc.arvados.org/user/getting_started/ssh-access-unix.html">Accessing an Arvados VM with SSH</a> (generic instructions).
1885 Site configurations vary. Contact your local cluster administrator if you have difficulty accessing an Arvados shell node.
1887 # Sample text if you are using a "switchyard" ssh proxy.
1888 # Replace "zzzzz" with your Cluster ID.
1890 # <p>Add a section like this to your SSH configuration file ( <i>~/.ssh/config</i>):</p>
1893 # ServerAliveInterval 60
1894 # ProxyCommand ssh -p2222 turnout@switchyard.zzzzz.arvadosapi.com -x -a $SSH_PROXY_FLAGS %h
1897 # If you are using a switchyard ssh proxy, shell node hostnames
1898 # may require a special hostname suffix. In the sample ssh
1899 # configuration above, this would be ".zzzzz"
1900 # This is added to the hostname in the "command line" column
1901 # the Workbench "shell VMs" page.
1903 # If your shell nodes are directly accessible by users without a
1904 # proxy and have fully qualified host names, you should leave
1906 SSHHelpHostSuffix: ""
1908 # (Experimental) Restart services automatically when config file
1909 # changes are detected. Only supported by `arvados-server boot` in
1911 AutoReloadConfig: false