2020-06-14 14:01:16 +02:00
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{{ ansible_managed | comment(decoration="; ") }}
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; Murmur configuration file.
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;
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; General notes:
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; * Settings in this file are default settings and many of them can be overridden
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; with virtual server specific configuration via the Ice or DBus interface.
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; * Due to the way this configuration file is read some rules have to be
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; followed when specifying variable values (as in variable = value):
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; * Make sure to quote the value when using commas in strings or passwords.
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; NOT variable = super,secret BUT variable = "super,secret"
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; * Make sure to escape special characters like '\' or '"' correctly
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; NOT variable = """ BUT variable = "\""
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; NOT regex = \w* BUT regex = \\w*
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; Path to database. If blank, will search for
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; murmur.sqlite in default locations or create it if not found.
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database={{ murmur_database.path | to_json }}
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; Murmur defaults to using SQLite with its default rollback journal.
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; In some situations, using SQLite's write-ahead log (WAL) can be
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; advantageous.
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; If you encounter slowdowns when moving between channels and similar
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; operations, enabling the SQLite write-ahead log might help.
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;
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; To use SQLite's write-ahead log, set sqlite_wal to one of the following
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; values:
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;
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; 0 - Use SQLite's default rollback journal.
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; 1 - Use write-ahead log with synchronous=NORMAL.
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; If Murmur crashes, the database will be in a consistent state, but
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; the most recent changes might be lost if the operating system did
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; not write them to disk yet. This option can improve Murmur's
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; interactivity on busy servers, or servers with slow storage.
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; 2 - Use write-ahead log with synchronous=FULL.
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; All database writes are synchronized to disk when they are made.
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; If Murmur crashes, the database will be include all completed writes.
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;sqlite_wal=0
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; If you wish to use something other than SQLite, you'll need to set the name
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; of the database above, and also uncomment the below.
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; Sticking with SQLite is strongly recommended, as it's the most well tested
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; and by far the fastest solution.
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;
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;dbDriver=QMYSQL
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;dbUsername=
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;dbPassword=
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;dbHost=
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;dbPort=
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;dbPrefix=murmur_
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;dbOpts=
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{% if murmur_database.driver is defined %}
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dbDriver={{ murmur_database.driver | to_json }}
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dbUsername={{ murmur_database.username | to_json }}
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dbPassword={{ murmur_database.password | to_json }}
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dbHost={{ murmur_database.host | default('localhost') | to_json }}
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dbPort={{ murmur_database.port }}
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dbPrefix={{ murmur_database.prefix | default('') | to_json }}
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dbOpts={{ murmur_database.opts | default('') | to_json }}
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{% endif %}
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; Murmur defaults to not using D-Bus. If you wish to use dbus, which is one of the
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; RPC methods available in Murmur, please specify so here.
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;
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;dbus=session
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; Alternate D-Bus service name. Only use if you are running distinct
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; murmurd processes connected to the same D-Bus daemon.
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;dbusservice=net.sourceforge.mumble.murmur
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; If you want to use ZeroC Ice to communicate with Murmur, you need
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; to specify the endpoint to use. Since there is no authentication
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; with ICE, you should only use it if you trust all the users who have
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; shell access to your machine.
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; Please see the ICE documentation on how to specify endpoints.
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ice="{{ murmur_ice }}"
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; Ice primarily uses local sockets. This means anyone who has a
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; user account on your machine can connect to the Ice services.
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; You can set a plaintext "secret" on the Ice connection, and
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; any script attempting to access must then have this secret
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; (as context with name "secret").
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; Access is split in read (look only) and write (modify)
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; operations. Write access always includes read access,
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; unless read is explicitly denied (see note below).
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;
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; Note that if this is uncommented and with empty content,
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; access will be denied.
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{% if murmur_ice_secret_read is defined %}
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icesecretread={{ murmur_ice_secret_read | to_json }}
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{% else %}
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;icesecretread=
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{% endif %}
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{% if murmur_ice_secret_write is defined %}
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icesecretwrite={{ murmur_ice_secret_write | to_json }}
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{% else %}
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2020-06-14 14:21:50 +02:00
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;icesecretwrite=
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2020-06-14 14:01:16 +02:00
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{% endif %}
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; If you want to expose Murmur's experimental gRPC API, you
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; need to specify an address to bind on.
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; Note: not all builds of Murmur support gRPC. If gRPC is not
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; available, Murmur will warn you in its log output.
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;grpc="127.0.0.1:50051"
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; Specifying both a certificate and key file below will cause gRPC to use
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; secured, TLS connections.
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;grpccert=""
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;grpckey=""
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; How many login attempts do we tolerate from one IP
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; inside a given timeframe before we ban the connection?
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; Note that this is global (shared between all virtual servers), and that
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; it counts both successfull and unsuccessfull connection attempts.
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; Set either Attempts or Timeframe to 0 to disable.
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;autobanAttempts = 10
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;autobanTimeframe = 120
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;autobanTime = 300
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autobanAttempts={{ murmur_autoban_attempts }}
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autobanTimeframe={{ murmur_autoban_timeframe }}
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autobanTime={{ murmur_autoban_time }}
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; Specifies the file Murmur should log to. By default, Murmur
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; logs to the file 'murmur.log'. If you leave this field blank
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; on Unix-like systems, Murmur will force itself into foreground
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; mode which logs to the console.
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;logfile=murmur.log
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logfile={{ murmur_log_file | to_json }}
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; If set, Murmur will write its process ID to this file
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; when running in daemon mode (when the -fg flag is not
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; specified on the command line). Only available on
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; Unix-like systems.
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;pidfile=
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pidfile={{ murmur_pid_file | to_json }}
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; The below will be used as defaults for new configured servers.
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; If you're just running one server (the default), it's easier to
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; configure it here than through D-Bus or Ice.
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;
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; Welcome message sent to clients when they connect.
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; If the welcome message is set to an empty string,
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; no welcome message will be sent to clients.
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welcometext={{ murmur_welcome_text | to_json }}
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; Port to bind TCP and UDP sockets to.
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port={{ murmur_port }}
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; Specific IP or hostname to bind to.
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; If this is left blank (default), Murmur will bind to all available addresses.
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;host=
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host={{ murmur_host | to_json }}
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; Password to join server.
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serverpassword={{ murmur_server_password | to_json }}
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; Maximum bandwidth (in bits per second) clients are allowed
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; to send speech at.
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bandwidth={{ murmur_max_bandwidth }}
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; Maximum number of concurrent clients allowed.
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users={{ murmur_max_users }}
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; Per-user rate limiting
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;
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; These two settings allow to configure the per-user rate limiter for some
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; command messages sent from the client to the server. The messageburst setting
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; specifies an amount of messages which are allowed in short bursts. The
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; messagelimit setting specifies the number of messages per second allowed over
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; a longer period. If a user hits the rate limit, his packages are then ignored
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; for some time. Both of these settings have a minimum of 1 as setting either to
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; 0 could render the server unusable.
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messageburst=5
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messagelimit=1
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; Respond to UDP ping packets.
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;
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; Setting to true exposes the current user count, the maximum user count, and
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; the server's maximum bandwidth per client to unauthenticated users. In the
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; Mumble client, this information is shown in the Connect dialog.
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allowping=true
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; Amount of users with Opus support needed to force Opus usage, in percent.
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; 0 = Always enable Opus, 100 = enable Opus if it's supported by all clients.
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;opusthreshold=100
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opusthreshold={{ murmur_opus_threshold }}
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; Maximum depth of channel nesting. Note that some databases like MySQL using
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; InnoDB will fail when operating on deeply nested channels.
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;channelnestinglimit=10
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channelnestinglimit={{ murmur_channel_nesting_limit }}
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; Maximum number of channels per server. 0 for unlimited. Note that an
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; excessive number of channels will impact server performance
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;channelcountlimit=1000
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channelcountlimit={{ murmur_channel_count_limit }}
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; Regular expression used to validate channel names.
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; (Note that you have to escape backslashes with \ )
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;channelname=[ \\-=\\w\\#\\[\\]\\{\\}\\(\\)\\@\\|]+
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{% if murmur_channel_name_regex is defined %}
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channelname={{ murmur_channel_name_regex }}
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{% endif %}
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; Regular expression used to validate user names.
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; (Note that you have to escape backslashes with \ )
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;username=[-=\\w\\[\\]\\{\\}\\(\\)\\@\\|\\.]+
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{% if murmur_username_regex is defined %}
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username={{ murmur_username_regex }}
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{% endif %}
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; Maximum length of text messages in characters. 0 for no limit.
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;textmessagelength=5000
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textmessagelength={{ murmur_text_message_max_length }}
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; Maximum length of text messages in characters, with image data. 0 for no limit.
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;imagemessagelength=131072
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imagemessagelength={{ murmur_image_message_max_length }}
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; Allow clients to use HTML in messages, user comments and channel descriptions?
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;allowhtml=true
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allowhtml={{ murmur_allow_html }}
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; Murmur retains the per-server log entries in an internal database which
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; allows it to be accessed over D-Bus/ICE.
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; How many days should such entries be kept?
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; Set to 0 to keep forever, or -1 to disable logging to the DB.
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;logdays=31
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logdays={{ murmur_log_days }}
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{% if murmur_register.name is defined %}
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; To enable public server registration, the serverpassword must be blank, and
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; this must all be filled out.
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; The password here is used to create a registry for the server name; subsequent
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; updates will need the same password. Don't lose your password.
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; The URL is your own website, and only set the registerHostname for static IP
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; addresses.
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; Only uncomment the 'registerName' parameter if you wish to give your "Root" channel a custom name.
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;
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registerName={{ murmur_register.name | to_json }}
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registerPassword={{ murmur_register.password | to_json }}
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registerUrl={{ murmur_register.url | to_json }}
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registerHostname={{ murmur_register.hostname | to_json }}
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{% endif %}
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; If this option is enabled, the server will announce its presence via the
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; bonjour service discovery protocol. To change the name announced by bonjour
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; adjust the registerName variable.
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; See http://developer.apple.com/networking/bonjour/index.html for more information
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; about bonjour.
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;bonjour=True
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bonjour={{ murmur_bonjour_enabled }}
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; If you have a proper SSL certificate, you can provide the filenames here.
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; Otherwise, Murmur will create its own certificate automatically.
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;sslCert=
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;sslKey=
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sslCert={{ murmur_certificate | to_json }}
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sslKey={{ murmur_private_key | to_json }}
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sslCa={{ murmur_trusted_certificate | to_json }}
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; The sslDHParams option allows you to specify a PEM-encoded file with
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; Diffie-Hellman parameters, which will be used as the default Diffie-
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; Hellman parameters for all virtual servers.
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;
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; Instead of pointing sslDHParams to a file, you can also use the option
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; to specify a named set of Diffie-Hellman parameters for Murmur to use.
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; Murmur comes bundled with the Diffie-Hellman parameters from RFC 7919.
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; These parameters are available by using the following names:
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;
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; @ffdhe2048, @ffdhe3072, @ffdhe4096, @ffdhe6144, @ffdhe8192
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;
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; By default, Murmur uses @ffdhe2048.
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sslDHParams={{ murmur_dhparam | to_json }}
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; The sslCiphers option chooses the cipher suites to make available for use
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; in SSL/TLS. This option is server-wide, and cannot be set on a
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; per-virtual-server basis.
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;
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; This option is specified using OpenSSL cipher list notation (see
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; https://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html#CIPHER-LIST-FORMAT).
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;
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; It is recommended that you try your cipher string using 'openssl ciphers <string>'
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; before setting it here, to get a feel for which cipher suites you will get.
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;
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; After setting this option, it is recommend that you inspect your Murmur log
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; to ensure that Murmur is using the cipher suites that you expected it to.
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;
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; Note: Changing this option may impact the backwards compatibility of your
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; Murmur server, and can remove the ability for older Mumble clients to be able
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; to connect to it.
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;sslCiphers=EECDH+AESGCM:EDH+aRSA+AESGCM:DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:AES256-SHA:AES128-SHA
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; If Murmur is started as root, which user should it switch to?
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; This option is ignored if Murmur isn't started with root privileges.
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;uname=
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uname={{ murmur_owner }}
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; If this options is enabled, only clients which have a certificate are allowed
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; to connect.
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;certrequired=False
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certrequired={{ murmur_client_certificate_required }}
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; If enabled, clients are sent information about the servers version and operating
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; system.
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;sendversion=True
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sendversion={{ murmur_send_server_version }}
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; This sets password hash storage to legacy mode (1.2.4 and before)
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; (Note that setting this to true is insecure and should not be used unless absolutely necessary)
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;legacyPasswordHash=false
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; By default a strong amount of PBKDF2 iterations are chosen automatically. If >0 this setting
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; overrides the automatic benchmark and forces a specific number of iterations.
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; (Note that you should only change this value if you know what you are doing)
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;kdfIterations=-1
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; You can configure any of the configuration options for Ice here. We recommend
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; leave the defaults as they are.
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; Please note that this section has to be last in the configuration file.
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;
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[Ice]
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Ice.Warn.UnknownProperties={{ murmur_ice_warn_unknown_properties }}
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Ice.MessageSizeMax={{ murmur_ice_message_size_max }}
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