pixelfed/config/websockets.php

300 lines
10 KiB
PHP

<?php
return [
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Dashboard Settings
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| You can configure the dashboard settings from here.
|
*/
'dashboard' => [
'port' => env('LARAVEL_WEBSOCKETS_PORT', 6001),
'domain' => env('LARAVEL_WEBSOCKETS_DOMAIN'),
'path' => env('LARAVEL_WEBSOCKETS_PATH', 'laravel-websockets'),
'middleware' => [
'web',
\BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\Dashboard\Http\Middleware\Authorize::class,
],
],
'managers' => [
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Application Manager
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| An Application manager determines how your websocket server allows
| the use of the TCP protocol based on, for example, a list of allowed
| applications.
| By default, it uses the defined array in the config file, but you can
| anytime implement the same interface as the class and add your own
| custom method to retrieve the apps.
|
*/
'app' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\Apps\ConfigAppManager::class,
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Applications Repository
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| By default, the only allowed app is the one you define with
| your PUSHER_* variables from .env.
| You can configure to use multiple apps if you need to, or use
| a custom App Manager that will handle the apps from a database, per se.
|
| You can apply multiple settings, like the maximum capacity, enable
| client-to-client messages or statistics.
|
*/
'apps' => [
[
'id' => env('PUSHER_APP_ID'),
'name' => env('APP_NAME'),
'host' => env('PUSHER_APP_HOST'),
'key' => env('PUSHER_APP_KEY'),
'secret' => env('PUSHER_APP_SECRET'),
'path' => env('PUSHER_APP_PATH'),
'capacity' => null,
'enable_client_messages' => false,
'enable_statistics' => false,
'allowed_origins' => [
// env('LARAVEL_WEBSOCKETS_DOMAIN'),
],
],
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Broadcasting Replication PubSub
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| You can enable replication to publish and subscribe to
| messages across the driver.
|
| By default, it is set to 'local', but you can configure it to use drivers
| like Redis to ensure connection between multiple instances of
| WebSocket servers. Just set the driver to 'redis' to enable the PubSub using Redis.
|
*/
'replication' => [
'mode' => env('WEBSOCKETS_REPLICATION_MODE', 'local'),
'modes' => [
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Local Replication
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Local replication is actually a null replicator, meaning that it
| is the default behaviour of storing the connections into an array.
|
*/
'local' => [
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Channel Manager
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The channel manager is responsible for storing, tracking and retrieving
| the channels as long as their members and connections.
|
*/
'channel_manager' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\ChannelManagers\LocalChannelManager::class,
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Statistics Collector
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The Statistics Collector will, by default, handle the incoming statistics,
| storing them until they will become dumped into another database, usually
| a MySQL database or a time-series database.
|
*/
'collector' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\Statistics\Collectors\MemoryCollector::class,
],
'redis' => [
'connection' => env('WEBSOCKETS_REDIS_REPLICATION_CONNECTION', 'default'),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Channel Manager
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The channel manager is responsible for storing, tracking and retrieving
| the channels as long as their members and connections.
|
*/
'channel_manager' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\ChannelManagers\RedisChannelManager::class,
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Statistics Collector
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The Statistics Collector will, by default, handle the incoming statistics,
| storing them until they will become dumped into another database, usually
| a MySQL database or a time-series database.
|
*/
'collector' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\Statistics\Collectors\RedisCollector::class,
],
],
],
'statistics' => [
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Statistics Store
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The Statistics Store is the place where all the temporary stats will
| be dumped. This is a much reliable store and will be used to display
| graphs or handle it later on your app.
|
*/
'store' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\Statistics\Stores\DatabaseStore::class,
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Statistics Interval Period
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you can specify the interval in seconds at which
| statistics should be logged.
|
*/
'interval_in_seconds' => 60,
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Statistics Deletion Period
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| When the clean-command is executed, all recorded statistics older than
| the number of days specified here will be deleted.
|
*/
'delete_statistics_older_than_days' => 60,
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Maximum Request Size
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The maximum request size in kilobytes that is allowed for
| an incoming WebSocket request.
|
*/
'max_request_size_in_kb' => 250,
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| SSL Configuration
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| By default, the configuration allows only on HTTP. For SSL, you need
| to set up the the certificate, the key, and optionally, the passphrase
| for the private key.
| You will need to restart the server for the settings to take place.
|
*/
'ssl' => [
'local_cert' => env('LARAVEL_WEBSOCKETS_SSL_LOCAL_CERT', null),
'capath' => env('LARAVEL_WEBSOCKETS_SSL_CA', null),
'local_pk' => env('LARAVEL_WEBSOCKETS_SSL_LOCAL_PK', null),
'passphrase' => env('LARAVEL_WEBSOCKETS_SSL_PASSPHRASE', null),
'verify_peer' => env('APP_ENV') === 'production',
'allow_self_signed' => env('APP_ENV') !== 'production',
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Route Handlers
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you can specify the route handlers that will take over
| the incoming/outgoing websocket connections. You can extend the
| original class and implement your own logic, alongside
| with the existing logic.
|
*/
'handlers' => [
'websocket' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\Server\WebSocketHandler::class,
'health' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\Server\HealthHandler::class,
'trigger_event' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\API\TriggerEvent::class,
'fetch_channels' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\API\FetchChannels::class,
'fetch_channel' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\API\FetchChannel::class,
'fetch_users' => \BeyondCode\LaravelWebSockets\API\FetchUsers::class,
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Promise Resolver
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The promise resolver is a class that takes a input value and is
| able to make sure the PHP code runs async by using ->then(). You can
| use your own Promise Resolver. This is usually changed when you want to
| intercept values by the promises throughout the app, like in testing
| to switch from async to sync.
|
*/
'promise_resolver' => \React\Promise\FulfilledPromise::class,
];