# conf for yaws # first we have a set of globals # That apply to all virtual servers # This is the directory where all logfiles for # all virtual servers will be written logdir = /var/log/yaws # This the path to a directory where additional # beam code can be placed. The daemon will add this # directory to its search path ebin_dir = /usr/lib/erlang/lib/stdlib-1.14.2/ebin ebin_dir = /var/www/ebin # This is a directory where application specific .hrl # files can be placed. application specific .yaws code can # then include these .hrl files include_dir = /var/www/include # This is a debug variable, possible values are http | traffic | false # It is also possible to set the trace (possibly to the tty) while # invoking yaws from the shell as in # yaws -i -T -x (see man yaws) trace = false # it is possible to have yaws start additional # application specific code at startup # # runmod = mymodule # By default yaws will copy the erlang error_log and # end write it to a wrap log called report.log (in the logdir) # this feature can be turned off. This would typically # be the case when yaws runs within another larger app copy_error_log = true # Logs are wrap logs log_wrap_size = 1000000 # Possibly resolve all hostnames in logfiles so webalizer # can produce the nice geography piechart log_resolve_hostname = true # fail completely or not if yaws fails # to bind a listen socket fail_on_bind_err = true # If yaws is started as root, it can, once it has opened # all relevant sockets for listening, change the uid to a # user with lower accessrights than root username = nobody # If HTTP auth is used, it is possible to have a specific # auth log. auth_log = true # When we're running multiple yaws systems on the same # host, we need to give each yaws system an individual # name. Yaws will write a number of runtime files under # /tmp/yaws/${id} # The default value is "default" # id = myname # earlier versions of Yaws picked the first virtual host # in a list of hosts with the same IP/PORT when the Host: # header doesn't match any name on any Host # This is often nice in testing environments but not # acceptable in real live hosting scenarios pick_first_virthost_on_nomatch = true # All unices are broken since it's not possible to bind to # a privileged port (< 1024) unless uid==0 # There is a contrib in jungerl which makes it possible by means # of an external setuid root programm called fdsrv to listen to # to privileged port. # If we use this feature, it requires fdsrv to be properly installed. # Doesn't yet work with SSL. use_fdsrv = false # 66.240.211.174 port = 80 listen = 0.0.0.0 docroot = /var/www/66.240.211.174 # www.bk1k.org redirect port = 80 listen = 0.0.0.0 rhost = bk1k.org docroot = /var/www/redirect arg_rewrite_mod = redirect # bk1k.org port = 80 listen = 0.0.0.0 rhost = bk1k.org # rscheme = https docroot = /var/www/bk1k.org/htdocs dir_listings = true_nozip # www.covracer.com redirect port = 80 listen = 0.0.0.0 rhost = covracer.com docroot = /var/www/redirect arg_rewrite_mod = sameurl # covracer.com port = 80 listen = 0.0.0.0 rhost = covracer.com docroot = /var/www/covracer.com/htdocs dir_listings = true_nozip # And then an ssl server # # port = 443 # docroot = /tmp # listen = 0.0.0.0 # dir_listings = true # # keyfile = /etc/yaws-key.pem # certfile = /etc/yaws-cert.pem # #