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CONFIGURATION.md

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OpenProject Configuration

This file describes a part of the OpenProject configuration. You can find general installation instructions here. OpenProject also allows configuring many aspects via its admin interface. The config/settings.yml file should not be used for changing these settings.

OpenProject can be configured either via a configuration.yml file, environment variables or a mix of both. While the latter is probably a bad idea, the environment variable option is often helpful for automatically deploying production systems. Using the configuration file is probably the simplest way of configuration.

You can find a list of options below and an example file in config/configuration.yml.example.

Environment variables

When using environment variables, you can set the options by setting environment variables with the name of the options below in uppercase. So for example, to configure email delivery via an SMTP server, you can set the following environment variables:

EMAIL_DELIVERY_METHOD="smtp"
SMTP_ADDRESS="smtp.example.net"
SMTP_PORT="587"
SMTP_DOMAIN="example.net"
SMTP_AUTHENTICATION="plain"
SMTP_USER_NAME="user"
SMTP_PASSWORD="password"
SMTP_ENABLE_STARTTLS_AUTO="true"

In case you want to use environment variables, but you have no easy way to set them on a specific systme, you can use the dotenv gem. It automatically sets environment variables written to a .env file for a Rails application.

Nested Values

You can override nested configuration values as well by joining the respective hash keys with underscores. Underscores within keys have to be escaped by doubling them. For example, given the following configuration:

storage:
  tmp_path: tmp

You can override it by defining the following environment variable:

OPENPROJECT_STORAGE_TMP__PATH=/some/other/path

You can also add new values this way. For instance you could add another field 'type' to the storage config above like this:

OPENPROJECT_STORAGE_TYPE=nfs

List of options

disable password login

default: false

If you enable this option you have to configure at least one omniauth authentication provider to take care of authentication instead of the password login.

All username/password forms will be removed and only a list of omniauth providers presented to the users.

omniauth direct login provider

default: nil

Example:

omniauth_direct_login_provider: google

Per default the user may choose the usual password login as well as several omniauth providers on the login page and in the login drop down menu. With his configuration option you can set a specific omniauth provider to be used for direct login. Meaning that the login provider selection is skipped and the configured provider is used directly instead.

If this option is active /login will lead directly to the configured omniauth provider and so will a click on 'Sign in' (as opposed to opening the drop down menu).

Note that this does not stop a user from manually navigating to any other omniauth provider if additional ones are configured.

attachments storage

default: file

Attachments can be stored using fog as well. You will have to add further configuration through fog, e.g. for Amazon S3:

attachments_storage: fog
fog:
  directory: bucket-name
  credentials:
    provider: 'AWS'
    aws_access_key_id: 'AKIAJ23HC4KNPWHPG3UA'
    aws_secret_access_key: 'PYZO9phvL5IgyjjcI2wJdkiy6UyxPK87wP/yxPxS'
    region: 'eu-west-1'

backend migration

You can migrate attachments between the available backends. One example would be that you change the configuration from the file storage to the fog storage. If you want to put all the present file-based attachments into the cloud, you will have to use the following rake task:

rake attachments:copy_to[fog]

It works the other way around too:

rake attachments:copy_to[file]

Note that you have to configure the respective storage (i.e. fog) beforehand as described in the previous section. In the case of fog you only have to configure everything under fog, however. Don't change attachments_storage to fog just yet. Instead leave it as file. This is because the current attachments storage is used as the source for the migration.

hidden menu items

default: {}

You can disable specific menu items in the menu sidebar for each main menu (such as Administration and Projects). The following example disables all menu items except 'Users', 'Groups' and 'Custom fields' under 'Administration':

hidden_menu_items:
  admin_menu:
    - roles
    - types
    - statuses
    - workflows
    - enumerations
    - settings
    - ldap_authentication
    - colors
    - project_types
    - export_card_configurations
    - plugins
    - info

The configuration can be overridden through environment variables. You have to define one variable for each menu. For instance 'Roles' and 'Types' under 'Administration' can be disabled by defining the following variable:

OPENPROJECT_HIDDEN__MENU__ITEMS_ADMIN__MENU='roles types'

blacklisted routes

default: []

You can blacklist specific routes The following example forbid all routes for above disabled menu:

blacklisted_routes:
  - 'admin/info'
  - 'admin/plugins'
  - 'export_card_configurations'
  - 'project_types'
  - 'colors'
  - 'settings'
  - 'admin/enumerations'
  - 'workflows/*'
  - 'statuses'
  - 'types'
  - 'admin/roles'

The configuration can be overridden through environment variables.

OPENPROJECT_BLACKLISTED__ROUTES='admin/info admin/plugins'

disabled modules

default: []

Modules may be disabled through the configuration. Just give a list of the module names either as an array or as a string with values separated by spaces.

Array example:

disabled_modules:
  - backlogs
  - meetings

String example:

disabled_modules: backlogs meetings

The option to use a string is mostly relevant for when you want to override the disabled modules via ENV variables:

OPENPROJECT_DISABLED__MODULES='backlogs meetings'

global basic auth

default: none

You can define a global set of credentials used to authenticate towards API v3. Example section for configuration.yml:

default:
  authentication:
    global_basic_auth:
      user: admin
      password: admin

Email configuration

  • email_delivery_method: The way emails should be delivered. Possible values: smtp or sendmail

SMTP Options:

  • smtp_address: SMTP server hostname, e.g. smtp.example.net
  • smtp_port: SMTP server port. Common options are 25 and 587.
  • smtp_domain: The domain told to the SMTP server, probably the hostname of your OpenProject instance (sent in the HELO domain command). Example: example.net
  • smtp_authentication: Authentication method, possible values: plain, login, cram_md5 (optional, only when authentication is required)
  • smtp_user_name: Username for authentication against the SMTP server (optional, only when authentication is required)
  • smtp_password (optional, only when authentication is required)
  • smtp_enable_starttls_auto: You can disable STARTTLS here in case it doesn't work. Make sure you don't login to a SMTP server over a public network when using this. This setting can't currently be used via environment variables, since setting options to false is only possible via a YAML file. (default: true, optional)
  • smtp_openssl_verify_mode: Define how the SMTP server certificate is validated. Make sure you don't just disable verification here unless both, OpenProject and SMTP servers are on a private network. Possible values: none, peer, client_once or fail_if_no_peer_cert

Cache Options:

  • rails_cache_store: memcache for memcached or memory_store (default: file_store)
  • cache_memcache_server: The memcache server host and IP (default: 127.0.0.1:11211)
  • cache_expires_in: Expiration time for memcache entries (default: 0, no expiry)
  • cache_namespace: Namespace for cache keys, useful when multiple applications use a single memcache server (default: none)