# This is the configuration file for your production environment. # Typically, you will want to route the traffic through a load balancer # which adds SSL security through https. If you use Serverpod's standard # Terraform scripts to deploy your server, all you need to change in # this file is the examplepod.com domain name. # Configuration for the main API server. apiServer: port: 8080 publicHost: api.examplepod.com publicPort: 443 publicScheme: https # Configuration for the Insights server. insightsServer: port: 8081 publicHost: insights.examplepod.com publicPort: 443 publicScheme: https # Configuration for the web server. webServer: port: 8082 publicHost: app.examplepod.com publicPort: 443 publicScheme: https # This is the database setup for your servers. The default for the Google Cloud # Engine Terraform configuration is to connect on a private IP address. # If you are connecting on a public IP (e.g. on AWS or Google Cloud Run), you # connect on the public IP of the database e.g. database.examplepod.com. database: host: database.private-production.examplepod.com port: 5432 name: serverpod user: postgres requireSsl: true #isUnixSocket: true # defaults to false # This is the setup for Redis. The default for the Google Cloud Engine Terraform # configuration is to connect on a private IP address. # If you are connecting on a public IP (e.g. on AWS or Google Cloud Run), you # connect on the public IP of the database e.g. redis.examplepod.com. redis: enabled: false host: redis.private-production.examplepod.com port: 6379 #user: # defaults to empty #requireSsl: true # defaults to false maxRequestSize: 524288 # The maximum size of requests allowed in bytes sessionLogs: consoleEnabled: false # persistentEnabled: true # consoleLogFormat: json # Defaults to "json", options are "text" or "json" # futureCallExecutionEnabled: true # Defaults to true #futureCall: # concurrencyLimit: 1 # Defaults to 1, a negative or null value removes the limit # scanInterval: 5000 # Unit in milliseconds, defaults to 5000