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rport.example.conf
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rport.example.conf
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#======================================================================================================================
# vim: softtabstop=2 shiftwidth=2 expandtab fenc=utf-8 spell spelllang=en cc=120
#======================================================================================================================
#
# FILE: rport.example.config
#
# DESCRIPTION: Configuration file for the rport client
#
# BUGS: https://github.com/realvnc-labs/rport/issues
#
# HELP: https://github.com/realvnc-labs/rport/blob/master/README.md
#
# COPYRIGHT: (c) 2020 by the CloudRadar Team,
#
# LICENSE: MIT
# ORGANIZATION: RealVNC Limited, Cambridge, United Kingdom (realvnc.com)
# CREATED: 10/10/2020
# UPDATED: 27/10/2022
#======================================================================================================================
[client]
## rportd server address.
## Mandatory IP address and port divided by a colon.
server = "0.0.0.0:8080"
## list of fallback rportd servers to which the clients tries to connect
## if the above "main" server is not reachable.
#fallback_servers = ["fallback-a.example.com:9090","fallback-b.example.com:80"]
## if connected to a fallback server, try every interval to switch back to the main server.
#server_switchback_interval = '2m'
## fingerprint string to perform host-key validation against the server's public key.
## Highly recommended. Not using it is a big security risk.
## Alternatively, can also be specified via the environment variable RPORT_FINGERPRINT.
#fingerprint = "36:98:56:12:f3:dc:e5:8d:ac:96:48:23:b6:f0:42:15"
## Required client authentication credentials in the form: "<client-auth-id>:<password>".
## Alternatively, can also be specified via the environment variable RPORT_AUTH.
auth = "clientAuth1:1234"
## An optional HTTP CONNECT or SOCKS5 proxy which will be used to reach the rport server.
## Authentication can be specified inside the URL.
#proxy = "http://admin:[email protected]:8081"
## By default rport reads /etc/machine-id (Linux) or the ComputerSystemProduct UUID (Windows)
## to get a unique id for the client identification.
## NOTE: all history for a client is stored based on this id.
use_system_id = true
## An optional hard-coded client ID to better identify the client.
## If not set, a random id will be created that changes on every client start.
## That's why it's highly recommended to set it with a value that was generated on the first
## start or just set it on the very beginning. So on client restart all his history will be preserved.
## The server rejects connections on duplicated ids.
#id = "5616a70e-81a0-4eec-bab3-0861e3c88334"
## By default rport reads the local hostname to identify the system in a human-readable way.
use_hostname = true
## Optionally you can set a hard-coded name for the client.
## Useful if you use numeric ids to make client identification easier.
#name = "my_win_vm_1"
## A list of of tags and labels to give your clients attributes maintained in a separate file.
## See https://oss.rport.io/advanced/attributes/
#attributes_file_path = "/var/lib/rport/client_attributes.(yaml|json|toml)"
#attributes_file_path = "C:\Program Files\rport\client_attributes.(yaml|json|toml)"
## Alternatively you can specify tags with the line below if {attributes_file_path} is not set.
#tags = ['win', 'server', 'vm']
## Optional remote connections tunneled through the server, each of which come in the form:
## <local-port>
## or
## <remote-port>:<local-port>
## or
## <remote-port>:<local-interface>:<local-port>
## Examples:
## 1) remotes = ['22']
## Makes the local port 22 available on a random port of the rport server.
## 2) remotes = ['2222:127.0.0.1:22'] or shorthand
## remotes = ['2222:22']
## Makes the local SSH port 22 available on port 2222 of the rport server.
## 3) remotes = ['9999:192.168.1.1:80']
## Makes the Port 80 of 192.168.1.1 available on port 9999 of the rport server.
## sharing <remote-host>:<remote-port> from the client to the server's <local-interface>:<local-port>.
## If not set, client connects without active tunnel(s) waiting for tunnels to be initialized by the server.
## Multiple remotes must be comma separated. Using linebreaks after the comma is possible.
#remotes = [
# '3389:3389',
# '5050'
#]
## By default the rport client can create tunnels to any network address.
## This way the so-called "service forwarding" can give access to entire networks.
## You can turn service forwarding off so tunnels must end on the local machine.
#tunnel_allowed = ['127.0.0.0/8']
## Alternatively to the above, you can explicitly allow which targets a tunnel is allowed to reach.
## By default, no limits are applied
## List items can be a single IP or CIDR specification allowing to reach all ports on the target
## or an IP address or a CIDR specification and a port separated by a colon.
## Using ':<PORT>' without IP address or CIDR is a shorthand for '127.0.0.0/8:<PORT>'
## Examples:
## Only RDP on localhost can be accessed
#tunnel_allowed = ['127.0.0.0/8:3389']
## Only SSH on localhost and SSH on 192.168.1.1 can be accessed.
#tunnel_allowed = [':22','192.168.1.1:22']
## Only HTTP on localhost, and RDP to any host on the 192.168.1.0/24 network, and all ports on 192.168.1.100 can be accessed.
#tunnel_allowed = [':80','192.168.1.0/24:3389','192.168.1.100']
## There is no technical requirement to run the rport client under the root user.
## Running it as root is an unnecessary security risk.
## Rport exits with an error if started as root unless you explicitly allow it.
## Defaults to false, ignored on Windows.
#allow_root = false
## Supervision and reporting of the pending updates (patch level)
## Rport can constantly summarize pending updates and
## make that summary available on the rport server.
## On Debian/Ubuntu and SuSE Linux sudo rules are needed.
## https://oss.rport.io/advanced/supervising-update-status/
## How often after the rport client has started pending updates are summarized
## Set 0 to disable.
## Supported time units: h (hours), m (minutes)
## Default: updates_interval = '4h'
#updates_interval = '4h'
## An optional param to define a local directory path to store internal data.
## By default, "/var/lib/rport" is used on Linux or 'C:\Program Files\rport' on Windows.
## On Linux you must create this directory because an unprivileged user
## don't have the right to create a directory in /var/lib.
## Ideally this directory is the homedir of the rport user and has been created along with the user.
## Example: useradd -r -d /var/lib/rport -m -s /bin/false -U -c "System user for rport client and server" rport
#data_dir = "/var/lib/rport"
## An optional param specifying the local interface to be used for connecting to the server.
#bind_interface = "eth0"
## Determine the clients' external ipv4 and ipv6 addresses by fetching an API.
## See https://oss.rport.io/advanced/ip-address-determination/
#ip_api_url = "https://myip.rport.io"
## How often (in minutes) to refresh external IP addresses, default 30
#ip_refresh_min = 30
[connection]
## An optional keepalive interval. The client will send ping request at this interval.
## You must specify a time with a unit, for example '30s' or '2m'.
## Defaults to '3m', '0s' = disabled
#keep_alive = '3m'
## Timout for the above keep_alive after which the connections is considered disconnected.
## You must specify a time with a unit, for example '30s' or '2m'.
## Defaults to '30s'
#keep_alive_timeout = '30s'
## Maximum number of times to retry before exiting. Defaults to unlimited (-1)
#max_retry_count = 10
## Maximum wait time before retrying after a disconnection. Defaults to 5 minutes
#max_retry_interval = '5m'
## Write a state file to {data_dir}/state.json that can be evaluated by external watchdog implementations.
## On Linux this also enables the systemd watchdog integration by using the systemd notify socket.
## Requires max_retry_count = -1 and keep_alive > 0
## Read more https://oss.rport.io/advanced/watchdog-integration/
## Disabled by default.
#watchdog_integration = false
## Optionally set the 'Host' header. Defaults to the host found in the server url
#hostname = "myvm1.lan"
## Other custom headers in the form "HeaderName: HeaderContent"
#headers = ['User-Agent: test1', 'Authorization: Basic XXXXXX']
[logging]
## Specifies log file path for global logging.
## Not setting "log_file" turns logging off.
#log_file = 'C:\Program Files\rport\rport.log'
log_file = "/var/log/rport/rport.log"
## Specify log level. Values: 'error', 'info', 'debug'.
## Defaults to 'info'
#log_level = "info"
[remote-commands]
## Enable or disable execution of remote commands sent by server.
## Defaults: true
#enabled = true
## Limit the maximum length of the command or script output that is sent back to server.
## Applies to the stdout and stderr separately.
## If exceeded {send_back_limit} bytes are sent.
## Defaults: 4M
#send_back_limit = 4194304
## Allow commands matching the following regular expressions.
## The filter is applied to the command sent. Full path must be used.
## See {order} parameter for more details how it's applied together with {deny}.
## Defaults: ['^/usr/bin/.*','^/usr/local/bin/.*','^C:\\Windows\\System32\\.*']
#allow = ['^/usr/bin/.*','^/usr/local/bin/.*','^C:\\Windows\\System32\\.*']
## Deny commands matching one of the following regular expressions.
## The filter is applied to the command sent. Full path must be used.
## See {order} parameter for more details how it's applied together with {allow}.
## With the below default filter only single commands are allowed.
## Defaults: ['(\||<|>|;|,|\n|&)']
#deny = ['(\||<|>|;|,|\n|&)']
## Order: ['allow','deny'] or ['deny','allow']. Order of which filter is applied first.
## Defaults: ['allow','deny']
##
## order: ['allow','deny']
## First, all allow directives are evaluated; at least one must match, or the command is rejected.
## Next, all deny directives are evaluated. If any matches, the command is rejected.
## Last, any commands which do not match an allow or a deny directive are denied by default.
## Example:
## allow: ['^/usr/bin/.*']
## deny: ['^/usr/bin/zip']
## All commands in /usr/bin except '/usr/bin/zip' can be executed. Full path must be used.
##
## order: ['deny','allow']
## First, all deny directives are evaluated; if any match,
## the command is denied UNLESS it also matches an allow directive.
## Any command which do not match any allow or deny directives are permitted.
## Example:
## deny: ['.*']
## allow: ['zip$']
## All commands are denied except those ending in zip.
##
#order = ['allow','deny']
[remote-scripts]
## Enable or disable execution of remote scripts sent by server.
## Defaults: false
#enabled = false
[monitoring]
## The rport client can collect and report performance data of the operating system.
## https://oss.rport.io/advanced/monitoring/
## Monitoring is enabled by default
enabled = true
## How often (seconds) monitoring data should be collected.
## A value below 60 seconds will be overwritten by the hard-coded default of 60 seconds.
#interval = 60
## RPort monitors the fill level of almost all volumes or mount points.
## Change the below defaults to include or exclude volumes or mount points from the monitoring.
#fs_type_include = ['ext3','ext4','xfs','jfs','ntfs','btrfs','hfs','apfs','exfat','smbfs','nfs']
## List of excluded mount points or device letters
## Example:
# fs_path_exclude = ['/mnt/*','h:']
#fs_path_exclude = []
## Having fs_path_exclude_recurse = false the specified path
## must match a mountpoint or it will be ignored
## Having fs_path_exclude_recurse = true the specified path
## can be any folder and all mountpoints underneath will be excluded
#fs_path_exclude_recurse = false
## To avoid monitoring of so-called mount binds,
## mount points are identified by the path and device name.
## Mountpoints pointing to the same device are ignored.
## What appears first in /proc/self/mountinfo is considered as the original.
## Applies only to Linux
#fs_identify_mountpoints_by_device = true
## RPort monitors all running processes
## Process monitoring is enabled by default
pm_enabled = true
## Monitor kernel tasks identified by process group 0
#pm_enable_kerneltask_monitoring = true
## The process list is sorted by PID descending. Only the top N processes are monitored.
#pm_max_number_monitored_processes = 500
## Monitor the bandwidth usage of the following maximum two network cards:
## 'net_lan' and 'net_wan'.
## You must specify the device name and the maximum speed in Megabits.
## On Windows use 'Get-Netadapter' to discover adapter names.
## Examples:
## net_lan = [ 'eth0' , '1000' ]
## net_wan = ['Ethernet0', '1000']
#net_lan = ['', '1000']
#net_wan = ['', '1000']
[interpreter-aliases]
## For fast and unified script execution with different interpreters and shells,
## you can specify aliases. Instead of providing the full path to the shell,
## sending the alias is sufficient.
## https://oss.rport.io/get-started/scripts/#customizing-an-interpreter
## Optionally you can also specify input and output encoding.
## If only one encoding is specified it will be used for both input and output.
## Examples:
# pwsh7 = 'C:\Program Files\PowerShell\7\pwsh.exe'
# pwsh7enc = ['C:\Program Files\PowerShell\7\pwsh.exe', 'windows-1252', 'cp437']
# bash = 'C:\Program Files\Git\bin\bash.exe'
[file-reception]
## Receive files pushed by the server, enabled by default
# enabled = true
## The rport client will reject writing files to any of the following folders and its sub folders.
## https://oss.rport.io/advanced/file-reception/
## Wildcards (glob) are supported.
## Linux defaults
# protected = ['/bin', '/sbin', '/boot', '/usr/bin', '/usr/sbin', '/dev', '/lib*', '/run']
## Windows defaults
# protected = ['C:\Windows\', 'C:\ProgramData']