--- title: "Files" description: "Using the YAML File Configuration Method." summary: "Authelia can be configured via files. This section describes utilizing this method." date: 2022-06-15T17:51:47+10:00 draft: false images: [] weight: 101200 toc: true seo: title: "" # custom title (optional) description: "" # custom description (recommended) canonical: "" # custom canonical URL (optional) noindex: false # false (default) or true --- ## Loading behavior and Discovery There are several options which affect the loading of files: | Name | Argument | Environment Variable | Description | |:------------------------:|:-------------------------------:|:---------------------------:|:----------------------------------------------------------------------------------:| | Files/Directories | `--config`, `-c` | `X_AUTHELIA_CONFIG` | A list of file or directory (non-recursive) paths to load configuration files from | | [Filters](#file-filters) | `--config.experimental.filters` | `X_AUTHELIA_CONFIG_FILTERS` | A list of filters applied to every file from the Files or Directories options | {{< callout context="note" title="Note" icon="outline/info-circle" >}} When specifying directories and files, the individual files specified must not be within any of the directories specified. {{< /callout >}} Configuration options can be discovered via either the Argument or Environment Variable, but not both at the same time. If both are specified the Argument takes precedence and the Environment Variable is ignored. It is generally recommended that if you're using a container that you use the Environment Variable as this will allow you to execute other commands from the context of the container more easily. ## Formats The only supported configuration file format is [YAML](#yaml). It's important that you sufficiently validate your configuration file. While we produce console errors for users in many misconfiguration scenarios it's not perfect. Each file type has recommended methods for validation. ### YAML *Authelia* loads `configuration.yml` as the configuration if you just run it. You can override this behavior with the following syntax: {{< envTabs "Validate Configuration" >}} {{< envTab "Docker" >}} ```bash docker run authelia/authelia:latest authelia --config config.custom.yml ``` {{< /envTab >}} {{< envTab "Bare-Metal" >}} ```bash authelia --config config.custom.yml ``` {{< /envTab >}} {{< /envTabs >}} #### YAML Validation We recommend utilizing [VSCodium](https://vscodium.com/) or [VSCode](https://code.visualstudio.com/), both with the [YAML Extension](https://open-vsx.org/extension/redhat/vscode-yaml) by RedHat to validate this file type. This extension allows validation of the format and schema of a YAML file. To facilitate schema validation we publish a set of JSON schemas which you can include as a special comment in order to validate the YAML file further. See the [JSON Schema reference guide](../../reference/guides/schemas.md#json-schema) for more information including instructions on how to utilize the schemas. ## Multiple Configuration Files You can have multiple configuration files which will be merged in the order specified. If duplicate keys are specified the last one to be specified is the one that takes precedence. Example: {{< envTabs "Run With Multiple Configurations" >}} {{< envTab "Docker" >}} ```bash docker run -d authelia/authelia:latest authelia --config configuration.yml --config config-acl.yml --config config-other.yml ``` ```bash docker run -d authelia/authelia:latest authelia --config configuration.yml,config-acl.yml,config-other.yml ``` {{< /envTab >}} {{< envTab "Bare-Metal" >}} ```bash authelia --config configuration.yml --config config-acl.yml --config config-other.yml ``` ```bash authelia --config configuration.yml,config-acl.yml,config-other.yml ``` {{< /envTab >}} {{< /envTabs >}} Authelia's configuration files use the YAML format. A template with all possible options can be found at the root of the repository {{< github-link name="here" path="config.template.yml" >}}. {{< callout context="caution" title="Important Note" icon="outline/alert-triangle" >}} You should not have configuration sections such as Access Control Rules or OpenID Connect 1.0 clients configured in multiple files. If you wish to split these into their own files that is fine, but if you have two files that specify these sections and expect them to merge properly you are asking for trouble. {{< /callout >}} ### Container By default, the container looks for a configuration file at `/config/configuration.yml`. ### Docker This is an example of how to override the configuration files loaded in docker: ```bash docker run -d --volume /path/to/config:/config authelia:authelia:latest authelia --config=/config/configuration.yml --config=/config/configuration.acl.yml ``` See the [Docker Documentation](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/run/) for more information on the `docker run` command. ### Docker Compose An excerpt from a docker compose that allows you to specify multiple configuration files is as follows: ```yaml {title="compose.yml"} services: authelia: container_name: '{{< sitevar name="host" nojs="authelia" >}}' image: 'authelia/authelia:latest' command: - 'authelia' - '--config=/config/configuration.yml' - '--config=/config/configuration.acl.yml' ``` See the [compose file reference](https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v3/#command) for more information. ### Kubernetes An excerpt from a Kubernetes container that allows you to specify multiple configuration files is as follows: ```yaml {title="deployment.yml"} kind: Deployment apiVersion: apps/v1 metadata: name: authelia namespace: authelia labels: app.kubernetes.io/instance: authelia app.kubernetes.io/name: authelia spec: replicas: 1 selector: matchLabels: app.kubernetes.io/instance: authelia app.kubernetes.io/name: authelia template: metadata: labels: app.kubernetes.io/instance: authelia app.kubernetes.io/name: authelia spec: enableServiceLinks: false containers: - name: authelia image: docker.io/authelia/authelia:latest command: - authelia args: - '--config=/configuration.yml' - '--config=/configuration.acl.yml' ``` See the Kubernetes [workloads documentation](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/#pod-templates) or the [Container API docs](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/v1.23/#container-v1-core) for more information. ## File Filters File filters exist which allow modification of all configuration files after reading them from the filesystem but before parsing their content. Unless explicitly specified these filters are _**NOT**_ covered by our [Standard Versioning Policy](../../policies/versioning.md) and There __*WILL*__ be a point where: - The name of the CLI argument will change (we suggest using the environment variable which will not) - The `expand-env` filter will be removed as it's deprecated The filters are configured as a list of filter names by the `--config.experimental.filters` CLI argument and `X_AUTHELIA_CONFIG_FILTERS` environment variable. We recommend using the environment variable as it ensures commands executed from the container use the same filters and it's likely to be a permanent value whereas the argument will likely change. If both the CLI argument and environment variable are used the environment variable is completely ignored. Filters can either be used on their own, in combination, or not at all. The filters are processed in order as they are defined. You can preview the output of the YAML files when processed via the filters using the [authelia config template](../../reference/cli/authelia/authelia_config_template.md) command. {{< callout context="caution" title="Important Note" icon="outline/alert-triangle" >}} The filters are applied in order and thus if the output of one filter outputs a string that contains syntax for a subsequent filter it will be filtered. It is therefore suggested the template filter is the only filter and if it isn't that it's last. {{< /callout >}} Examples: {{< envTabs "Filters By Argument" >}} {{< envTab "Docker" >}} ```bash docker run -d authelia/authelia:latest authelia --config /config/configuration.yml --config.experimental.filters template ``` {{< /envTab >}} {{< envTab "Bare-Metal" >}} ```bash authelia --config /config/configuration.yml --config.experimental.filters template ``` {{< /envTab >}} {{< /envTabs >}} {{< envTabs "Filters By Environment" >}} {{< envTab "Docker" >}} ```bash docker run -d -e X_AUTHELIA_CONFIG_FILTERS=template -e X_AUTHELIA_CONFIG=/config/configuration.yml authelia/authelia:latest authelia ``` {{< /envTab >}} {{< envTab "Bare-Metal" >}} ```bash X_AUTHELIA_CONFIG_FILTERS=template X_AUTHELIA_CONFIG=/config/configuration.yml authelia ``` {{< /envTab >}} {{< /envTabs >}} ### Go Template Filter The name used to enable this filter is `template`. This filter is considered stable. This filter uses the [Go template engine](https://pkg.go.dev/text/template) to render the configuration files. It uses similar syntax to Jinja2 templates with different function names. Comprehensive examples are beyond what we support and people wishing to use this should consult the official [Go template engine](https://pkg.go.dev/text/template) documentation for syntax instructions. We also log the generated output at each filter stage as a base64 string when trace logging is enabled. #### Functions In addition to the standard builtin functions we support several other functions which should operate similar. See the [Templating Reference Guide](../../reference/guides/templating.md) for more information. ### Expand Environment Variable Filter {{< callout context="caution" title="Important Note" icon="outline/alert-triangle" >}} The Expand Environment Variable filter (i.e. `expand-env`) is officially deprecated. It will be removed in v4.40.0 and will result in a startup error. This removal is done based on the experimental introduction of this feature and our [Versioning Policy](../../policies/versioning.md). The removal decision was made due to the fact the [Go Template Filter](#go-template-filter) can effectively do everything this filter can do without the [Known Limitations](#known-limitations) which should be read carefully before usage of this filter. {{< /callout >}} The name used to enable this filter is `expand-env`. This filter is the most common filter type used by many other applications. It is similar to using `envsubst` where it replaces a string like `$EXAMPLE` or `${EXAMPLE}` with the value of the `EXAMPLE` environment variable. This filter utilizes [os.ExpandEnv](https://pkg.go.dev/os#ExpandEnv) but does not include any environment variables that look like they're an Authelia secret. This filter is very limited in what we can achieve, and there are known limitations with this filter which may not be possible for us to work around. We discourage it's usage as the `template` is much more robust and we have a lot more freedom to make adjustments to this filter compared to the `expand-env` filter. #### Known Limitations The following known limitations exist with the Expand Environment Variable Filter. - Has no inbuilt way to handle escaping a `$` so treats all `$` values as an expansion value. This can be escaped using `$$` as an indication that it should be a `$` literal. However this functionality likely will not work under all circumstances and is not guaranteed.