# Configuration file for jupyterhub. #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # Application(SingletonConfigurable) configuration #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ## This is an application. ## The date format used by logging formatters for %(asctime)s #c.Application.log_datefmt = '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S' ## The Logging format template #c.Application.log_format = '[%(name)s]%(highlevel)s %(message)s' ## Set the log level by value or name. #c.Application.log_level = 30 #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # JupyterHub(Application) configuration #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ## An Application for starting a Multi-User Jupyter Notebook server. ## Maximum number of concurrent servers that can be active at a time. # # Setting this can limit the total resources your users can consume. # # An active server is any server that's not fully stopped. It is considered # active from the time it has been requested until the time that it has # completely stopped. # # If this many user servers are active, users will not be able to launch new # servers until a server is shutdown. Spawn requests will be rejected with a 429 # error asking them to try again. # # If set to 0, no limit is enforced. #c.JupyterHub.active_server_limit = 0 ## Duration (in seconds) to determine the number of active users. #c.JupyterHub.active_user_window = 1800 ## Grant admin users permission to access single-user servers. # # Users should be properly informed if this is enabled. #c.JupyterHub.admin_access = False ## DEPRECATED since version 0.7.2, use Authenticator.admin_users instead. #c.JupyterHub.admin_users = set() ## Allow named single-user servers per user #c.JupyterHub.allow_named_servers = False ## Answer yes to any questions (e.g. confirm overwrite) #c.JupyterHub.answer_yes = False ## PENDING DEPRECATION: consider using service_tokens # # Dict of token:username to be loaded into the database. # # Allows ahead-of-time generation of API tokens for use by externally managed # services, which authenticate as JupyterHub users. # # Consider using service_tokens for general services that talk to the JupyterHub # API. #c.JupyterHub.api_tokens = {} ## Class for authenticating users. # # This should be a class with the following form: # # - constructor takes one kwarg: `config`, the IPython config object. # # with an authenticate method that: # # - is a coroutine (asyncio or tornado) # - returns username on success, None on failure # - takes two arguments: (handler, data), # where `handler` is the calling web.RequestHandler, # and `data` is the POST form data from the login page. #c.JupyterHub.authenticator_class = 'jupyterhub.auth.PAMAuthenticator' c.JupyterHub.authenticator_class = 'ldapauthenticator.LDAPAuthenticator' ## The base URL of the entire application. # # Add this to the beginning of all JupyterHub URLs. Use base_url to run # JupyterHub within an existing website. # # .. deprecated: 0.9 # Use JupyterHub.bind_url #c.JupyterHub.base_url = '/' ## The public facing URL of the whole JupyterHub application. # # This is the address on which the proxy will bind. Sets protocol, ip, base_url c.JupyterHub.bind_url = '__URL__:__PORT__/__PATH__' ## Whether to shutdown the proxy when the Hub shuts down. # # Disable if you want to be able to teardown the Hub while leaving the proxy # running. # # Only valid if the proxy was starting by the Hub process. # # If both this and cleanup_servers are False, sending SIGINT to the Hub will # only shutdown the Hub, leaving everything else running. # # The Hub should be able to resume from database state. #c.JupyterHub.cleanup_proxy = True ## Whether to shutdown single-user servers when the Hub shuts down. # # Disable if you want to be able to teardown the Hub while leaving the single- # user servers running. # # If both this and cleanup_proxy are False, sending SIGINT to the Hub will only # shutdown the Hub, leaving everything else running. # # The Hub should be able to resume from database state. #c.JupyterHub.cleanup_servers = True ## Maximum number of concurrent users that can be spawning at a time. # # Spawning lots of servers at the same time can cause performance problems for # the Hub or the underlying spawning system. Set this limit to prevent bursts of # logins from attempting to spawn too many servers at the same time. # # This does not limit the number of total running servers. See # active_server_limit for that. # # If more than this many users attempt to spawn at a time, their requests will # be rejected with a 429 error asking them to try again. Users will have to wait # for some of the spawning services to finish starting before they can start # their own. # # If set to 0, no limit is enforced. #c.JupyterHub.concurrent_spawn_limit = 100 ## The config file to load #c.JupyterHub.config_file = 'jupyterhub_config.py' ## DEPRECATED: does nothing #c.JupyterHub.confirm_no_ssl = False ## Number of days for a login cookie to be valid. Default is two weeks. #c.JupyterHub.cookie_max_age_days = 14 ## The cookie secret to use to encrypt cookies. # # Loaded from the JPY_COOKIE_SECRET env variable by default. # # Should be exactly 256 bits (32 bytes). #c.JupyterHub.cookie_secret = b'' ## File in which to store the cookie secret. #c.JupyterHub.cookie_secret_file = 'jupyterhub_cookie_secret' ## The location of jupyterhub data files (e.g. /usr/local/share/jupyterhub) #c.JupyterHub.data_files_path = '/usr/local/share/jupyterhub' ## Include any kwargs to pass to the database connection. See # sqlalchemy.create_engine for details. #c.JupyterHub.db_kwargs = {} ## url for the database. e.g. `sqlite:///jupyterhub.sqlite` #c.JupyterHub.db_url = 'sqlite:///jupyterhub.sqlite' ## log all database transactions. This has A LOT of output #c.JupyterHub.debug_db = False ## DEPRECATED since version 0.8: Use ConfigurableHTTPProxy.debug #c.JupyterHub.debug_proxy = False ## The default URL for users when they arrive (e.g. when user directs to "/") # # By default, redirects users to their own server. #c.JupyterHub.default_url = '' ## Register extra tornado Handlers for jupyterhub. # # Should be of the form ``("", Handler)`` # # The Hub prefix will be added, so `/my-page` will be served at `/hub/my-page`. #c.JupyterHub.extra_handlers = [] ## DEPRECATED: use output redirection instead, e.g. # # jupyterhub &>> /var/log/jupyterhub.log #c.JupyterHub.extra_log_file = '' ## Extra log handlers to set on JupyterHub logger #c.JupyterHub.extra_log_handlers = [] ## Generate default config file #c.JupyterHub.generate_config = False ## The URL on which the Hub will listen. This is a private URL for internal # communication. Typically set in combination with hub_connect_url. If a unix # socket, hub_connect_url **must** also be set. # # For example: # # "http://127.0.0.1:8081" # "unix+http://%2Fsrv%2Fjupyterhub%2Fjupyterhub.sock" # # .. versionadded:: 0.9 #c.JupyterHub.hub_bind_url = '' ## The ip or hostname for proxies and spawners to use for connecting to the Hub. # # Use when the bind address (`hub_ip`) is 0.0.0.0 or otherwise different from # the connect address. # # Default: when `hub_ip` is 0.0.0.0, use `socket.gethostname()`, otherwise use # `hub_ip`. # # Note: Some spawners or proxy implementations might not support hostnames. # Check your spawner or proxy documentation to see if they have extra # requirements. # # .. versionadded:: 0.8 #c.JupyterHub.hub_connect_ip = '' ## DEPRECATED # # Use hub_connect_url # # .. versionadded:: 0.8 # # .. deprecated:: 0.9 # Use hub_connect_url #c.JupyterHub.hub_connect_port = 0 ## The URL for connecting to the Hub. Spawners, services, and the proxy will use # this URL to talk to the Hub. # # Only needs to be specified if the default hub URL is not connectable (e.g. # using a unix+http:// bind url). # # .. seealso:: # JupyterHub.hub_connect_ip # JupyterHub.hub_bind_url # # .. versionadded:: 0.9 #c.JupyterHub.hub_connect_url = '' ## The ip address for the Hub process to *bind* to. # # By default, the hub listens on localhost only. This address must be accessible # from the proxy and user servers. You may need to set this to a public ip or '' # for all interfaces if the proxy or user servers are in containers or on a # different host. # # See `hub_connect_ip` for cases where the bind and connect address should # differ, or `hub_bind_url` for setting the full bind URL. #c.JupyterHub.hub_ip = '0.0.0.0' ## The internal port for the Hub process. # # This is the internal port of the hub itself. It should never be accessed # directly. See JupyterHub.port for the public port to use when accessing # jupyterhub. It is rare that this port should be set except in cases of port # conflict. # # See also `hub_ip` for the ip and `hub_bind_url` for setting the full bind URL. #c.JupyterHub.hub_port = 80 ## The public facing ip of the whole JupyterHub application (specifically # referred to as the proxy). # # This is the address on which the proxy will listen. The default is to listen # on all interfaces. This is the only address through which JupyterHub should be # accessed by users. # # .. deprecated: 0.9 # Use JupyterHub.bind_url #c.JupyterHub.ip = '0.0.0.0' ## Supply extra arguments that will be passed to Jinja environment. #c.JupyterHub.jinja_environment_options = {} ## Interval (in seconds) at which to update last-activity timestamps. #c.JupyterHub.last_activity_interval = 300 ## Dict of 'group': ['usernames'] to load at startup. # # This strictly *adds* groups and users to groups. # # Loading one set of groups, then starting JupyterHub again with a different set # will not remove users or groups from previous launches. That must be done # through the API. #c.JupyterHub.load_groups = {} ## Specify path to a logo image to override the Jupyter logo in the banner. #c.JupyterHub.logo_file = '' ## File to write PID Useful for daemonizing JupyterHub. #c.JupyterHub.pid_file = '' ## The public facing port of the proxy. # # This is the port on which the proxy will listen. This is the only port through # which JupyterHub should be accessed by users. # # .. deprecated: 0.9 # Use JupyterHub.bind_url #c.JupyterHub.port = 80 ## DEPRECATED since version 0.8 : Use ConfigurableHTTPProxy.api_url #c.JupyterHub.proxy_api_ip = '' ## DEPRECATED since version 0.8 : Use ConfigurableHTTPProxy.api_url #c.JupyterHub.proxy_api_port = 0 ## DEPRECATED since version 0.8: Use ConfigurableHTTPProxy.auth_token #c.JupyterHub.proxy_auth_token = '' ## Interval (in seconds) at which to check if the proxy is running. #c.JupyterHub.proxy_check_interval = 30 ## Select the Proxy API implementation. #c.JupyterHub.proxy_class = 'jupyterhub.proxy.ConfigurableHTTPProxy' ## DEPRECATED since version 0.8. Use ConfigurableHTTPProxy.command #c.JupyterHub.proxy_cmd = [] ## Redirect user to server (if running), instead of control panel. #c.JupyterHub.redirect_to_server = True ## Purge and reset the database. #c.JupyterHub.reset_db = False ## Interval (in seconds) at which to check connectivity of services with web # endpoints. #c.JupyterHub.service_check_interval = 60 ## Dict of token:servicename to be loaded into the database. # # Allows ahead-of-time generation of API tokens for use by externally managed # services. #c.JupyterHub.service_tokens = {} ## List of service specification dictionaries. # # A service # # For instance:: # # services = [ # { # 'name': 'cull_idle', # 'command': ['/path/to/cull_idle_servers.py'], # }, # { # 'name': 'formgrader', # 'url': 'http://127.0.0.1:1234', # 'api_token': 'super-secret', # 'environment': # } # ] #c.JupyterHub.services = [] ## The class to use for spawning single-user servers. # # Should be a subclass of Spawner. #c.JupyterHub.spawner_class = 'jupyterhub.spawner.LocalProcessSpawner' ## Path to SSL certificate file for the public facing interface of the proxy # # When setting this, you should also set ssl_key #c.JupyterHub.ssl_cert = '' ## Path to SSL key file for the public facing interface of the proxy # # When setting this, you should also set ssl_cert #c.JupyterHub.ssl_key = '' ## Host to send statsd metrics to. An empty string (the default) disables sending # metrics. #c.JupyterHub.statsd_host = '' ## Port on which to send statsd metrics about the hub #c.JupyterHub.statsd_port = 8125 ## Prefix to use for all metrics sent by jupyterhub to statsd #c.JupyterHub.statsd_prefix = 'jupyterhub' ## Run single-user servers on subdomains of this host. # # This should be the full `https://hub.domain.tld[:port]`. # # Provides additional cross-site protections for javascript served by single- # user servers. # # Requires `.hub.domain.tld` to resolve to the same host as # `hub.domain.tld`. # # In general, this is most easily achieved with wildcard DNS. # # When using SSL (i.e. always) this also requires a wildcard SSL certificate. #c.JupyterHub.subdomain_host = '' ## Paths to search for jinja templates, before using the default templates. #c.JupyterHub.template_paths = [] ## Extra variables to be passed into jinja templates #c.JupyterHub.template_vars = {} ## Extra settings overrides to pass to the tornado application. #c.JupyterHub.tornado_settings = {} ## Trust user-provided tokens (via JupyterHub.service_tokens) to have good # entropy. # # If you are not inserting additional tokens via configuration file, this flag # has no effect. # # In JupyterHub 0.8, internally generated tokens do not pass through additional # hashing because the hashing is costly and does not increase the entropy of # already-good UUIDs. # # User-provided tokens, on the other hand, are not trusted to have good entropy # by default, and are passed through many rounds of hashing to stretch the # entropy of the key (i.e. user-provided tokens are treated as passwords instead # of random keys). These keys are more costly to check. # # If your inserted tokens are generated by a good-quality mechanism, e.g. # `openssl rand -hex 32`, then you can set this flag to True to reduce the cost # of checking authentication tokens. #c.JupyterHub.trust_user_provided_tokens = False ## Upgrade the database automatically on start. # # Only safe if database is regularly backed up. Only SQLite databases will be # backed up to a local file automatically. #c.JupyterHub.upgrade_db = False #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # Spawner(LoggingConfigurable) configuration #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ## Base class for spawning single-user notebook servers. # # Subclass this, and override the following methods: # # - load_state - get_state - start - stop - poll # # As JupyterHub supports multiple users, an instance of the Spawner subclass is # created for each user. If there are 20 JupyterHub users, there will be 20 # instances of the subclass. ## Extra arguments to be passed to the single-user server. # # Some spawners allow shell-style expansion here, allowing you to use # environment variables here. Most, including the default, do not. Consult the # documentation for your spawner to verify! #c.Spawner.args = [] ## The command used for starting the single-user server. # # Provide either a string or a list containing the path to the startup script # command. Extra arguments, other than this path, should be provided via `args`. # # This is usually set if you want to start the single-user server in a different # python environment (with virtualenv/conda) than JupyterHub itself. # # Some spawners allow shell-style expansion here, allowing you to use # environment variables. Most, including the default, do not. Consult the # documentation for your spawner to verify! c.Spawner.cmd = ['jupyter-labhub'] ## Maximum number of consecutive failures to allow before shutting down # JupyterHub. # # This helps JupyterHub recover from a certain class of problem preventing # launch in contexts where the Hub is automatically restarted (e.g. systemd, # docker, kubernetes). # # A limit of 0 means no limit and consecutive failures will not be tracked. #c.Spawner.consecutive_failure_limit = 0 ## Minimum number of cpu-cores a single-user notebook server is guaranteed to # have available. # # If this value is set to 0.5, allows use of 50% of one CPU. If this value is # set to 2, allows use of up to 2 CPUs. # # **This is a configuration setting. Your spawner must implement support for the # limit to work.** The default spawner, `LocalProcessSpawner`, does **not** # implement this support. A custom spawner **must** add support for this setting # for it to be enforced. #c.Spawner.cpu_guarantee = None ## Maximum number of cpu-cores a single-user notebook server is allowed to use. # # If this value is set to 0.5, allows use of 50% of one CPU. If this value is # set to 2, allows use of up to 2 CPUs. # # The single-user notebook server will never be scheduled by the kernel to use # more cpu-cores than this. There is no guarantee that it can access this many # cpu-cores. # # **This is a configuration setting. Your spawner must implement support for the # limit to work.** The default spawner, `LocalProcessSpawner`, does **not** # implement this support. A custom spawner **must** add support for this setting # for it to be enforced. #c.Spawner.cpu_limit = None ## Enable debug-logging of the single-user server #c.Spawner.debug = False ## The URL the single-user server should start in. # # `{username}` will be expanded to the user's username # # Example uses: # # - You can set `notebook_dir` to `/` and `default_url` to `/tree/home/{username}` to allow people to # navigate the whole filesystem from their notebook server, but still start in their home directory. # - Start with `/notebooks` instead of `/tree` if `default_url` points to a notebook instead of a directory. # - You can set this to `/lab` to have JupyterLab start by default, rather than Jupyter Notebook. #c.Spawner.default_url = '/user/%U/lab' ## Disable per-user configuration of single-user servers. # # When starting the user's single-user server, any config file found in the # user's $HOME directory will be ignored. # # Note: a user could circumvent this if the user modifies their Python # environment, such as when they have their own conda environments / virtualenvs # / containers. #c.Spawner.disable_user_config = False ## Whitelist of environment variables for the single-user server to inherit from # the JupyterHub process. # # This whitelist is used to ensure that sensitive information in the JupyterHub # process's environment (such as `CONFIGPROXY_AUTH_TOKEN`) is not passed to the # single-user server's process. #c.Spawner.env_keep = ['PATH', 'PYTHONPATH', 'CONDA_ROOT', 'CONDA_DEFAULT_ENV', 'VIRTUAL_ENV', 'LANG', 'LC_ALL'] ## Extra environment variables to set for the single-user server's process. # # Environment variables that end up in the single-user server's process come from 3 sources: # - This `environment` configurable # - The JupyterHub process' environment variables that are whitelisted in `env_keep` # - Variables to establish contact between the single-user notebook and the hub (such as JUPYTERHUB_API_TOKEN) # # The `environment` configurable should be set by JupyterHub administrators to # add installation specific environment variables. It is a dict where the key is # the name of the environment variable, and the value can be a string or a # callable. If it is a callable, it will be called with one parameter (the # spawner instance), and should return a string fairly quickly (no blocking # operations please!). # # Note that the spawner class' interface is not guaranteed to be exactly same # across upgrades, so if you are using the callable take care to verify it # continues to work after upgrades! #c.Spawner.environment = {} ## Timeout (in seconds) before giving up on a spawned HTTP server # # Once a server has successfully been spawned, this is the amount of time we # wait before assuming that the server is unable to accept connections. #c.Spawner.http_timeout = 30 ## The IP address (or hostname) the single-user server should listen on. # # The JupyterHub proxy implementation should be able to send packets to this # interface. #c.Spawner.ip = '' ## Minimum number of bytes a single-user notebook server is guaranteed to have # available. # # Allows the following suffixes: # - K -> Kilobytes # - M -> Megabytes # - G -> Gigabytes # - T -> Terabytes # # **This is a configuration setting. Your spawner must implement support for the # limit to work.** The default spawner, `LocalProcessSpawner`, does **not** # implement this support. A custom spawner **must** add support for this setting # for it to be enforced. #c.Spawner.mem_guarantee = None ## Maximum number of bytes a single-user notebook server is allowed to use. # # Allows the following suffixes: # - K -> Kilobytes # - M -> Megabytes # - G -> Gigabytes # - T -> Terabytes # # If the single user server tries to allocate more memory than this, it will # fail. There is no guarantee that the single-user notebook server will be able # to allocate this much memory - only that it can not allocate more than this. # # **This is a configuration setting. Your spawner must implement support for the # limit to work.** The default spawner, `LocalProcessSpawner`, does **not** # implement this support. A custom spawner **must** add support for this setting # for it to be enforced. #c.Spawner.mem_limit = None ## Path to the notebook directory for the single-user server. # # The user sees a file listing of this directory when the notebook interface is # started. The current interface does not easily allow browsing beyond the # subdirectories in this directory's tree. # # `~` will be expanded to the home directory of the user, and {username} will be # replaced with the name of the user. # # Note that this does *not* prevent users from accessing files outside of this # path! They can do so with many other means. c.Spawner.notebook_dir = '~/' ## An HTML form for options a user can specify on launching their server. # # The surrounding `
` element and the submit button are already provided. # # For example: # # .. code:: html # # Set your key: # #
# Choose a letter: # # # The data from this form submission will be passed on to your spawner in # `self.user_options` # # Instead of a form snippet string, this could also be a callable that takes as # one parameter the current spawner instance and returns a string. The callable # will be called asynchronously if it returns a future, rather than a str. Note # that the interface of the spawner class is not deemed stable across versions, # so using this functionality might cause your JupyterHub upgrades to break. #c.Spawner.options_form = traitlets.Undefined ## Interval (in seconds) on which to poll the spawner for single-user server's # status. # # At every poll interval, each spawner's `.poll` method is called, which checks # if the single-user server is still running. If it isn't running, then # JupyterHub modifies its own state accordingly and removes appropriate routes # from the configurable proxy. #c.Spawner.poll_interval = 30 ## The port for single-user servers to listen on. # # Defaults to `0`, which uses a randomly allocated port number each time. # # If set to a non-zero value, all Spawners will use the same port, which only # makes sense if each server is on a different address, e.g. in containers. # # New in version 0.7. #c.Spawner.port = 0 ## An optional hook function that you can implement to do work after the spawner # stops. # # This can be set independent of any concrete spawner implementation. #c.Spawner.post_stop_hook = None ## An optional hook function that you can implement to do some bootstrapping work # before the spawner starts. For example, create a directory for your user or # load initial content. # # This can be set independent of any concrete spawner implementation. # # Example:: # # from subprocess import check_call # def my_hook(spawner): # username = spawner.user.name # check_call(['./examples/bootstrap-script/bootstrap.sh', username]) # # c.Spawner.pre_spawn_hook = my_hook #c.Spawner.pre_spawn_hook = None ## Timeout (in seconds) before giving up on starting of single-user server. # # This is the timeout for start to return, not the timeout for the server to # respond. Callers of spawner.start will assume that startup has failed if it # takes longer than this. start should return when the server process is started # and its location is known. #c.Spawner.start_timeout = 60 #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # LocalProcessSpawner(Spawner) configuration #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ## A Spawner that uses `subprocess.Popen` to start single-user servers as local # processes. # # Requires local UNIX users matching the authenticated users to exist. Does not # work on Windows. # # This is the default spawner for JupyterHub. # # Note: This spawner does not implement CPU / memory guarantees and limits. ## Seconds to wait for single-user server process to halt after SIGINT. # # If the process has not exited cleanly after this many seconds, a SIGTERM is # sent. #c.LocalProcessSpawner.interrupt_timeout = 10 ## Seconds to wait for process to halt after SIGKILL before giving up. # # If the process does not exit cleanly after this many seconds of SIGKILL, it # becomes a zombie process. The hub process will log a warning and then give up. #c.LocalProcessSpawner.kill_timeout = 5 ## Extra keyword arguments to pass to Popen # # when spawning single-user servers. # # For example:: # # popen_kwargs = dict(shell=True) #c.LocalProcessSpawner.popen_kwargs = {} ## Specify a shell command to launch. # # The single-user command will be appended to this list, so it sould end with # `-c` (for bash) or equivalent. # # For example:: # # c.LocalProcessSpawner.shell_cmd = ['bash', '-l', '-c'] # # to launch with a bash login shell, which would set up the user's own complete # environment. # # .. warning:: # # Using shell_cmd gives users control over PATH, etc., # which could change what the jupyterhub-singleuser launch command does. # Only use this for trusted users. #c.LocalProcessSpawner.shell_cmd = [] ## Seconds to wait for single-user server process to halt after SIGTERM. # # If the process does not exit cleanly after this many seconds of SIGTERM, a # SIGKILL is sent. #c.LocalProcessSpawner.term_timeout = 5 #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # Authenticator(LoggingConfigurable) configuration #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ## Base class for implementing an authentication provider for JupyterHub ## Set of users that will have admin rights on this JupyterHub. # # Admin users have extra privileges: # - Use the admin panel to see list of users logged in # - Add / remove users in some authenticators # - Restart / halt the hub # - Start / stop users' single-user servers # - Can access each individual users' single-user server (if configured) # # Admin access should be treated the same way root access is. # # Defaults to an empty set, in which case no user has admin access. #c.Authenticator.admin_users = set() ## Automatically begin the login process # # rather than starting with a "Login with..." link at `/hub/login` # # To work, `.login_url()` must give a URL other than the default `/hub/login`, # such as an oauth handler or another automatic login handler, registered with # `.get_handlers()`. # # .. versionadded:: 0.8 #c.Authenticator.auto_login = False ## Blacklist of usernames that are not allowed to log in. # # Use this with supported authenticators to restrict which users can not log in. # This is an additional blacklist that further restricts users, beyond whatever # restrictions the authenticator has in place. # # If empty, does not perform any additional restriction. # # .. versionadded: 0.9 #c.Authenticator.blacklist = set() ## Enable persisting auth_state (if available). # # auth_state will be encrypted and stored in the Hub's database. This can # include things like authentication tokens, etc. to be passed to Spawners as # environment variables. # # Encrypting auth_state requires the cryptography package. # # Additionally, the JUPYTERHUB_CRYPT_KEY environment variable must contain one # (or more, separated by ;) 32B encryption keys. These can be either base64 or # hex-encoded. # # If encryption is unavailable, auth_state cannot be persisted. # # New in JupyterHub 0.8 #c.Authenticator.enable_auth_state = False ## Dictionary mapping authenticator usernames to JupyterHub users. # # Primarily used to normalize OAuth user names to local users. #c.Authenticator.username_map = {} ## Regular expression pattern that all valid usernames must match. # # If a username does not match the pattern specified here, authentication will # not be attempted. # # If not set, allow any username. #c.Authenticator.username_pattern = '' ## Whitelist of usernames that are allowed to log in. # # Use this with supported authenticators to restrict which users can log in. # This is an additional whitelist that further restricts users, beyond whatever # restrictions the authenticator has in place. # # If empty, does not perform any additional restriction. #c.Authenticator.whitelist = set() #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # LocalAuthenticator(Authenticator) configuration #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ## Base class for Authenticators that work with local Linux/UNIX users # # Checks for local users, and can attempt to create them if they exist. ## The command to use for creating users as a list of strings # # For each element in the list, the string USERNAME will be replaced with the # user's username. The username will also be appended as the final argument. # # For Linux, the default value is: # # ['adduser', '-q', '--gecos', '""', '--disabled-password'] # # To specify a custom home directory, set this to: # # ['adduser', '-q', '--gecos', '""', '--home', '/customhome/USERNAME', '-- # disabled-password'] # # This will run the command: # # adduser -q --gecos "" --home /customhome/river --disabled-password river # # when the user 'river' is created. #c.LocalAuthenticator.add_user_cmd = [] ## If set to True, will attempt to create local system users if they do not exist # already. # # Supports Linux and BSD variants only. #c.LocalAuthenticator.create_system_users = False ## Whitelist all users from this UNIX group. # # This makes the username whitelist ineffective. #c.LocalAuthenticator.group_whitelist = set() #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # PAMAuthenticator(LocalAuthenticator) configuration #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ## Authenticate local UNIX users with PAM ## Whether to check the user's account status via PAM during authentication. # # The PAM account stack performs non-authentication based account management. # It is typically used to restrict/permit access to a service and this step is # needed to access the host's user access control. # # Disabling this can be dangerous as authenticated but unauthorized users may be # granted access and, therefore, arbitrary execution on the system. #c.PAMAuthenticator.check_account = True ## The text encoding to use when communicating with PAM #c.PAMAuthenticator.encoding = 'utf8' ## Whether to open a new PAM session when spawners are started. # # This may trigger things like mounting shared filsystems, loading credentials, # etc. depending on system configuration, but it does not always work. # # If any errors are encountered when opening/closing PAM sessions, this is # automatically set to False. #c.PAMAuthenticator.open_sessions = True ## The name of the PAM service to use for authentication #c.PAMAuthenticator.service = 'login' #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # CryptKeeper(SingletonConfigurable) configuration #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ## Encapsulate encryption configuration # # Use via the encryption_config singleton below. ## #c.CryptKeeper.keys = [] ## The number of threads to allocate for encryption #c.CryptKeeper.n_threads = 4 c.LDAPAuthenticator.bind_dn_template = [ "uid={username},ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org" ] c.LDAPAuthenticator.server_address = 'localhost'