Configuration

Introduction

The configuration files of EMQX Broker usually have the suffix .conf. You can find these configuration files in the etc directory.

FileDescription
etc/emqx.confEMQX Broker Configuration File
etc/cluster.confEMQX Cluster-related Configuration File
etc/rpc.confEMQX Remote Procedure Call Configuration File
etc/logger.confEMQX Logging Configuration File
etc/zones.confEMQX Zone Configuration File
etc/listeners.confEMQX Listeners Configuration File
etc/sys_mon.confEMQX System Monitoring configuration file
etc/acl.confEMQX Broker default ACL file
etc/plugins/*.confConfiguration Files of Plugins

It should be noted that for the EMQX Broker installed by different methods, the path of the etc directory may be different. For details, please refer to directory structure.

Grammar rules

  • Use k = v common format like sysctl
  • All information for a single configuration item is on the same line, and a new line means creating a new configuration item
  • The key can be layered by ., support configuration items managed by tree structure
  • Value types can be integer, float, percent, enum, ip, string, atom, flag, duration and bytesize
  • Any line beginning with # is considered as a comment

Example:

  1. mqtt.max_packet_size = 1MB

Data type

integer

float

percent

The percentage data ending in % , that will eventually be converted to float type.

enum

Usually we will list all its optional values near the configuration item of type enum. Of course, you can also search for configuration item.

ip

When you see that the data type of a configuration item is ip, it means that you can set the configuration item in the form of {ip}:{port}, for example, 0.0.0.0:1883.

string

Everything in the *.conf file except for comments will be parsed into a string and then converted to other types, so there is no need to use double quotes to modify the value of the string type value, and this way is not supported.

Yes!

  1. dir = tmp

No!!!

  1. dir = "tmp"

atom

A value of type atom will eventually be converted into Erlang ’s atom, but its using method in the *.conf file is exactly the same as string.

flag

flag is used for variables that have two possible values. The default available values of flag are on and off, which will be mapped to true and false for application. If we have established other mapping relationships for a configuration item, we will indicate it in the configuration file, and you can also find this information in configuration item.

duration

duration is used to specify those fixed time intervals, and you can use the following time units:

  • f - fortnight
  • w - week
  • d - day
  • h - hour
  • m - minute
  • s - second
  • ms - millisecond

You can arbitrarily combine these time units, such as 1w13ms, or you can use floating point numbers, such as0.5d, and these time intervals will eventually be converted to the base unit we specify. It should be noted here is that if you set a configuration item in milliseconds and its base unit is seconds, it will round up to the closest description, for example, 1s50ms =2s. Therefore, we will list the benchmark units for this type of configuration item.

bytesize

bytesize supports configuration of message size and buffer size in a more readable way, and the unit can be KB, MB and GB. You can also use lower case, for example kb, but mixed case, such as Kb, is not supported. It will eventually be converted to bytes. If you do not specify any units, then it is used directly as the number of bytes.

Default configuration

In the configuration file of EMQX Broker, you will see a lot of configuration items that are commented out, which means that these configuration items will use their default values. Usually we will list the default values of these configurations.

Zone & Listener

EMQX Broker provides a lot of configuration items, and supports global configuration and local configuration. For example, EMQX Broker provides an anonymous login function, which allows clients to connect to the broker without a user name and password. Usually this feature is disabled by default in the user’s production environment, but the user may want this feature enabled in the intranet environment. Since version 3.0, EMQX Broker has provided this possibility to users through Zone and Listener.

Listener

Listener is mainly used to configure listening ports and related parameters of different protocols. EMQX Broker supports configuring multiple Listeners to listen to multiple protocols or ports at the same time. The following are the supported Listeners:

ListenerDescription
TCP ListenerA listener for MQTT which uses TCP
SSL ListenerA secure listener for MQTT which uses TLS
Websocket ListenerA listener for MQTT over WebSockets
Secure Websocket ListenerA secure listener for MQTT over secure WebSockets (TLS)

EMQX Broker provides 5 Listeners by default, and they will occupy the following ports:

PortDescription
1883MQTT/TCP protocol port
11883MQTT/TCP Protocol internal port, only used for local client connection
8883MQTT/SSL protocol port
8083MQTT/WS protocol port
8084MQTT/WSS protocol port

The naming rule of the Listener configuration item is listener.<Protocol>.<Listener Name>.xxx, and Protocol> is the protocol used by the Listener that currently supports tcp, ssl,ws, wss . <Listener Name> can be named arbitrarily, but it is recommended to use all lowercase words, and xxx is a specific configuration item. The <Listener Name> of Listeners with different protocols can be repeated. Listener.tcp.external and listener.ssl.external are two different Listeners.

Due to the existence of the default configuration, we can quickly show how to add a new Listener. Taking TCP Listener as an example, we only need to add the following configuration in emqx.conf:

  1. listener.tcp.example = 12345

Of course, in this case, we recommend that you copy the default Listener configuration for modification.

Zone

A Zone defines a set of configuration items (such as the maximum number of connections), and the Listener can specify the Zone through the configuration item listener.<Protocol>.<Listener Name>.zone to use all the configurations under the Zone. Multiple Listeners can share the same Zone. The naming rule of Zone is zone.<Zone Name>.xxx. Zone Name can be named at will, but it is also recommended to be all lowercase. xxx is a specific configuration item, you can find it in configuration item to view all configuration items supported by Zone.

At this time, there are three available values for each of our configuration items, which are the global value, the value set in Zone and the default value, and their priority order is: Zone> Global> Default.