4.3 KiB
Required Configuration Settings
ALLOWED_HOSTS
This is a list of valid fully-qualified domain names (FQDNs) that is used to reach the NetBox service. Usually this is the same as the hostname for the NetBox server, but can also be different (e.g. when using a reverse proxy serving the NetBox website under a different FQDN than the hostname of the NetBox server). NetBox will not permit access to the server via any other hostnames (or IPs). The value of this option is also used to set CSRF_TRUSTED_ORIGINS
, which restricts HTTP POST
to the same set of hosts (more about this here). Keep in mind that NetBox, by default, has USE_X_FORWARDED_HOST = True
(in netbox/netbox/settings.py
) which means that if you're using a reverse proxy, it's the FQDN used to reach that reverse proxy which needs to be in this list (more about this here).
Example:
ALLOWED_HOSTS = ['netbox.example.com', '192.0.2.123']
DATABASE
NetBox requires access to a PostgreSQL database service to store data. This service can run locally or on a remote system. The following parameters must be defined within the DATABASE
dictionary:
NAME
- Database nameUSER
- PostgreSQL usernamePASSWORD
- PostgreSQL passwordHOST
- Name or IP address of the database server (uselocalhost
if running locally)PORT
- TCP port of the PostgreSQL service; leave blank for default port (5432)
Example:
DATABASE = {
'NAME': 'netbox', # Database name
'USER': 'netbox', # PostgreSQL username
'PASSWORD': 'J5brHrAXFLQSif0K', # PostgreSQL password
'HOST': 'localhost', # Database server
'PORT': '', # Database port (leave blank for default)
}
REDIS
Redis is an in-memory data store similar to memcached. While Redis has been an optional component of NetBox since the introduction of webhooks in version 2.4, it is required starting in 2.6 to support NetBox's caching functionality (as well as other planned features). In 2.7, the connection settings were broken down into two sections for webhooks and caching, allowing the user to connect to different Redis instances/databases per feature.
Redis is configured using a configuration setting similar to DATABASE
and these settings are the same for both of the webhooks
and caching
subsections:
HOST
- Name or IP address of the Redis server (uselocalhost
if running locally)PORT
- TCP port of the Redis service; leave blank for default port (6379)PASSWORD
- Redis password (if set)DATABASE
- Numeric database IDDEFAULT_TIMEOUT
- Connection timeout in secondsSSL
- Use SSL connection to Redis
Example:
REDIS = {
'webhooks': {
'HOST': 'redis.example.com',
'PORT': 1234,
'PASSWORD': 'foobar',
'DATABASE': 0,
'DEFAULT_TIMEOUT': 300,
'SSL': False,
},
'caching': {
'HOST': 'localhost',
'PORT': 6379,
'PASSWORD': '',
'DATABASE': 1,
'DEFAULT_TIMEOUT': 300,
'SSL': False,
}
}
!!! note:
If you are upgrading from a version prior to v2.7, please note that the Redis connection configuration settings have
changed. Manual modification to bring the REDIS
section inline with the above specification is necessary
!!! warning: It is highly recommended to keep the webhook and cache databases seperate. Using the same database number on the same Redis instance for both may result in webhook processing data being lost during cache flushing events.
SECRET_KEY
This is a secret cryptographic key is used to improve the security of cookies and password resets. The key defined here should not be shared outside of the configuration file. SECRET_KEY
can be changed at any time, however be aware that doing so will invalidate all existing sessions.
Please note that this key is not used for hashing user passwords or for the encrypted storage of secret data in NetBox.
SECRET_KEY
should be at least 50 characters in length and contain a random mix of letters, digits, and symbols. The script located at netbox/generate_secret_key.py
may be used to generate a suitable key.