webgui/etc/spectre.conf
2026-02-25 12:58:03 +01:00

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# config-file-format: JSON 1
{
# Define the IP address that Spectre should run on. If WebGUI and
# Spectre are on the same machine, you should leave this as is.
"ip" : "127.0.0.1",
# Define a port for Spectre to run on between 1024 and 65000.
"port" : 32133,
# How many Spectre workers should be allowed to be running at
# one time. Keep in mind that workers use some of the resources
# of your web site. If you're running only one server, you probably
# shouldn't have more than 5 workers. If you're running load
# balanced servers, you can probably have as many as 5 per server,
# but depending upon the amount of editing and workflows you have
# on your site, you may not need that many.
"maxWorkers" : 3,
# How many seconds should Spectre wait between spawning jobs. This
# can help avoid creating a denial of service attack on overworked
# or underpowered servers.
"timeBetweenRunningWorkflows" : 1,
# How long should Spectre delay processing a workflow instance when
# it gets suspended. It can get suspended if it's waiting for
# external input, or if it errors for any reason.
"suspensionDelay" : 60,
# What port should we connect to WebGUI on? If you've configured
# WebGUI yourself, then this should probably be 80. If you're using
# the WebGUI Runtime Environment, 8081 might be a better choice to go
# directly at the mod_perl server.
"webguiPort" : 80,
# Should we ignore the proxy environment variables? If your server
# uses a proxy to connect to the internet and you are running
# Spectre on the same server as WebGUI, you should set this to 1.
# It should be safe to set this to 1 any time spectre and WebGUI
# are running on the same server.
"ignoreEnvProxy" : 0,
# The location of the file that keeps track of the master spectre processId.
"pidFile" : "/var/run/spectre.pid"
}