go-asink/example_config

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# Copyright (C) 2013 Aaron Lindsay <aaron@aclindsay.com>
#
# An example Asink configuration file. The `asink' command will search
# for this file at ~/.asink/config. If you want to keep it somewhere
# else, you must run the `asink' command with the `-c' option:
# asink -c /path/to/your/config
#
# This file must remain only readable and writable only by the user
# running the Asink client (i.e. `chmod 600 config`) because it contains
# passwords and encryption keys.
########################################################################
# The [local] section controls things which are independent of the rest
# of the system (i.e. you can change these settings and not have to
# change anything with your server configuration, or the config on any
# of the other clients)
########################################################################
[local]
# The directory you want to keep synchronized between your computers
syncdir = /home/user1/Asink
## The following directories/files are all typically located inside a
## .asink folder in your home directory.
# A directory to store locally-cached versions of files.
cachedir = /home/user1/.asink/cache
# A temporary directory used by Asink when it needs to make temporary
# files
tmpdir = /home/user1/.asink/cache/.tmpdir
# Where you want to store the SQLite database used by the Asink client
dblocation = /home/user1/.asink/localdb.db
# The socket to be used to communicate with the Asink client
socket = /home/user1/.asink/asink.sock
########################################################################
# The [server] section controls how the Asink client communicates with
# the Asink server (`asinkd')
########################################################################
[server]
# The IP address or hostname of your Asink server (`asinkd')
host = example.com
# The port used to communicate with asinkd (i.e. 'asinkd -p 8080')
port = 8080
# Your user's username and password for communicating with the server
# These can be set using the asinkd 'useradd', 'usermod', and 'userdel'
# commands.
username = user1
# Don't surround with quotes unless your password contains them
password = user1password
########################################################################
# The [storage] section controls how/where your files are stored (The
# server mentioned above only handles keeping track of file versions, it
# doesn't actually store them). Asink supports several different types
# of storage providers, and which options are available to you in this
# section varies depending on which storage provider you use.
#
# The current storage options are:
# local
# FTP
#
# Be sure you only uncomment one of the following "method = ..." lines
# along with its corresponding options.
########################################################################
[storage]
## Local storage ##
# Local storage is useful if you want to back your files up to a NFS
# share or something you can mount locally (and also for testing Asink
# with only one machine).
method = local
# The directory to store files in
dir = /home/user1/.asink/localstorage
## FTP storage ##
#method = ftp
# The hostname or IP address of the FTP server
#server = localhost
# The remote port the FTP server is using
# port = 21
# The directory on the server you want to store your files in
#directory = asink_ftp
# The username and password used to connect to the FTP server
#username = user1
# Don't surround with quotes unless your password contains them
#password = user1password
########################################################################
# The [encryption] section controls whether or not files are encrypted,
# and supplies the encryption key if they are.
########################################################################
[encryption]
# 'yes' if encryption is enabled and 'no' otherwise
enabled = yes
# The key only needs to be supplied if encryption is enabled. This
# currently cannot be changed once you begin synchronizing files, so
# choose it carefully. In the future, there will most likely be an
# option to change the encryption key, but it will involve downloading,
# decrypting, re-encrypting, and re-uploading all the versions of all
# your files, so it will be a time-intensive operation.
#
# Note: The key should not be surrounded by quotes
key = user1encryptionkey