# By default, this file should be stored in /etc/teleport.yaml # This section of the configuration file applies to all teleport # services. teleport: # nodename allows to assign an alternative name this node can be reached by. # by default it's equal to hostname # nodename: graviton # Data directory where Teleport daemon keeps its data. # See "Filesystem Layout" section above for more details. data_dir: /var/lib/teleport # Invitation token used to join a cluster. it is not used on # subsequent starts # auth_token: xxxx-token-xxxx # When running in multi-homed or NATed environments Teleport nodes need # to know which IP it will be reachable at by other nodes # # This value can be specified as FQDN e.g. host.example.com # advertise_ip: 10.1.0.5 # list of auth servers in a cluster. you will have more than one auth server # if you configure teleport auth to run in HA configuration auth_servers: - localhost:3025 # Teleport throttles all connections to avoid abuse. These settings allow # you to adjust the default limits connection_limits: max_connections: 1000 max_users: 250 # Logging configuration. Possible output values are 'stdout', 'stderr' and # 'syslog'. Possible severity values are INFO, WARN and ERROR (default). log: output: stderr severity: ERROR # Type of storage used for keys. You need to configure this to use etcd or # a DynamoDB backend if you want to run Teleport in HA configuration. storage: # By default teleport uses the `data_dir` directory on a local filesystem type: dir # Array of locations where the audit log events will be stored. by # default they are stored in `/var/lib/teleport/log` # audit_events_uri: [file:///var/lib/teleport/log, dynamo://events_table_name] # Use this setting to configure teleport to store the recorded sessions in # an AWS S3 bucket. see "Using Amazon S3" chapter for more information. # audit_sessions_uri: s3://name-of-s3-bucket # Cipher algorithms that the server supports. This section only needs to be # set if you want to override the defaults. ciphers: - aes128-ctr - aes192-ctr - aes256-ctr - aes128-gcm@openssh.com # Key exchange algorithms that the server supports. This section only needs # to be set if you want to override the defaults. kex_algos: - curve25519-sha256@libssh.org - ecdh-sha2-nistp256 - ecdh-sha2-nistp384 - ecdh-sha2-nistp521 - diffie-hellman-group14-sha1 - diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 # Message authentication code (MAC) algorithms that the server supports. # This section only needs to be set if you want to override the defaults. mac_algos: - hmac-sha2-256-etm@openssh.com - hmac-sha2-256 - hmac-sha1 - hmac-sha1-96 # List of the supported ciphersuites. If this section is not specified, # only the default ciphersuites are enabled. ciphersuites: - tls-rsa-with-aes-128-cbc-sha # default - tls-rsa-with-aes-256-cbc-sha # default - tls-rsa-with-aes-128-cbc-sha256 - tls-rsa-with-aes-128-gcm-sha256 - tls-rsa-with-aes-256-gcm-sha384 - tls-ecdhe-ecdsa-with-aes-128-cbc-sha - tls-ecdhe-ecdsa-with-aes-256-cbc-sha - tls-ecdhe-rsa-with-aes-128-cbc-sha - tls-ecdhe-rsa-with-aes-256-cbc-sha - tls-ecdhe-ecdsa-with-aes-128-cbc-sha256 - tls-ecdhe-rsa-with-aes-128-cbc-sha256 - tls-ecdhe-rsa-with-aes-128-gcm-sha256 - tls-ecdhe-ecdsa-with-aes-128-gcm-sha256 - tls-ecdhe-rsa-with-aes-256-gcm-sha384 - tls-ecdhe-ecdsa-with-aes-256-gcm-sha384 - tls-ecdhe-rsa-with-chacha20-poly1305 - tls-ecdhe-ecdsa-with-chacha20-poly1305 # This section configures the 'auth service': auth_service: # Turns 'auth' role on. Default is 'yes' enabled: yes # A cluster name is used as part of a signature in certificates # generated by this CA. # # We strongly recommend to explicitly set it to something meaningful as it # becomes important when configuring trust between multiple clusters. # # By default an automatically generated name is used (not recommended) # # IMPORTANT: if you change cluster_name, it will invalidate all generated # certificates and keys (may need to wipe out /var/lib/teleport directory) cluster_name: "main" authentication: # default authentication type. possible values are 'local', 'oidc' and 'saml' # only local authentication (Teleport's own user DB) is supported in the open # source version type: local # second_factor can be off, otp, or u2f second_factor: otp # this section is used if second_factor is set to 'u2f' u2f: # app_id must point to the URL of the Teleport Web UI (proxy) accessible # by the end users app_id: https://localhost:3080 # facets must list all proxy servers if there are more than one deployed facets: - https://localhost:3080 # IP and the port to bind to. Other Teleport nodes will be connecting to # this port (AKA "Auth API" or "Cluster API") to validate client # certificates listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:3025 # The optional DNS name the auth server if locataed behind a load balancer. # (see public_addr section below) # public_addr: auth.example.com:3025 # Pre-defined tokens for adding new nodes to a cluster. Each token specifies # the role a new node will be allowed to assume. The more secure way to # add nodes is to use `ttl node add --ttl` command to generate auto-expiring # tokens. # # We recommend to use tools like `pwgen` to generate sufficiently random # tokens of 32+ byte length. # tokens: # - "proxy,node:xxxxx" # - "auth:yyyy" # Optional setting for configuring session recording. Possible values are: # "node" : sessions will be recorded on the node level (the default) # "proxy" : recording on the proxy level, see "recording proxy mode" section. # "off" : session recording is turned off session_recording: "node" # This setting determines if a Teleport proxy performs strict host key checks. # Only applicable if session_recording=proxy, see "recording proxy mode" for details. proxy_checks_host_keys: yes # Determines if SSH sessions to cluster nodes are forcefully terminated # after no activity from a client (idle client). # Examples: "30m", "1h" or "1h30m" client_idle_timeout: never # Determines if the clients will be forcefully disconnected when their # certificates expire in the middle of an active SSH session. (default is 'no') disconnect_expired_cert: no # If the auth service is deployed outside Kubernetes, but Kubernetes integration # is required, you have to specify a valid kubeconfig credentials: # kubeconfig_file: /path/to/kubeconfig # This section configures the 'node service': ssh_service: # Turns 'ssh' role on. Default is 'yes' enabled: yes # IP and the port for SSH service to bind to. listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:3022 # The optional public address the SSH service. This is useful if administrators # want to allow users to connect to nodes directly, bypassing a Teleport proxy # (see public_addr section below) # public_addr: node.example.com:3022 # See explanation of labels in "Labeling Nodes" section below labels: role: master # List of the commands to periodically execute. Their output will be used as node labels. # See "Labeling Nodes" section below for more information. commands: - name: arch # this command will add a label like 'arch=x86_64' to a node command: [uname, -p] period: 1h0m0s # enables reading ~/.tsh/environment before creating a session. by default # set to false, can be set true here or as a command line flag. permit_user_env: false # configures PAM integration. see below for more details. pam: enabled: no service_name: teleport # This section configures the 'proxy servie' proxy_service: # Turns 'proxy' role on. Default is 'yes' enabled: yes # SSH forwarding/proxy address. Command line (CLI) clients always begin their # SSH sessions by connecting to this port listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:3023 # Reverse tunnel listening address. An auth server (CA) can establish an # outbound (from behind the firewall) connection to this address. # This will allow users of the outside CA to connect to behind-the-firewall # nodes. tunnel_listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:3024 # The HTTPS listen address to serve the Web UI and also to authenticate the # command line (CLI) users via password+HOTP web_listen_addr: 0.0.0.0:3080 # The DNS name the proxy server is accessible by cluster users. Defaults to # the proxy's hostname if not specified. If running multiple proxies behind # a load balancer, this name must point to the load balancer # (see public_addr section below) # public_addr: proxy.example.com:3080 # TLS certificate for the HTTPS connection. Configuring these properly is # critical for Teleport security. https_key_file: /var/lib/teleport/webproxy_key.pem https_cert_file: /var/lib/teleport/webproxy_cert.pem