; ; Asterisk Builtin mini-HTTP server ; ; ; Note about Asterisk documentation: ; If Asterisk was installed from a tarball, then the HTML documentation should ; be installed in the static-http/docs directory which is ; (/var/lib/asterisk/static-http/docs) on linux by default. If the Asterisk ; HTTP server is enabled in this file by setting the "enabled", "bindaddr", ; and "bindport" options, then you should be able to view the documentation ; remotely by browsing to: ; http://:/static/docs/index.html ; [general] ; ; Whether HTTP/HTTPS interface is enabled or not. Default is no. ; This also affects manager/rawman/mxml access (see manager.conf) ; ;enabled=yes ; ; Address to bind to, both for HTTP and HTTPS. You MUST specify ; a bindaddr in order for the HTTP server to run. There is no ; default value. ; bindaddr=127.0.0.1 ; ; Port to bind to for HTTP sessions (default is 8088) ; ;bindport=8088 ; ; Prefix allows you to specify a prefix for all requests ; to the server. The default is blank. If uncommented ; all requests must begin with /asterisk ; ;prefix=asterisk ; ; sessionlimit specifies the maximum number of httpsessions that will be ; allowed to exist at any given time. (default: 100) ; ;sessionlimit=100 ; ; session_inactivity specifies the number of milliseconds to wait for ; more data over the HTTP connection before closing it. ; ; Default: 30000 ;session_inactivity=30000 ; ; Whether Asterisk should serve static content from http-static ; Default is no. ; ;enablestatic=yes ; ; Redirect one URI to another. This is how you would set a ; default page. ; Syntax: redirect= ; For example, if you are using the Asterisk-gui, ; it is convenient to enable the following redirect: ; ;redirect = / /static/config/index.html ; ; HTTPS support. In addition to enabled=yes, you need to ; explicitly enable tls, define the port to use, ; and have a certificate somewhere. ;tlsenable=yes ; enable tls - default no. ;tlsbindaddr=0.0.0.0:8089 ; address and port to bind to - default is bindaddr and port 8089. ; ;tlscertfile= ; path to the certificate file (*.pem) only. ;tlsprivatekey= ; path to private key file (*.pem) only. ; If no path is given for tlscertfile or tlsprivatekey, default is to look in current ; directory. If no tlsprivatekey is given, default is to search tlscertfile for private key. ; ; To produce a certificate you can e.g. use openssl. This places both the cert and ; private in same .pem file. ; openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -out /tmp/foo.pem -keyout /tmp/foo.pem ; ; The post_mappings section maps URLs to real paths on the filesystem. If a ; POST is done from within an authenticated manager session to one of the ; configured POST mappings, then any files in the POST will be placed in the ; configured directory. ; ;[post_mappings] ; ; In this example, if the prefix option is set to "asterisk", then using the ; POST URL: /asterisk/uploads will put files in /var/lib/asterisk/uploads/. ;uploads = /var/lib/asterisk/uploads/ ;