86 KiB
Configuring the ntfy server
The ntfy server can be configured in three ways: using a config file (typically at /etc/ntfy/server.yml
,
see server.yml), via command line arguments
or using environment variables.
Quick start
By default, simply running ntfy serve
will start the server at port 80. No configuration needed. Batteries included 😀.
If everything works as it should, you'll see something like this:
$ ntfy serve
2021/11/30 19:59:08 Listening on :80
You can immediately start publishing messages, or subscribe via the Android app,
the web UI, or simply via curl or your favorite HTTP client. To configure
the server further, check out the config options table or simply type ntfy serve --help
to
get a list of command line options.
Example config
!!! info Definitely check out the server.yml file. It contains examples and detailed descriptions of all the settings.
The most basic settings are base-url
(the external URL of the ntfy server), the HTTP/HTTPS listen address (listen-http
and listen-https
), and socket path (listen-unix
). All the other things are additional features.
Here are a few working sample configs:
=== "server.yml (HTTP-only, with cache + attachments)"
yaml base-url: "http://ntfy.example.com" cache-file: "/var/cache/ntfy/cache.db" attachment-cache-dir: "/var/cache/ntfy/attachments"
=== "server.yml (HTTP+HTTPS, with cache + attachments)"
yaml base-url: "http://ntfy.example.com" listen-http: ":80" listen-https: ":443" key-file: "/etc/letsencrypt/live/ntfy.example.com.key" cert-file: "/etc/letsencrypt/live/ntfy.example.com.crt" cache-file: "/var/cache/ntfy/cache.db" attachment-cache-dir: "/var/cache/ntfy/attachments"
=== "server.yml (ntfy.sh config)" ``` yaml # All the things: Behind a proxy, Firebase, cache, attachments, # SMTP publishing & receiving
base-url: "https://ntfy.sh"
listen-http: "127.0.0.1:2586"
firebase-key-file: "/etc/ntfy/firebase.json"
cache-file: "/var/cache/ntfy/cache.db"
behind-proxy: true
attachment-cache-dir: "/var/cache/ntfy/attachments"
smtp-sender-addr: "email-smtp.us-east-2.amazonaws.com:587"
smtp-sender-user: "AKIDEADBEEFAFFE12345"
smtp-sender-pass: "Abd13Kf+sfAk2DzifjafldkThisIsNotARealKeyOMG."
smtp-sender-from: "ntfy@ntfy.sh"
smtp-server-listen: ":25"
smtp-server-domain: "ntfy.sh"
smtp-server-addr-prefix: "ntfy-"
keepalive-interval: "45s"
```
Message cache
If desired, ntfy can temporarily keep notifications in an in-memory or an on-disk cache. Caching messages for a short period of time is important to allow phones and other devices with brittle Internet connections to be able to retrieve notifications that they may have missed.
By default, ntfy keeps messages in-memory for 12 hours, which means that cached messages do not survive an application restart. You can override this behavior using the following config settings:
cache-file
: if set, ntfy will store messages in a SQLite based cache (default is empty, which means in-memory cache). This is required if you'd like messages to be retained across restarts.cache-duration
: defines the duration for which messages are stored in the cache (default is12h
).
You can also entirely disable the cache by setting cache-duration
to 0
. When the cache is disabled, messages are only
passed on to the connected subscribers, but never stored on disk or even kept in memory longer than is needed to forward
the message to the subscribers.
Subscribers can retrieve cached messaging using the poll=1
parameter, as well as the
since=
parameter.
Attachments
If desired, you may allow users to upload and attach files to notifications. To enable
this feature, you have to simply configure an attachment cache directory and a base URL (attachment-cache-dir
, base-url
).
Once these options are set and the directory is writable by the server user, you can upload attachments via PUT.
By default, attachments are stored in the disk-cache for only 3 hours. The main reason for this is to avoid legal issues and such when hosting user controlled content. Typically, this is more than enough time for the user (or the auto download feature) to download the file. The following config options are relevant to attachments:
base-url
is the root URL for the ntfy server; this is needed for the generated attachment URLsattachment-cache-dir
is the cache directory for attached filesattachment-total-size-limit
is the size limit of the on-disk attachment cache (default: 5G)attachment-file-size-limit
is the per-file attachment size limit (e.g. 300k, 2M, 100M, default: 15M)attachment-expiry-duration
is the duration after which uploaded attachments will be deleted (e.g. 3h, 20h, default: 3h)
Here's an example config using mostly the defaults (except for the cache directory, which is empty by default):
=== "/etc/ntfy/server.yml (minimal)"
yaml base-url: "https://ntfy.sh" attachment-cache-dir: "/var/cache/ntfy/attachments"
=== "/etc/ntfy/server.yml (all options)"
yaml base-url: "https://ntfy.sh" attachment-cache-dir: "/var/cache/ntfy/attachments" attachment-total-size-limit: "5G" attachment-file-size-limit: "15M" attachment-expiry-duration: "3h" visitor-attachment-total-size-limit: "100M" visitor-attachment-daily-bandwidth-limit: "500M"
Please also refer to the rate limiting settings below, specifically visitor-attachment-total-size-limit
and visitor-attachment-daily-bandwidth-limit
. Setting these conservatively is necessary to avoid abuse.
Access control
By default, the ntfy server is open for everyone, meaning everyone can read and write to any topic (this is how ntfy.sh is configured). To restrict access to your own server, you can optionally configure authentication and authorization.
ntfy's auth is implemented with a simple SQLite-based backend. It implements two roles
(user
and admin
) and per-topic read
and write
permissions using an access control list (ACL).
Access control entries can be applied to users as well as the special everyone user (*
), which represents anonymous API access.
To set up auth, simply configure the following two options:
auth-file
is the user/access database; it is created automatically if it doesn't already exist; suggested location/var/lib/ntfy/user.db
(easiest if deb/rpm package is used)auth-default-access
defines the default/fallback access if no access control entry is found; it can be set toread-write
(default),read-only
,write-only
ordeny-all
.
Once configured, you can use the ntfy user
command to add or modify users, and the ntfy access
command
lets you modify the access control list for specific users and topic patterns. Both of these
commands directly edit the auth database (as defined in auth-file
), so they only work on the server, and only if the user
accessing them has the right permissions.
Users and roles
The ntfy user
command allows you to add/remove/change users in the ntfy user database, as well as change
passwords or roles (user
or admin
). In practice, you'll often just create one admin
user with ntfy user add --role=admin ...
and be done with all this (see example below).
Roles:
- Role
user
(default): Users with this role have no special permissions. Manage access usingntfy access
(see below). - Role
admin
: Users with this role can read/write to all topics. Granular access control is not necessary.
Example commands (type ntfy user --help
or ntfy user COMMAND --help
for more details):
ntfy user list # Shows list of users (alias: 'ntfy access')
ntfy user add phil # Add regular user phil
ntfy user add --role=admin phil # Add admin user phil
ntfy user del phil # Delete user phil
ntfy user change-pass phil # Change password for user phil
ntfy user change-role phil admin # Make user phil an admin
ntfy user change-tier phil pro # Change phil's tier to "pro"
Access control list (ACL)
The access control list (ACL) manages access to topics for non-admin users, and for anonymous access (everyone
/*
).
Each entry represents the access permissions for a user to a specific topic or topic pattern.
The ACL can be displayed or modified with the ntfy access
command:
ntfy access # Shows access control list (alias: 'ntfy user list')
ntfy access USERNAME # Shows access control entries for USERNAME
ntfy access USERNAME TOPIC PERMISSION # Allow/deny access for USERNAME to TOPIC
A USERNAME
is an existing user, as created with ntfy user add
(see users and roles), or the
anonymous user everyone
or *
, which represents clients that access the API without username/password.
A TOPIC
is either a specific topic name (e.g. mytopic
, or phil_alerts
), or a wildcard pattern that matches any
number of topics (e.g. alerts_*
or ben-*
). Only the wildcard character *
is supported. It stands for zero to any
number of characters.
A PERMISSION
is any of the following supported permissions:
read-write
(alias:rw
): Allows publishing messages to the given topic, as well as subscribing and reading messagesread-only
(aliases:read
,ro
): Allows only subscribing and reading messages, but not publishing to the topicwrite-only
(aliases:write
,wo
): Allows only publishing to the topic, but not subscribing to itdeny
(alias:none
): Allows neither publishing nor subscribing to a topic
Example commands (type ntfy access --help
for more details):
ntfy access # Shows entire access control list
ntfy access phil # Shows access for user phil
ntfy access phil mytopic rw # Allow read-write access to mytopic for user phil
ntfy access everyone mytopic rw # Allow anonymous read-write access to mytopic
ntfy access everyone "up*" write # Allow anonymous write-only access to topics "up..."
ntfy access --reset # Reset entire access control list
ntfy access --reset phil # Reset all access for user phil
ntfy access --reset phil mytopic # Reset access for user phil and topic mytopic
Example ACL:
$ ntfy access
user phil (admin)
- read-write access to all topics (admin role)
user ben (user)
- read-write access to topic garagedoor
- read-write access to topic alerts*
- read-only access to topic furnace
user * (anonymous)
- read-only access to topic announcements
- read-only access to topic server-stats
- no access to any (other) topics (server config)
In this example, phil
has the role admin
, so he has read-write access to all topics (no ACL entries are necessary).
User ben
has three topic-specific entries. He can read, but not write to topic furnace
, and has read-write access
to topic garagedoor
and all topics starting with the word alerts
(wildcards). Clients that are not authenticated
(called *
/everyone
) only have read access to the announcements
and server-stats
topics.
Access tokens
In addition to username/password auth, ntfy also provides authentication via access tokens. Access tokens are useful to avoid having to configure your password across multiple publishing/subscribing applications. For instance, you may want to use a dedicated token to publish from your backup host, and one from your home automation system.
!!! info As of today, access tokens grant users full access to the user account. Aside from changing the password, and deleting the account, every action can be performed with a token. Granular access tokens are on the roadmap, but not yet implemented.
The ntfy token
command can be used to manage access tokens for users. Tokens can have labels, and they can expire
automatically (or never expire). Each user can have up to 20 tokens (hardcoded).
Example commands (type ntfy token --help
or ntfy token COMMAND --help
for more details):
ntfy token list # Shows list of tokens for all users
ntfy token list phil # Shows list of tokens for user phil
ntfy token add phil # Create token for user phil which never expires
ntfy token add --expires=2d phil # Create token for user phil which expires in 2 days
ntfy token remove phil tk_th2sxr... # Delete token
Creating an access token:
$ ntfy token add --expires=30d --label="backups" phil
$ ntfy token list
user phil
- tk_AgQdq7mVBoFD37zQVN29RhuMzNIz2 (backups), expires 15 Mar 23 14:33 EDT, accessed from 0.0.0.0 at 13 Feb 23 13:33 EST
Once an access token is created, you can use it to authenticate against the ntfy server, e.g. when you publish or subscribe to topics. To learn how, check out authenticate via access tokens.
Example: Private instance
The easiest way to configure a private instance is to set auth-default-access
to deny-all
in the server.yml
:
=== "/etc/ntfy/server.yml"
yaml auth-file: "/var/lib/ntfy/user.db" auth-default-access: "deny-all"
After that, simply create an admin
user:
$ ntfy user add --role=admin phil
password: mypass
confirm: mypass
user phil added with role admin
Once you've done that, you can publish and subscribe using Basic Auth with the given username/password. Be sure to use HTTPS to avoid eavesdropping and exposing your password. Here's a simple example:
=== "Command line (curl)"
curl \ -u phil:mypass \ -d "Look ma, with auth" \ https://ntfy.example.com/mysecrets
=== "ntfy CLI"
ntfy publish \ -u phil:mypass \ ntfy.example.com/mysecrets \ "Look ma, with auth"
=== "HTTP" ``` http POST /mysecrets HTTP/1.1 Host: ntfy.example.com Authorization: Basic cGhpbDpteXBhc3M=
Look ma, with auth
```
=== "JavaScript"
javascript fetch('https://ntfy.example.com/mysecrets', { method: 'POST', // PUT works too body: 'Look ma, with auth', headers: { 'Authorization': 'Basic cGhpbDpteXBhc3M=' } })
=== "Go"
go req, _ := http.NewRequest("POST", "https://ntfy.example.com/mysecrets", strings.NewReader("Look ma, with auth")) req.Header.Set("Authorization", "Basic cGhpbDpteXBhc3M=") http.DefaultClient.Do(req)
=== "Python"
python requests.post("https://ntfy.example.com/mysecrets", data="Look ma, with auth", headers={ "Authorization": "Basic cGhpbDpteXBhc3M=" })
=== "PHP"
php-inline file_get_contents('https://ntfy.example.com/mysecrets', false, stream_context_create([ 'http' => [ 'method' => 'POST', // PUT also works 'header' => 'Content-Type: text/plain\r\n' . 'Authorization: Basic cGhpbDpteXBhc3M=', 'content' => 'Look ma, with auth' ] ]));
Example: UnifiedPush
UnifiedPush requires that the application server (e.g. Synapse, Fediverse Server, …)
has anonymous write access to the topic used for push messages.
The topic names used by UnifiedPush all start with the up*
prefix. Please refer to the
UnifiedPush documentation for more details.
To enable support for UnifiedPush for private servers (i.e. auth-default-access: "deny-all"
), you should either
allow anonymous write access for the entire prefix or explicitly per topic:
=== "Prefix"
$ ntfy access '*' 'up*' write-only
=== "Explicitly"
$ ntfy access '*' upYzMtZGZiYTY5 write-only
E-mail notifications
To allow forwarding messages via e-mail, you can configure an SMTP server for outgoing messages. Once configured,
you can set the X-Email
header to send messages via e-mail (e.g.
curl -d "hi there" -H "X-Email: phil@example.com" ntfy.sh/mytopic
).
As of today, only SMTP servers with PLAIN auth and STARTLS are supported. To enable e-mail sending, you must set the following settings:
base-url
is the root URL for the ntfy server; this is needed for e-mail footersmtp-sender-addr
is the hostname:port of the SMTP serversmtp-sender-user
andsmtp-sender-pass
are the username and password of the SMTP usersmtp-sender-from
is the e-mail address of the sender
Here's an example config using Amazon SES for outgoing mail (this is how it is
configured for ntfy.sh
):
=== "/etc/ntfy/server.yml"
yaml base-url: "https://ntfy.sh" smtp-sender-addr: "email-smtp.us-east-2.amazonaws.com:587" smtp-sender-user: "AKIDEADBEEFAFFE12345" smtp-sender-pass: "Abd13Kf+sfAk2DzifjafldkThisIsNotARealKeyOMG." smtp-sender-from: "ntfy@ntfy.sh"
Please also refer to the rate limiting settings below, specifically visitor-email-limit-burst
and visitor-email-limit-burst
. Setting these conservatively is necessary to avoid abuse.
E-mail publishing
To allow publishing messages via e-mail, ntfy can run a lightweight SMTP server for incoming messages. Once configured,
users can send emails to a topic e-mail address (e.g. mytopic@ntfy.sh
or
myprefix-mytopic@ntfy.sh
) to publish messages to a topic. This is useful for e-mail based integrations such as for
statuspage.io (though these days most services also support webhooks and HTTP calls).
To configure the SMTP server, you must at least set smtp-server-listen
and smtp-server-domain
:
smtp-server-listen
defines the IP address and port the SMTP server will listen on, e.g.:25
or1.2.3.4:25
smtp-server-domain
is the e-mail domain, e.g.ntfy.sh
(must be identical to MX record, see below)smtp-server-addr-prefix
is an optional prefix for the e-mail addresses to prevent spam. If set tontfy-
, for instance, only e-mails tontfy-$topic@ntfy.sh
will be accepted. If this is not set, all emails to$topic@ntfy.sh
will be accepted (which may obviously be a spam problem).
Here's an example config (this is how it is configured for ntfy.sh
):
=== "/etc/ntfy/server.yml"
yaml smtp-server-listen: ":25" smtp-server-domain: "ntfy.sh" smtp-server-addr-prefix: "ntfy-"
In addition to configuring the ntfy server, you have to create two DNS records (an MX record
and a corresponding A record), so incoming mail will find its way to your server. Here's an example of how ntfy.sh
is
configured (in Amazon Route 53):
You can check if everything is working correctly by sending an email as raw SMTP via nc
. Create a text file, e.g.
email.txt
EHLO example.com
MAIL FROM: phil@example.com
RCPT TO: ntfy-mytopic@ntfy.sh
DATA
Subject: Email for you
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Hello from 🇩🇪
.
And then send the mail via nc
like this. If you see any lines starting with 451
, those are errors from the
ntfy server. Read them carefully.
$ cat email.txt | nc -N ntfy.sh 25
220 ntfy.sh ESMTP Service Ready
250-Hello example.com
...
250 2.0.0 Roger, accepting mail from <phil@example.com>
250 2.0.0 I'll make sure <ntfy-mytopic@ntfy.sh> gets this
As for the DNS setup, be sure to verify that dig MX
and dig A
are returning results similar to this:
$ dig MX ntfy.sh +short
10 mx1.ntfy.sh.
$ dig A mx1.ntfy.sh +short
3.139.215.220
Behind a proxy (TLS, etc.)
!!! warning
If you are running ntfy behind a proxy, you must set the behind-proxy
flag. Otherwise, all visitors are
rate limited as if they are one.
It may be desirable to run ntfy behind a proxy (e.g. nginx, HAproxy or Apache), so you can provide TLS certificates using Let's Encrypt using certbot, or simply because you'd like to share the ports (80/443) with other services. Whatever your reasons may be, there are a few things to consider.
If you are running ntfy behind a proxy, you should set the behind-proxy
flag. This will instruct the
rate limiting logic to use the X-Forwarded-For
header as the primary identifier for a visitor,
as opposed to the remote IP address. If the behind-proxy
flag is not set, all visitors will
be counted as one, because from the perspective of the ntfy server, they all share the proxy's IP address.
=== "/etc/ntfy/server.yml"
yaml # Tell ntfy to use "X-Forwarded-For" to identify visitors behind-proxy: true
TLS/SSL
ntfy supports HTTPS/TLS by setting the listen-https
config option. However, if you
are behind a proxy, it is recommended that TLS/SSL termination is done by the proxy itself (see below).
I highly recommend using certbot. I use it with the dns-route53 plugin, which lets you use AWS Route 53 as the challenge. That's much easier than using the HTTP challenge. I've found this guide to be incredibly helpful.
nginx/Apache2/caddy
For your convenience, here's a working config that'll help configure things behind a proxy. Be sure to enable WebSockets
by forwarding the Connection
and Upgrade
headers accordingly.
In this example, ntfy runs on :2586
and we proxy traffic to it. We also redirect HTTP to HTTPS for GET requests against a topic
or the root domain:
=== "nginx (convenient)" ``` # /etc/nginx/sites-*/ntfy # # This config allows insecure HTTP POST/PUT requests against topics to allow a short curl syntax (without -L # and "https://" prefix). It also disables output buffering, which has worked well for the ntfy.sh server. # # This is pretty much how ntfy.sh is configured. To see the exact configuration, # see https://github.com/binwiederhier/ntfy-ansible/
server {
listen 80;
server_name ntfy.sh;
location / {
# Redirect HTTP to HTTPS, but only for GET topic addresses, since we want
# it to work with curl without the annoying https:// prefix
set $redirect_https "";
if ($request_method = GET) {
set $redirect_https "yes";
}
if ($request_uri ~* "^/([-_a-z0-9]{0,64}$|docs/|static/)") {
set $redirect_https "${redirect_https}yes";
}
if ($redirect_https = "yesyes") {
return 302 https://$http_host$request_uri$is_args$query_string;
}
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:2586;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_buffering off;
proxy_request_buffering off;
proxy_redirect off;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_connect_timeout 3m;
proxy_send_timeout 3m;
proxy_read_timeout 3m;
client_max_body_size 0; # Stream request body to backend
}
}
server {
listen 443 ssl http2;
server_name ntfy.sh;
# See https://ssl-config.mozilla.org/#server=nginx&version=1.18.0&config=intermediate&openssl=1.1.1k&hsts=false&ocsp=false&guideline=5.6see https://ssl-config.mozilla.org/#server=nginx&version=1.18.0&config=intermediate&openssl=1.1.1k&hsts=false&ocsp=false&guideline=5.6
ssl_session_timeout 1d;
ssl_session_cache shared:MozSSL:10m; # about 40000 sessions
ssl_session_tickets off;
ssl_protocols TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3;
ssl_ciphers ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:ECDHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:DHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384;
ssl_prefer_server_ciphers off;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/ntfy.sh/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/ntfy.sh/privkey.pem;
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:2586;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_buffering off;
proxy_request_buffering off;
proxy_redirect off;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_connect_timeout 3m;
proxy_send_timeout 3m;
proxy_read_timeout 3m;
client_max_body_size 0; # Stream request body to backend
}
}
```
=== "nginx (more secure)" ``` # /etc/nginx/sites-*/ntfy # # This config requires the use of the -L flag in curl to redirect to HTTPS, and it keeps nginx output buffering # enabled. While recommended, I have had issues with that in the past.
server {
listen 80;
server_name ntfy.sh;
location / {
return 302 https://$http_host$request_uri$is_args$query_string;
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:2586;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_connect_timeout 3m;
proxy_send_timeout 3m;
proxy_read_timeout 3m;
client_max_body_size 0; # Stream request body to backend
}
}
server {
listen 443 ssl http2;
server_name ntfy.sh;
# See https://ssl-config.mozilla.org/#server=nginx&version=1.18.0&config=intermediate&openssl=1.1.1k&hsts=false&ocsp=false&guideline=5.6see https://ssl-config.mozilla.org/#server=nginx&version=1.18.0&config=intermediate&openssl=1.1.1k&hsts=false&ocsp=false&guideline=5.6
ssl_session_timeout 1d;
ssl_session_cache shared:MozSSL:10m; # about 40000 sessions
ssl_session_tickets off;
ssl_protocols TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3;
ssl_ciphers ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:ECDHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:DHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384;
ssl_prefer_server_ciphers off;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/ntfy.sh/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/ntfy.sh/privkey.pem;
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:2586;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_connect_timeout 3m;
proxy_send_timeout 3m;
proxy_read_timeout 3m;
client_max_body_size 0; # Stream request body to backend
}
}
```
=== "Apache2" ``` # /etc/apache2/sites-*/ntfy.conf
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName ntfy.sh
# Proxy connections to ntfy (requires "a2enmod proxy")
ProxyPass / http://127.0.0.1:2586/
ProxyPassReverse / http://127.0.0.1:2586/
SetEnv proxy-nokeepalive 1
SetEnv proxy-sendchunked 1
# Higher than the max message size of 4096 bytes
LimitRequestBody 102400
# Enable mod_rewrite (requires "a2enmod rewrite")
RewriteEngine on
# WebSockets support (requires "a2enmod rewrite proxy_wstunnel")
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Upgrade} websocket [NC]
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Connection} upgrade [NC]
RewriteRule ^/?(.*) "ws://127.0.0.1:2586/$1" [P,L]
# Redirect HTTP to HTTPS, but only for GET topic addresses, since we want
# it to work with curl without the annoying https:// prefix
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_METHOD} GET
RewriteRule ^/([-_A-Za-z0-9]{0,64})$ https://%{SERVER_NAME}/$1 [R,L]
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:443>
ServerName ntfy.sh
SSLEngine on
SSLCertificateFile /etc/letsencrypt/live/ntfy.sh/fullchain.pem
SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/letsencrypt/live/ntfy.sh/privkey.pem
Include /etc/letsencrypt/options-ssl-apache.conf
# Proxy connections to ntfy (requires "a2enmod proxy")
ProxyPass / http://127.0.0.1:2586/
ProxyPassReverse / http://127.0.0.1:2586/
SetEnv proxy-nokeepalive 1
SetEnv proxy-sendchunked 1
# Higher than the max message size of 4096 bytes
LimitRequestBody 102400
# Enable mod_rewrite (requires "a2enmod rewrite")
RewriteEngine on
# WebSockets support (requires "a2enmod rewrite proxy_wstunnel")
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Upgrade} websocket [NC]
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Connection} upgrade [NC]
RewriteRule ^/?(.*) "ws://127.0.0.1:2586/$1" [P,L]
</VirtualHost>
```
=== "caddy" ``` # Note that this config is most certainly incomplete. Please help out and let me know what's missing # via Discord/Matrix or in a GitHub issue.
ntfy.sh, http://nfty.sh {
reverse_proxy 127.0.0.1:2586
# Redirect HTTP to HTTPS, but only for GET topic addresses, since we want
# it to work with curl without the annoying https:// prefix
@httpget {
protocol http
method GET
path_regexp ^/([-_a-z0-9]{0,64}$|docs/|static/)
}
redir @httpget https://{host}{uri}
}
```
Firebase (FCM)
!!! info Using Firebase is optional and only works if you modify and build your own Android .apk. For a self-hosted instance, it's easier to just not bother with FCM.
Firebase Cloud Messaging (FCM) is the Google approved way to send push messages to Android devices. FCM is the only method that an Android app can receive messages without having to run a foreground service.
For the main host ntfy.sh, the ntfy Android app uses Firebase to send messages to the device. For other hosts, instant delivery is used and FCM is not involved.
To configure FCM for your self-hosted instance of the ntfy server, follow these steps:
- Sign up for a Firebase account
- Create a Firebase app and download the key file (e.g.
myapp-firebase-adminsdk-...json
) - Place the key file in
/etc/ntfy
, set thefirebase-key-file
inserver.yml
accordingly and restart the ntfy server - Build your own Android .apk following these instructions
Example:
# If set, also publish messages to a Firebase Cloud Messaging (FCM) topic for your app.
# This is optional and only required to support Android apps (which don't allow background services anymore).
#
firebase-key-file: "/etc/ntfy/ntfy-sh-firebase-adminsdk-ahnce-9f4d6f14b5.json"
iOS instant notifications
Unlike Android, iOS heavily restricts background processing, which sadly makes it impossible to implement instant push notifications without a central server.
To still support instant notifications on iOS through your self-hosted ntfy server, you have to forward so called poll_request
messages to the main ntfy.sh server (or any upstream server that's APNS/Firebase connected, if you build your own iOS app),
which will then forward it to Firebase/APNS.
To configure it, simply set upstream-base-url
like so:
upstream-base-url: "https://ntfy.sh"
If set, all incoming messages will publish a poll request to the configured upstream server, containing the message ID of the original message, instructing the iOS app to poll this server for the actual message contents.
If upstream-base-url
is not set, notifications will still eventually get to your device, but delivery can take hours,
depending on the state of the phone. If you are using your phone, it shouldn't take more than 20-30 minutes though.
In case you're curious, here's an example of the entire flow:
- In the iOS app, you subscribe to
https://ntfy.example.com/mytopic
- The app subscribes to the Firebase topic
6de73be8dfb7d69e...
(the SHA256 of the topic URL) - When you publish a message to
https://ntfy.example.com/mytopic
, your ntfy server will publish a poll request tohttps://ntfy.sh/6de73be8dfb7d69e...
. The request from your server to the upstream server contains only the message ID (in theX-Poll-ID
header), and the SHA256 checksum of the topic URL (as upstream topic). - The ntfy.sh server publishes the poll request message to Firebase, which forwards it to APNS, which forwards it to your iOS device
- Your iOS device receives the poll request, and fetches the actual message from your server, and then displays it
Here's an example of what the self-hosted server forwards to the upstream server. The request is equivalent to this curl:
curl -X POST -H "X-Poll-ID: s4PdJozxM8na" https://ntfy.sh/6de73be8dfb7d69e32fb2c00c23fe7adbd8b5504406e3068c273aa24cef4055b
{"id":"4HsClFEuCIcs","time":1654087955,"event":"poll_request","topic":"6de73be8dfb7d69e32fb2c00c23fe7adbd8b5504406e3068c273aa24cef4055b","message":"New message","poll_id":"s4PdJozxM8na"}
Note that the self-hosted server literally sends the message New message
for every message, even if your message
may be Some other message
. This is so that if iOS cannot talk to the self-hosted server (in time, or at all),
it'll show New message
as a popup.
Tiers
ntfy supports associating users to pre-defined tiers. Tiers can be used to grant users higher limits, such as
daily message limits, attachment size, or make it possible for users to reserve topics. If payments are enabled,
tiers can be paid or unpaid, and users can upgrade/downgrade between them. If payments are disabled, then the only way
to switch between tiers is with the ntfy user change-tier
command (see users and roles).
By default, newly created users have no tier, and all usage limits are read from the server.yml
config file.
Once a user is associated with a tier, some limits are overridden based on the tier.
The ntfy tier
command can be used to manage all available tiers. By default, there are no pre-defined tiers.
Example commands (type ntfy token --help
or ntfy token COMMAND --help
for more details):
ntfy tier add pro # Add tier with code "pro", using the defaults
ntfy tier change --name="Pro" pro # Update the name of an existing tier
ntfy tier del starter # Delete an existing tier
ntfy user change-tier phil pro # Switch user "phil" to tier "pro"
Creating a tier (full example):
ntfy tier add \
--name="Pro" \
--message-limit=10000 \
--message-expiry-duration=24h \
--email-limit=50 \
--reservation-limit=10 \
--attachment-file-size-limit=100M \
--attachment-total-size-limit=1G \
--attachment-expiry-duration=12h \
--attachment-bandwidth-limit=5G \
--stripe-price-id=price_123456 \
pro
Payments
ntfy supports paid tiers via Stripe as a payment provider. If payments are enabled, users can register, login and switch plans in the web app. The web app will behave slightly differently if payments are enabled (e.g. showing an upgrade banner, or "ntfy Pro" tags).
!!! info The ntfy payments integration is very tailored to ntfy.sh and Stripe. I do not intend to support arbitrary use cases.
To enable payments, sign up with Stripe, set the stripe-secret-key
and stripe-webhook-key
config options:
stripe-secret-key
is the key used for the Stripe API communication. Setting this values enables payments in the ntfy web app (e.g. Upgrade dialog). See API keys.stripe-webhook-key
is the key required to validate the authenticity of incoming webhooks from Stripe. Webhooks are essential to keep the local database in sync with the payment provider. See Webhooks.billing-contact
is an email address or website displayed in the "Upgrade tier" dialog to let people reach out with billing questions. If unset, nothing will be displayed.
In addition to setting these two options, you also need to define a Stripe webhook
for the customer.subscription.updated
and customer.subscription.deleted
event, which points
to https://ntfy.example.com/v1/account/billing/webhook
.
Here's an example:
stripe-secret-key: "sk_test_ZmhzZGtmbGhkc2tqZmhzYcO2a2hmbGtnaHNkbGtnaGRsc2hnbG"
stripe-webhook-key: "whsec_ZnNkZnNIRExBSFNES0hBRFNmaHNka2ZsaGR"
billing-contact: "phil@example.com"
Rate limiting
!!! info
Be aware that if you are running ntfy behind a proxy, you must set the behind-proxy
flag.
Otherwise, all visitors are rate limited as if they are one.
By default, ntfy runs without authentication, so it is vitally important that we protect the server from abuse or overload. There are various limits and rate limits in place that you can use to configure the server:
- Global limit: A global limit applies across all visitors (IPs, clients, users)
- Visitor limit: A visitor limit only applies to a certain visitor. A visitor is identified by its IP address
(or the
X-Forwarded-For
header ifbehind-proxy
is set). All config options that start with the wordvisitor
apply only on a per-visitor basis.
During normal usage, you shouldn't encounter these limits at all, and even if you burst a few requests or emails (e.g. when you reconnect after a connection drop), it shouldn't have any effect.
General limits
Let's do the easy limits first:
global-topic-limit
defines the total number of topics before the server rejects new topics. It defaults to 15,000.visitor-subscription-limit
is the number of subscriptions (open connections) per visitor. This value defaults to 30.
Request limits
In addition to the limits above, there is a requests/second limit per visitor for all sensitive GET/PUT/POST requests. This limit uses a token bucket (using Go's rate package):
Each visitor has a bucket of 60 requests they can fire against the server (defined by visitor-request-limit-burst
).
After the 60, new requests will encounter a 429 Too Many Requests
response. The visitor request bucket is refilled at a rate of one
request every 5s (defined by visitor-request-limit-replenish
)
visitor-request-limit-burst
is the initial bucket of requests each visitor has. This defaults to 60.visitor-request-limit-replenish
is the rate at which the bucket is refilled (one request per x). Defaults to 5s.visitor-request-limit-exempt-hosts
is a comma-separated list of hostnames and IPs to be exempt from request rate limiting; hostnames are resolved at the time the server is started. Defaults to an empty list.
Message limits
By default, the number of messages a visitor can send is governed entirely by the request limit. For instance, if the request limit allows for 15,000 requests per day, and all of those requests are POST/PUT requests to publish messages, then that is the daily message limit.
To limit the number of daily messages per visitor, you can set visitor-message-daily-limit
. This defines the number
of messages a visitor can send in a day. This counter is reset every day at midnight (UTC).
Attachment limits
Aside from the global file size and total attachment cache limits (see above), there are two relevant per-visitor limits:
visitor-attachment-total-size-limit
is the total storage limit used for attachments per visitor. It defaults to 100M. The per-visitor storage is automatically decreased as attachments expire. External attachments (attached viaX-Attach
, see publishing docs) do not count here.visitor-attachment-daily-bandwidth-limit
is the total daily attachment download/upload bandwidth limit per visitor, including PUT and GET requests. This is to protect your precious bandwidth from abuse, since egress costs money in most cloud providers. This defaults to 500M.
E-mail limits
Similarly to the request limit, there is also an e-mail limit (only relevant if e-mail notifications are enabled):
visitor-email-limit-burst
is the initial bucket of emails each visitor has. This defaults to 16.visitor-email-limit-replenish
is the rate at which the bucket is refilled (one email per x). Defaults to 1h.
Firebase limits
If Firebase is configured, all messages are also published to a Firebase topic (unless Firebase: no
is set). Firebase enforces its own limits
on how many messages can be published. Unfortunately these limits are a little vague and can change depending on the time
of day. In practice, I have only ever observed 429 Quota exceeded
responses from Firebase if too many messages are published to
the same topic.
In ntfy, if Firebase responds with a 429 after publishing to a topic, the visitor (= IP address) who published the message is banned from publishing to Firebase for 10 minutes (not configurable). Because publishing to Firebase happens asynchronously, there is no indication of the user that this has happened. Non-Firebase subscribers (WebSocket or HTTP stream) are not affected. After the 10 minutes are up, messages forwarding to Firebase is resumed for this visitor.
If this ever happens, there will be a log message that looks something like this:
WARN Firebase quota exceeded (likely for topic), temporarily denying Firebase access to visitor
Subscriber-based rate limiting
By default, ntfy puts almost all rate limits on the message publisher, e.g. number of messages, requests, and attachment size are all based on the visitor who publishes a message. Subscriber-based rate limiting is a way to use the rate limits of a topic's subscriber, instead of the limits of the publisher.
If enabled, subscribers may opt to have published messages counted against their own rate limits, as opposed to the publisher's rate limits. This is especially useful to increase the amount of messages that high-volume publishers (e.g. Matrix/Mastodon servers) are allowed to send.
Once enabled, a client may send a Rate-Topics: <topic1>,<topic2>,...
header when subscribing to topics via
HTTP stream, or websockets, thereby registering itself as the "rate visitor", i.e. the visitor whose rate limits
to use when publishing on this topic. Note that setting the rate visitor requires read-write permission on the topic.
UnifiedPush only: If this setting is enabled, publishing to UnifiedPush topics will lead to an HTTP 507 Insufficient Storage
response if no "rate visitor" has been previously registered. This is to avoid burning the publisher's
visitor-message-daily-limit
.
To enable subscriber-based rate limiting, set visitor-subscriber-rate-limiting: true
.
Tuning for scale
If you're running ntfy for your home server, you probably don't need to worry about scale at all. In its default config,
if it's not behind a proxy, the ntfy server can keep about as many connections as the open file limit allows.
This limit is typically called nofile
. Other than that, RAM and CPU are obviously relevant. You may also want to check
out this discussion on Reddit.
Depending on how you run it, here are a few limits that are relevant:
Message cache
By default, the message cache (defined by cache-file
) uses the SQLite default settings, which means it
syncs to disk on every write. For personal servers, this is perfectly adequate. For larger installations, such as ntfy.sh,
the write-ahead log (WAL) should be enabled, and the sync mode should be adjusted.
See this article for details.
In addition to that, for very high load servers (such as ntfy.sh), it may be beneficial to write messages to the cache
in batches, and asynchronously. This can be enabled with the cache-batch-size
and cache-batch-timeout
. If you start
seeing database locked
messages in the logs, you should probably enable that.
Here's how ntfy.sh has been tuned in the server.yml
file:
cache-batch-size: 25
cache-batch-timeout: "1s"
cache-startup-queries: |
pragma journal_mode = WAL;
pragma synchronous = normal;
pragma temp_store = memory;
pragma busy_timeout = 15000;
vacuum;
For systemd services
If you're running ntfy in a systemd service (e.g. for .deb/.rpm packages), the main limiting factor is the
LimitNOFILE
setting in the systemd unit. The default open files limit for ntfy.service
is 10,000. You can override it
by creating a /etc/systemd/system/ntfy.service.d/override.conf
file. As far as I can tell, /etc/security/limits.conf
is not relevant.
=== "/etc/systemd/system/ntfy.service.d/override.conf"
# Allow 20,000 ntfy connections (and give room for other file handles) [Service] LimitNOFILE=20500
Outside of systemd
If you're running outside systemd, you may want to adjust your /etc/security/limits.conf
file to
increase the nofile
setting. Here's an example that increases the limit to 5,000. You can find out the current setting
by running ulimit -n
, or manually override it temporarily by running ulimit -n 50000
.
=== "/etc/security/limits.conf"
# Increase open files limit globally * hard nofile 20500
Proxy limits (nginx, Apache2)
If you are running behind a proxy (e.g. nginx, Apache), the open files limit of the proxy is also relevant. So if your proxy runs inside of systemd, increase the limits in systemd for the proxy. Typically, the proxy open files limit has to be double the number of how many connections you'd like to support, because the proxy has to maintain the client connection and the connection to ntfy.
=== "/etc/nginx/nginx.conf"
events { # Allow 40,000 proxy connections (2x of the desired ntfy connection count; # and give room for other file handles) worker_connections 40500; }
=== "/etc/systemd/system/nginx.service.d/override.conf"
# Allow 40,000 proxy connections (2x of the desired ntfy connection count; # and give room for other file handles) [Service] LimitNOFILE=40500
Banning bad actors (fail2ban)
If you put stuff on the Internet, bad actors will try to break them or break in. fail2ban and nginx's ngx_http_limit_req_module module can be used to ban client IPs if they misbehave. This is on top of the rate limiting inside the ntfy server.
Here's an example for how ntfy.sh is configured, following the instructions from two tutorials (here and here):
=== "/etc/nginx/nginx.conf" ``` # Rate limit all IP addresses http { limit_req_zone $binary_remote_addr zone=one:10m rate=45r/m; }
# Alternatively, whitelist certain IP addresses
http {
geo $limited {
default 1;
116.203.112.46/32 0;
132.226.42.65/32 0;
...
}
map $limited $limitkey {
1 $binary_remote_addr;
0 "";
}
limit_req_zone $limitkey zone=one:10m rate=45r/m;
}
```
=== "/etc/nginx/sites-enabled/ntfy.sh"
# For each server/location block server { location / { limit_req zone=one burst=1000 nodelay; } }
=== "/etc/fail2ban/filter.d/nginx-req-limit.conf"
[Definition] failregex = limiting requests, excess:.* by zone.*client: <HOST> ignoreregex =
=== "/etc/fail2ban/jail.local"
[nginx-req-limit] enabled = true filter = nginx-req-limit action = iptables-multiport[name=ReqLimit, port="http,https", protocol=tcp] logpath = /var/log/nginx/error.log findtime = 600 bantime = 14400 maxretry = 10
Health checks
A preliminary health check API endpoint is exposed at /v1/health
. The endpoint returns a json
response in the format shown below.
If a non-200 HTTP status code is returned or if the returned health
field is false
the ntfy service should be considered as unhealthy.
{"health":true}
See Installation for Docker for an example of how this could be used in a docker-compose
environment.
Monitoring
If configured, ntfy can expose a /metrics
endpoint for Prometheus, which can then be used to
create dashboards and alerts (e.g. via Grafana).
To configure the metrics endpoint, either set enable-metrics
and/or set the listen-metrics-http
option to a dedicated
listen address. Metrics may be considered sensitive information, so before you enable them, be sure you know what you are
doing, and/or secure access to the endpoint in your reverse proxy.
enable-metrics
enables the /metrics endpoint for the default ntfy server (i.e. HTTP, HTTPS and/or Unix socket)metrics-listen-http
exposes the metrics endpoint via a dedicated[IP]:port
. If set, this option implicitly enables metrics as well, e.g. "10.0.1.1:9090" or ":9090"
=== "Using default port"
yaml enable-metrics: true
=== "Using dedicated IP/port"
yaml metrics-listen-http: "10.0.1.1:9090"
Here's an example Grafana dashboard built from the metrics (see Grafana JSON on GitHub):
Logging & debugging
By default, ntfy logs to the console (stderr), with an info
log level, and in a human-readable text format.
ntfy supports five different log levels, can also write to a file, log as JSON, and even supports granular
log level overrides for easier debugging. Some options (log-level
and log-level-overrides
) can be hot reloaded
by calling kill -HUP $pid
or systemctl reload ntfy
.
The following config options define the logging behavior:
log-format
defines the output format, can betext
(default) orjson
log-file
is a filename to write logs to. If this is not set, ntfy logs to stderr.log-level
defines the default log level, can be one oftrace
,debug
,info
(default),warn
orerror
. Be aware thatdebug
(and particularlytrace
) can be very verbose. Only turn them on briefly for debugging purposes.log-level-overrides
lets you override the log level if certain fields match. This is incredibly powerful for debugging certain parts of the system (e.g. only the account management, or only a certain visitor). This is an array of strings in the format:field=value -> level
to match a value exactly, e.g.tag=manager -> trace
field -> level
to match any value, e.g.time_taken_ms -> debug
Logging config (good for production use):
log-level: info
log-format: json
log-file: /var/log/ntfy.log
Temporary debugging:
If something's not working right, you can debug/trace through what the ntfy server is doing by setting the log-level
to debug
or trace
. The debug
setting will output information about each published message, but not the message
contents. The trace
setting will also print the message contents.
Alternatively, you can set log-level-overrides
for only certain fields, such as a visitor's IP address (visitor_ip
),
a username (user_name
), or a tag (tag
). There are dozens of fields you can use to override log levels. To learn what
they are, either turn the log-level to trace
and observe, or reference the source code.
Here's an example that will output only info
log events, except when they match either of the defined overrides:
log-level: info
log-level-overrides:
- "tag=manager -> trace"
- "visitor_ip=1.2.3.4 -> debug"
- "time_taken_ms -> debug"
!!! warning
The debug
and trace
log levels are very verbose, and using log-level-overrides
has a
performance penalty. Only use it for temporary debugging.
You can also hot-reload the log-level
and log-level-overrides
by sending the SIGHUP
signal to the process after
editing the server.yml
file. You can do so by calling systemctl reload ntfy
(if ntfy is running inside systemd),
or by calling kill -HUP $(pidof ntfy)
. If successful, you'll see something like this:
$ ntfy serve
2022/06/02 10:29:28 INFO Listening on :2586[http] :1025[smtp], log level is INFO
2022/06/02 10:29:34 INFO Partially hot reloading configuration ...
2022/06/02 10:29:34 INFO Log level is TRACE
Config options
Each config option can be set in the config file /etc/ntfy/server.yml
(e.g. listen-http: :80
) or as a
CLI option (e.g. --listen-http :80
. Here's a list of all available options. Alternatively, you can set an environment
variable before running the ntfy
command (e.g. export NTFY_LISTEN_HTTP=:80
).
!!! info
All config options can also be defined in the server.yml
file using underscores instead of dashes, e.g.
cache_duration
and cache-duration
are both supported. This is to support stricter YAML parsers that do
not support dashes.
Config option | Env variable | Format | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
base-url |
NTFY_BASE_URL |
URL | - | Public facing base URL of the service (e.g. https://ntfy.sh ) |
listen-http |
NTFY_LISTEN_HTTP |
[host]:port |
:80 |
Listen address for the HTTP web server |
listen-https |
NTFY_LISTEN_HTTPS |
[host]:port |
- | Listen address for the HTTPS web server. If set, you also need to set key-file and cert-file . |
listen-unix |
NTFY_LISTEN_UNIX |
filename | - | Path to a Unix socket to listen on |
listen-unix-mode |
NTFY_LISTEN_UNIX_MODE |
file mode | system default | File mode of the Unix socket, e.g. 0700 or 0777 |
key-file |
NTFY_KEY_FILE |
filename | - | HTTPS/TLS private key file, only used if listen-https is set. |
cert-file |
NTFY_CERT_FILE |
filename | - | HTTPS/TLS certificate file, only used if listen-https is set. |
firebase-key-file |
NTFY_FIREBASE_KEY_FILE |
filename | - | If set, also publish messages to a Firebase Cloud Messaging (FCM) topic for your app. This is optional and only required to save battery when using the Android app. See Firebase (FCM. |
cache-file |
NTFY_CACHE_FILE |
filename | - | If set, messages are cached in a local SQLite database instead of only in-memory. This allows for service restarts without losing messages in support of the since= parameter. See message cache. |
cache-duration |
NTFY_CACHE_DURATION |
duration | 12h | Duration for which messages will be buffered before they are deleted. This is required to support the since=... and poll=1 parameter. Set this to 0 to disable the cache entirely. |
cache-startup-queries |
NTFY_CACHE_STARTUP_QUERIES |
string (SQL queries) | - | SQL queries to run during database startup; this is useful for tuning and enabling WAL mode |
cache-batch-size |
NTFY_CACHE_BATCH_SIZE |
int | 0 | Max size of messages to batch together when writing to message cache (if zero, writes are synchronous) |
cache-batch-timeout |
NTFY_CACHE_BATCH_TIMEOUT |
duration | 0s | Timeout for batched async writes to the message cache (if zero, writes are synchronous) |
auth-file |
NTFY_AUTH_FILE |
filename | - | Auth database file used for access control. If set, enables authentication and access control. See access control. |
auth-default-access |
NTFY_AUTH_DEFAULT_ACCESS |
read-write , read-only , write-only , deny-all |
read-write |
Default permissions if no matching entries in the auth database are found. Default is read-write . |
behind-proxy |
NTFY_BEHIND_PROXY |
bool | false | If set, the X-Forwarded-For header is used to determine the visitor IP address instead of the remote address of the connection. |
attachment-cache-dir |
NTFY_ATTACHMENT_CACHE_DIR |
directory | - | Cache directory for attached files. To enable attachments, this has to be set. |
attachment-total-size-limit |
NTFY_ATTACHMENT_TOTAL_SIZE_LIMIT |
size | 5G | Limit of the on-disk attachment cache directory. If the limits is exceeded, new attachments will be rejected. |
attachment-file-size-limit |
NTFY_ATTACHMENT_FILE_SIZE_LIMIT |
size | 15M | Per-file attachment size limit (e.g. 300k, 2M, 100M). Larger attachment will be rejected. |
attachment-expiry-duration |
NTFY_ATTACHMENT_EXPIRY_DURATION |
duration | 3h | Duration after which uploaded attachments will be deleted (e.g. 3h, 20h). Strongly affects visitor-attachment-total-size-limit . |
smtp-sender-addr |
NTFY_SMTP_SENDER_ADDR |
host:port |
- | SMTP server address to allow email sending |
smtp-sender-user |
NTFY_SMTP_SENDER_USER |
string | - | SMTP user; only used if e-mail sending is enabled |
smtp-sender-pass |
NTFY_SMTP_SENDER_PASS |
string | - | SMTP password; only used if e-mail sending is enabled |
smtp-sender-from |
NTFY_SMTP_SENDER_FROM |
e-mail address | - | SMTP sender e-mail address; only used if e-mail sending is enabled |
smtp-server-listen |
NTFY_SMTP_SERVER_LISTEN |
[ip]:port |
- | Defines the IP address and port the SMTP server will listen on, e.g. :25 or 1.2.3.4:25 |
smtp-server-domain |
NTFY_SMTP_SERVER_DOMAIN |
domain name | - | SMTP server e-mail domain, e.g. ntfy.sh |
smtp-server-addr-prefix |
NTFY_SMTP_SERVER_ADDR_PREFIX |
string | - | Optional prefix for the e-mail addresses to prevent spam, e.g. ntfy- |
keepalive-interval |
NTFY_KEEPALIVE_INTERVAL |
duration | 45s | Interval in which keepalive messages are sent to the client. This is to prevent intermediaries closing the connection for inactivity. Note that the Android app has a hardcoded timeout at 77s, so it should be less than that. |
manager-interval |
NTFY_MANAGER_INTERVAL |
duration | 1m | Interval in which the manager prunes old messages, deletes topics and prints the stats. |
global-topic-limit |
NTFY_GLOBAL_TOPIC_LIMIT |
number | 15,000 | Rate limiting: Total number of topics before the server rejects new topics. |
upstream-base-url |
NTFY_UPSTREAM_BASE_URL |
URL | https://ntfy.sh |
Forward poll request to an upstream server, this is needed for iOS push notifications for self-hosted servers |
visitor-attachment-total-size-limit |
NTFY_VISITOR_ATTACHMENT_TOTAL_SIZE_LIMIT |
size | 100M | Rate limiting: Total storage limit used for attachments per visitor, for all attachments combined. Storage is freed after attachments expire. See attachment-expiry-duration . |
visitor-attachment-daily-bandwidth-limit |
NTFY_VISITOR_ATTACHMENT_DAILY_BANDWIDTH_LIMIT |
size | 500M | Rate limiting: Total daily attachment download/upload traffic limit per visitor. This is to protect your bandwidth costs from exploding. |
visitor-email-limit-burst |
NTFY_VISITOR_EMAIL_LIMIT_BURST |
number | 16 | Rate limiting:Initial limit of e-mails per visitor |
visitor-email-limit-replenish |
NTFY_VISITOR_EMAIL_LIMIT_REPLENISH |
duration | 1h | Rate limiting: Strongly related to visitor-email-limit-burst : The rate at which the bucket is refilled |
visitor-message-daily-limit |
NTFY_VISITOR_MESSAGE_DAILY_LIMIT |
number | - | Rate limiting: Allowed number of messages per day per visitor, reset every day at midnight (UTC). By default, this value is unset. |
visitor-request-limit-burst |
NTFY_VISITOR_REQUEST_LIMIT_BURST |
number | 60 | Rate limiting: Allowed GET/PUT/POST requests per second, per visitor. This setting is the initial bucket of requests each visitor has |
visitor-request-limit-replenish |
NTFY_VISITOR_REQUEST_LIMIT_REPLENISH |
duration | 5s | Rate limiting: Strongly related to visitor-request-limit-burst : The rate at which the bucket is refilled |
visitor-request-limit-exempt-hosts |
NTFY_VISITOR_REQUEST_LIMIT_EXEMPT_HOSTS |
comma-separated host/IP list | - | Rate limiting: List of hostnames and IPs to be exempt from request rate limiting |
visitor-subscription-limit |
NTFY_VISITOR_SUBSCRIPTION_LIMIT |
number | 30 | Rate limiting: Number of subscriptions per visitor (IP address) |
visitor-subscriber-rate-limiting |
NTFY_VISITOR_SUBSCRIBER_RATE_LIMITING |
bool | false |
Rate limiting: Enables subscriber-based rate limiting |
web-root |
NTFY_WEB_ROOT |
app , home or disable |
app |
Sets web root to landing page (home), web app (app) or disables the web app entirely (disable) |
enable-signup |
NTFY_ENABLE_SIGNUP |
boolean (true or false ) |
false |
Allows users to sign up via the web app, or API |
enable-login |
NTFY_ENABLE_LOGIN |
boolean (true or false ) |
false |
Allows users to log in via the web app, or API |
enable-reservations |
NTFY_ENABLE_RESERVATIONS |
boolean (true or false ) |
false |
Allows users to reserve topics (if their tier allows it) |
stripe-secret-key |
NTFY_STRIPE_SECRET_KEY |
string | - | Payments: Key used for the Stripe API communication, this enables payments |
stripe-webhook-key |
NTFY_STRIPE_WEBHOOK_KEY |
string | - | Payments: Key required to validate the authenticity of incoming webhooks from Stripe |
billing-contact |
NTFY_BILLING_CONTACT |
email address or website | - | Payments: Email or website displayed in Upgrade dialog as a billing contact |
The format for a duration is: <number>(smh)
, e.g. 30s, 20m or 1h.
The format for a size is: <number>(GMK)
, e.g. 1G, 200M or 4000k.
Command line options
$ ntfy serve --help
NAME:
ntfy serve - Run the ntfy server
USAGE:
ntfy serve [OPTIONS..]
CATEGORY:
Server commands
DESCRIPTION:
Run the ntfy server and listen for incoming requests
The command will load the configuration from /etc/ntfy/server.yml. Config options can
be overridden using the command line options.
Examples:
ntfy serve # Starts server in the foreground (on port 80)
ntfy serve --listen-http :8080 # Starts server with alternate port
OPTIONS:
--debug, -d enable debug logging (default: false) [$NTFY_DEBUG]
--trace enable tracing (very verbose, be careful) (default: false) [$NTFY_TRACE]
--no-log-dates, --no_log_dates disable the date/time prefix (default: false) [$NTFY_NO_LOG_DATES]
--log-level value, --log_level value set log level (default: "INFO") [$NTFY_LOG_LEVEL]
--log-level-overrides value, --log_level_overrides value [ --log-level-overrides value, --log_level_overrides value ] set log level overrides [$NTFY_LOG_LEVEL_OVERRIDES]
--log-format value, --log_format value set log format (default: "text") [$NTFY_LOG_FORMAT]
--log-file value, --log_file value set log file, default is STDOUT [$NTFY_LOG_FILE]
--config value, -c value config file (default: /etc/ntfy/server.yml) [$NTFY_CONFIG_FILE]
--base-url value, --base_url value, -B value externally visible base URL for this host (e.g. https://ntfy.sh) [$NTFY_BASE_URL]
--listen-http value, --listen_http value, -l value ip:port used to as HTTP listen address (default: ":80") [$NTFY_LISTEN_HTTP]
--listen-https value, --listen_https value, -L value ip:port used to as HTTPS listen address [$NTFY_LISTEN_HTTPS]
--listen-unix value, --listen_unix value, -U value listen on unix socket path [$NTFY_LISTEN_UNIX]
--listen-unix-mode value, --listen_unix_mode value file permissions of unix socket, e.g. 0700 (default: system default) [$NTFY_LISTEN_UNIX_MODE]
--key-file value, --key_file value, -K value private key file, if listen-https is set [$NTFY_KEY_FILE]
--cert-file value, --cert_file value, -E value certificate file, if listen-https is set [$NTFY_CERT_FILE]
--firebase-key-file value, --firebase_key_file value, -F value Firebase credentials file; if set additionally publish to FCM topic [$NTFY_FIREBASE_KEY_FILE]
--cache-file value, --cache_file value, -C value cache file used for message caching [$NTFY_CACHE_FILE]
--cache-duration since, --cache_duration since, -b since buffer messages for this time to allow since requests (default: 12h0m0s) [$NTFY_CACHE_DURATION]
--cache-batch-size value, --cache_batch_size value max size of messages to batch together when writing to message cache (if zero, writes are synchronous) (default: 0) [$NTFY_BATCH_SIZE]
--cache-batch-timeout value, --cache_batch_timeout value timeout for batched async writes to the message cache (if zero, writes are synchronous) (default: 0s) [$NTFY_CACHE_BATCH_TIMEOUT]
--cache-startup-queries value, --cache_startup_queries value queries run when the cache database is initialized [$NTFY_CACHE_STARTUP_QUERIES]
--auth-file value, --auth_file value, -H value auth database file used for access control [$NTFY_AUTH_FILE]
--auth-startup-queries value, --auth_startup_queries value queries run when the auth database is initialized [$NTFY_AUTH_STARTUP_QUERIES]
--auth-default-access value, --auth_default_access value, -p value default permissions if no matching entries in the auth database are found (default: "read-write") [$NTFY_AUTH_DEFAULT_ACCESS]
--attachment-cache-dir value, --attachment_cache_dir value cache directory for attached files [$NTFY_ATTACHMENT_CACHE_DIR]
--attachment-total-size-limit value, --attachment_total_size_limit value, -A value limit of the on-disk attachment cache (default: 5G) [$NTFY_ATTACHMENT_TOTAL_SIZE_LIMIT]
--attachment-file-size-limit value, --attachment_file_size_limit value, -Y value per-file attachment size limit (e.g. 300k, 2M, 100M) (default: 15M) [$NTFY_ATTACHMENT_FILE_SIZE_LIMIT]
--attachment-expiry-duration value, --attachment_expiry_duration value, -X value duration after which uploaded attachments will be deleted (e.g. 3h, 20h) (default: 3h) [$NTFY_ATTACHMENT_EXPIRY_DURATION]
--keepalive-interval value, --keepalive_interval value, -k value interval of keepalive messages (default: 45s) [$NTFY_KEEPALIVE_INTERVAL]
--manager-interval value, --manager_interval value, -m value interval of for message pruning and stats printing (default: 1m0s) [$NTFY_MANAGER_INTERVAL]
--disallowed-topics value, --disallowed_topics value [ --disallowed-topics value, --disallowed_topics value ] topics that are not allowed to be used [$NTFY_DISALLOWED_TOPICS]
--web-root value, --web_root value sets web root to landing page (home), web app (app) or disabled (disable) (default: "app") [$NTFY_WEB_ROOT]
--enable-signup, --enable_signup allows users to sign up via the web app, or API (default: false) [$NTFY_ENABLE_SIGNUP]
--enable-login, --enable_login allows users to log in via the web app, or API (default: false) [$NTFY_ENABLE_LOGIN]
--enable-reservations, --enable_reservations allows users to reserve topics (if their tier allows it) (default: false) [$NTFY_ENABLE_RESERVATIONS]
--upstream-base-url value, --upstream_base_url value forward poll request to an upstream server, this is needed for iOS push notifications for self-hosted servers [$NTFY_UPSTREAM_BASE_URL]
--smtp-sender-addr value, --smtp_sender_addr value SMTP server address (host:port) for outgoing emails [$NTFY_SMTP_SENDER_ADDR]
--smtp-sender-user value, --smtp_sender_user value SMTP user (if e-mail sending is enabled) [$NTFY_SMTP_SENDER_USER]
--smtp-sender-pass value, --smtp_sender_pass value SMTP password (if e-mail sending is enabled) [$NTFY_SMTP_SENDER_PASS]
--smtp-sender-from value, --smtp_sender_from value SMTP sender address (if e-mail sending is enabled) [$NTFY_SMTP_SENDER_FROM]
--smtp-server-listen value, --smtp_server_listen value SMTP server address (ip:port) for incoming emails, e.g. :25 [$NTFY_SMTP_SERVER_LISTEN]
--smtp-server-domain value, --smtp_server_domain value SMTP domain for incoming e-mail, e.g. ntfy.sh [$NTFY_SMTP_SERVER_DOMAIN]
--smtp-server-addr-prefix value, --smtp_server_addr_prefix value SMTP email address prefix for topics to prevent spam (e.g. 'ntfy-') [$NTFY_SMTP_SERVER_ADDR_PREFIX]
--global-topic-limit value, --global_topic_limit value, -T value total number of topics allowed (default: 15000) [$NTFY_GLOBAL_TOPIC_LIMIT]
--visitor-subscription-limit value, --visitor_subscription_limit value number of subscriptions per visitor (default: 30) [$NTFY_VISITOR_SUBSCRIPTION_LIMIT]
--visitor-attachment-total-size-limit value, --visitor_attachment_total_size_limit value total storage limit used for attachments per visitor (default: "100M") [$NTFY_VISITOR_ATTACHMENT_TOTAL_SIZE_LIMIT]
--visitor-attachment-daily-bandwidth-limit value, --visitor_attachment_daily_bandwidth_limit value total daily attachment download/upload bandwidth limit per visitor (default: "500M") [$NTFY_VISITOR_ATTACHMENT_DAILY_BANDWIDTH_LIMIT]
--visitor-request-limit-burst value, --visitor_request_limit_burst value initial limit of requests per visitor (default: 60) [$NTFY_VISITOR_REQUEST_LIMIT_BURST]
--visitor-request-limit-replenish value, --visitor_request_limit_replenish value interval at which burst limit is replenished (one per x) (default: 5s) [$NTFY_VISITOR_REQUEST_LIMIT_REPLENISH]
--visitor-request-limit-exempt-hosts value, --visitor_request_limit_exempt_hosts value hostnames and/or IP addresses of hosts that will be exempt from the visitor request limit [$NTFY_VISITOR_REQUEST_LIMIT_EXEMPT_HOSTS]
--visitor-message-daily-limit value, --visitor_message_daily_limit value max messages per visitor per day, derived from request limit if unset (default: 0) [$NTFY_VISITOR_MESSAGE_DAILY_LIMIT]
--visitor-email-limit-burst value, --visitor_email_limit_burst value initial limit of e-mails per visitor (default: 16) [$NTFY_VISITOR_EMAIL_LIMIT_BURST]
--visitor-email-limit-replenish value, --visitor_email_limit_replenish value interval at which burst limit is replenished (one per x) (default: 1h0m0s) [$NTFY_VISITOR_EMAIL_LIMIT_REPLENISH]
--behind-proxy, --behind_proxy, -P if set, use X-Forwarded-For header to determine visitor IP address (for rate limiting) (default: false) [$NTFY_BEHIND_PROXY]
--stripe-secret-key value, --stripe_secret_key value key used for the Stripe API communication, this enables payments [$NTFY_STRIPE_SECRET_KEY]
--stripe-webhook-key value, --stripe_webhook_key value key required to validate the authenticity of incoming webhooks from Stripe [$NTFY_STRIPE_WEBHOOK_KEY]
--billing-contact value, --billing_contact value e-mail or website to display in upgrade dialog (only if payments are enabled) [$NTFY_BILLING_CONTACT]
--help, -h show help (default: false)