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NAMEmosquitto.conf - the configuration file for mosquittoSYNOPSISmosquitto.conf DESCRIPTIONmosquitto.conf is the configuration file for mosquitto. This file can reside anywhere as long as mosquitto can read it. By default, mosquitto does not need a configuration file and will use the default values listed below. See mosquitto(8) for information on how to load a configuration file.Mosquitto can be instructed to reload the configuration file by sending a SIGHUP signal as described in the Signals section of mosquitto(8). Not all configuration options can be reloaded, as detailed in the options below. FILE FORMATAll lines with a # as the very first character are treated as a comment.Configuration lines start with a variable name. The variable value is separated from the name by a single space. AUTHENTICATIONThe authentication options described below allow a wide range of possibilities in conjunction with the listener options. This section aims to clarify the possibilities. An overview is also available at https://mosquitto.org/documentation/authentication-methods/The simplest option is to have no authentication at all. This is the default if no other options are given. Unauthenticated encrypted support is provided by using the certificate based SSL/TLS based options certfile and keyfile. MQTT provides username/password authentication as part of the protocol. Use the password_file option to define the valid usernames and passwords. Be sure to use network encryption if you are using this option otherwise the username and password will be vulnerable to interception. Use the per_listener_settings to control whether passwords are required globally or on a per-listener basis. Mosquitto provides the Dynamic Security plugin which handles username/password authentication and access control in a much more flexible way than a password file. See https://mosquitto.org/documentation/dynamic-security/ When using certificate based encryption there are three options that affect authentication. The first is require_certificate, which may be set to true or false. If false, the SSL/TLS component of the client will verify the server but there is no requirement for the client to provide anything for the server: authentication is limited to the MQTT built in username/password. If require_certificate is true, the client must provide a valid certificate in order to connect successfully. In this case, the second and third options, use_identity_as_username and use_subject_as_username, become relevant. If set to true, use_identity_as_username causes the Common Name (CN) from the client certificate to be used instead of the MQTT username for access control purposes. The password is not used because it is assumed that only authenticated clients have valid certificates. This means that any CA certificates you include in cafile or capath will be able to issue client certificates that are valid for connecting to your broker. If use_identity_as_username is false, the client must authenticate as normal (if required by password_file) through the MQTT options. The same principle applies for the use_subject_as_username option, but the entire certificate subject is used as the username instead of just the CN. When using pre-shared-key based encryption through the psk_hint and psk_file options, the client must provide a valid identity and key in order to connect to the broker before any MQTT communication takes place. If use_identity_as_username is true, the PSK identity is used instead of the MQTT username for access control purposes. If use_identity_as_username is false, the client may still authenticate using the MQTT username/password if using the password_file option. Both certificate and PSK based encryption are configured on a per-listener basis. Authentication plugins can be created to augment the password_file, acl_file and psk_file options with e.g. SQL based lookups. It is possible to support multiple authentication schemes at once. A config could be created that had a listener for all of the different encryption options described above and hence a large number of ways of authenticating. GENERAL OPTIONSacl_file file pathSet the path to an access control list file. If defined,
the contents of the file are used to control client access to topics on the
broker.
If this parameter is defined then only the topics listed will have access. Topic access is added with lines of the format: topic [read|write|readwrite|deny] <topic> The access type is controlled using "read", "write", "readwrite" or "deny". This parameter is optional (unless <topic> includes a space character) - if not given then the access is read/write. <topic> can contain the + or # wildcards as in subscriptions. The "deny" option can used to explicitly deny access to a topic that would otherwise be granted by a broader read/write/readwrite statement. Any "deny" topics are handled before topics that grant read/write access. The first set of topics are applied to anonymous clients, assuming allow_anonymous is true. User specific topic ACLs are added after a user line as follows: user <username> The username referred to here is the same as in password_file. It is not the clientid. It is also possible to define ACLs based on pattern substitution within the topic. The form is the same as for the topic keyword, but using pattern as the keyword. pattern [read|write|readwrite|deny] <topic> The patterns available for substition are: •%c to match the client id of the client
•%u to match the username of the client
The substitution pattern must be the only text for that level of hierarchy. Pattern ACLs apply to all users even if the "user" keyword has previously been given. Example: pattern write sensor/%u/data Allow access for bridge connection messages: pattern write $SYS/broker/connection/%c/state If the first character of a line of the ACL file is a # it is treated as a comment. If per_listener_settings is true, this option applies to the current listener being configured only. If per_listener_settings is false, this option applies to all listeners. Reloaded on reload signal. The currently loaded ACLs will be freed and reloaded. Existing subscriptions will be affected after the reload. See also https://mosquitto.org/documentation/dynamic-security/ allow_anonymous [ true | false ] Boolean value that determines whether clients that
connect without providing a username are allowed to connect. If set to
false then another means of connection should be created to control
authenticated client access.
Defaults to false, unless no listeners are defined in the configuration file, in which case it set to true, but connections are only allowed from the local machine. If per_listener_settings is true, this option applies to the current listener being configured only. If per_listener_settings is false, this option applies to all listeners. Important In version 1.6.x and earlier, this option defaulted to true unless there was another security option set. allow_duplicate_messages [ true | false ] This option is deprecated and will be removed in a future
version. The behaviour will default to true.
If a client is subscribed to multiple subscriptions that overlap, e.g. foo/# and foo/+/baz , then MQTT expects that when the broker receives a message on a topic that matches both subscriptions, such as foo/bar/baz, then the client should only receive the message once. Mosquitto keeps track of which clients a message has been sent to in order to meet this requirement. This option allows this behaviour to be disabled, which may be useful if you have a large number of clients subscribed to the same set of topics and want to minimise memory usage. It can be safely set to true if you know in advance that your clients will never have overlapping subscriptions, otherwise your clients must be able to correctly deal with duplicate messages even when then have QoS=2. Defaults to true. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. allow_zero_length_clientid [ true | false ] MQTT 3.1.1 and MQTT 5 allow clients to connect with a
zero length client id and have the broker generate a client id for them. Use
this option to allow/disallow this behaviour. Defaults to true.
See also the auto_id_prefix option. If per_listener_settings is true, this option applies to the current listener being configured only. If per_listener_settings is false, this option applies to all listeners. Reloaded on reload signal. auth_plugin_deny_special_chars [ true | false ] If true then before an ACL check is made, the
username/client id of the client needing the check is searched for the
presence of either a '+' or '#' character. If either of these characters is
found in either the username or client id, then the ACL check is denied before
it is sent to the plugin.
This check prevents the case where a malicious user could circumvent an ACL check by using one of these characters as their username or client id. This is the same issue as was reported with mosquitto itself as CVE-2017-7650. If you are entirely sure that the plugin you are using is not vulnerable to this attack (i.e. if you never use usernames or client ids in topics) then you can disable this extra check and hence have all ACL checks delivered to your plugin by setting this option to false. Defaults to true. Applies to the current authentication plugin being configured. Not currently reloaded on reload signal. auto_id_prefix prefix If allow_zero_length_clientid is true, this
option allows you to set a string that will be prefixed to the automatically
generated client ids to aid visibility in logs. Defaults to auto-.
If per_listener_settings is true, this option applies to the current listener being configured only. If per_listener_settings is false, this option applies to all listeners. Reloaded on reload signal. autosave_interval seconds The number of seconds that mosquitto will wait between
each time it saves the in-memory database to disk. If set to 0, the in-memory
database will only be saved when mosquitto exits or when receiving the SIGUSR1
signal. Note that this setting only has an effect if persistence is enabled.
Defaults to 1800 seconds (30 minutes).
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. autosave_on_changes [ true | false ] If true, mosquitto will count the number of
subscription changes, retained messages received and queued messages and if
the total exceeds autosave_interval then the in-memory database will be
saved to disk. If false, mosquitto will save the in-memory database to
disk by treating autosave_interval as a time in seconds.
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. check_retain_source [ true | false ] This option affects the scenario when a client subscribes
to a topic that has retained messages. It is possible that the client that
published the retained message to the topic had access at the time they
published, but that access has been subsequently removed. If
check_retain_source is set to true, the default, the source of a
retained message will be checked for access rights before it is republished.
When set to false, no check will be made and the retained message will always
be published.
This option applies globally, regardless of the per_listener_settings option. clientid_prefixes prefix This option is deprecated and will be removed in a future
version.
If defined, only clients that have a clientid with a prefix that matches clientid_prefixes will be allowed to connect to the broker. For example, setting "secure-" here would mean a client "secure-client" could connect but another with clientid "mqtt" couldn't. By default, all client ids are valid. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. Note that currently connected clients will be unaffected by any changes. connection_messages [ true | false ] If set to true, the log will include entries when
clients connect and disconnect. If set to false, these entries will not
appear.
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. include_dir dir External configuration files may be included by using the
include_dir option. This defines a directory that will be searched for config
files. All files that end in '.conf' will be loaded as a configuration file.
It is best to have this as the last option in the main file. This option will
only be processed from the main configuration file. The directory specified
must not contain the main configuration file.
The configuration files in include_dir are loaded in case sensitive alphabetical order, with the upper case of each letter ordered before the lower case of the same letter. Example Load Order for include_dir. Given the files b.conf, A.conf, 01.conf, a.conf, B.conf, and 00.conf inside include_dir, the config files would be loaded in this order: 00.conf 01.conf A.conf a.conf B.conf b.conf If this option is used multiple times, then each include_dir option is processed completely in the order that they are written in the main configuration file. Example Load Order for Multiple include_dir. Assuming a directory one.d containing files B.conf and C.conf, and a second directory two.d containing files A.conf and D.conf, and a config: include_dir one.d include_dir two.d Then the config files would be loaded in this order: # files from one.d B.conf C.conf # files from two.d A.conf D.conf log_dest destinations Send log messages to a particular destination. Possible
destinations are: stdout stderr syslog topic
file dlt.
stdout and stderr log to the console on the named output. syslog uses the userspace syslog facility which usually ends up in /var/log/messages or similar. topic logs to the broker topic '$SYS/broker/log/<severity>', where severity is one of E, W, N, I, M which are error, warning, notice, information and message. Message type severity is used by the subscribe and unsubscribe log_type options and publishes log messages at $SYS/broker/log/M/subscribe and $SYS/broker/log/M/unsubscribe. Debug messages are never logged on topics. The file destination requires an additional parameter which is the file to be logged to, e.g. "log_dest file /var/log/mosquitto.log". The file will be closed and reopened when the broker receives a HUP signal. Only a single file destination may be configured. The dlt destination is for the automotive `Diagnostic Log and Trace` tool. This requires that Mosquitto has been compiled with DLT support. Use "log_dest none" if you wish to disable logging. Defaults to stderr. This option may be specified multiple times. Note that if the broker is running as a Windows service it will default to "log_dest none" and neither stdout nor stderr logging is available. Reloaded on reload signal. log_facility local facility If using syslog logging (not on Windows), messages will
be logged to the "daemon" facility by default. Use the
log_facility option to choose which of local0 to local7 to log to
instead. The option value should be an integer value, e.g. "log_facility
5" to use local5.
log_timestamp [ true | false ] Boolean value, if set to true a timestamp value
will be added to each log entry. The default is true.
Reloaded on reload signal. log_timestamp_format format Set the format of the log timestamp. If left unset, this
is the number of seconds since the Unix epoch. This option is a free text
string which will be passed to the strftime function as the format specifier.
To get an ISO 8601 datetime, for example:
log_timestamp_format %Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S Reloaded on reload signal. log_type types Choose types of messages to log. Possible types are:
debug, error, warning, notice, information,
subscribe, unsubscribe, websockets, none,
all.
Defaults to error, warning, notice and information. This option may be specified multiple times. Note that the debug type (used for decoding incoming/outgoing network packets) is never logged in topics. Reloaded on reload signal. max_inflight_bytes count Outgoing QoS 1 and 2 messages will be allowed in flight
until this byte limit is reached. This allows control of outgoing message rate
based on message size rather than message count. If the limit is set to 100,
messages of over 100 bytes are still allowed, but only a single message can be
in flight at once. Defaults to 0. (No limit).
See also the max_inflight_messages option. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. max_inflight_messages count The maximum number of outgoing QoS 1 or 2 messages that
can be in the process of being transmitted simultaneously. This includes
messages currently going through handshakes and messages that are being
retried. Defaults to 20. Set to 0 for no maximum. If set to 1, this will
guarantee in-order delivery of messages.
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. max_keepalive value For MQTT v5 clients, it is possible to have the server
send a "server keepalive" value that will override the keepalive
value set by the client. This is intended to be used as a mechanism to say
that the server will disconnect the client earlier than it anticipated, and
that the client should use the new keepalive value. The max_keepalive option
allows you to specify that clients may only connect with keepalive less than
or equal to this value, otherwise they will be sent a server keepalive telling
them to use max_keepalive. This only applies to MQTT v5 clients. The maximum
value allowable, and default value, is 65535.
Set to 0 to allow clients to set keepalive = 0, which means no keepalive checks are made and the client will never be disconnected by the broker if no messages are received. You should be very sure this is the behaviour that you want. For MQTT v3.1.1 and v3.1 clients, there is no mechanism to tell the client what keepalive value they should use. If an MQTT v3.1.1 or v3.1 client specifies a keepalive time greater than max_keepalive they will be sent a CONNACK message with the "identifier rejected" reason code, and disconnected. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. max_packet_size value For MQTT v5 clients, it is possible to have the server
send a "maximum packet size" value that will instruct the client it
will not accept MQTT packets with size greater than value bytes. This
applies to the full MQTT packet, not just the payload. Setting this option to
a positive value will set the maximum packet size to that number of bytes. If
a client sends a packet which is larger than this value, it will be
disconnected. This applies to all clients regardless of the protocol version
they are using, but v3.1.1 and earlier clients will of course not have
received the maximum packet size information. Defaults to no limit.
This option applies to all clients, not just those using MQTT v5, but it is not possible to notify clients using MQTT v3.1.1 or MQTT v3.1 of the limit. Setting below 20 bytes is forbidden because it is likely to interfere with normal client operation even with small payloads. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. max_queued_bytes count The number of outgoing QoS 1 and 2 messages above those
currently in-flight will be queued (per client) by the broker. Once this limit
has been reached, subsequent messages will be silently dropped. This is an
important option if you are sending messages at a high rate and/or have
clients who are slow to respond or may be offline for extended periods of
time. Defaults to 0. (No maximum).
See also the max_queued_messages option. If both max_queued_messages and max_queued_bytes are specified, packets will be queued until the first limit is reached. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. max_queued_messages count The maximum number of QoS 1 or 2 messages to hold in the
queue (per client) above those messages that are currently in flight. Defaults
to 1000. Set to 0 for no maximum (not recommended). See also the
queue_qos0_messages and max_queued_bytes options.
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. memory_limit limit This option sets the maximum number of heap memory bytes
that the broker will allocate, and hence sets a hard limit on memory use by
the broker. Memory requests that exceed this value will be denied. The effect
will vary depending on what has been denied. If an incoming message is being
processed, then the message will be dropped and the publishing client will be
disconnected. If an outgoing message is being sent, then the individual
message will be dropped and the receiving client will be disconnected.
Defaults to no limit.
This option is only available if memory tracking support is compiled in. Reloaded on reload signal. Setting to a lower value and reloading will not result in memory being freed. message_size_limit limit This option sets the maximum publish payload size that
the broker will allow. Received messages that exceed this size will not be
accepted by the broker. This means that the message will not be forwarded on
to subscribing clients, but the QoS flow will be completed for QoS 1 or QoS 2
messages. MQTT v5 clients using QoS 1 or QoS 2 will receive a PUBACK or PUBREC
with the "implementation specific error" reason code.
The default value is 0, which means that all valid MQTT messages are accepted. MQTT imposes a maximum payload size of 268435455 bytes. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. password_file file path Set the path to a password file. If defined, the contents
of the file are used to control client access to the broker. The file can be
created using the mosquitto_passwd(1) utility. If mosquitto is compiled
without TLS support (it is recommended that TLS support is included), then the
password file should be a text file with each line in the format
"username:password", where the colon and password are optional but
recommended. If allow_anonymous is set to false, only users
defined in this file will be able to connect. Setting allow_anonymous
to true when password_fileis defined is valid and could be used
with acl_file to have e.g. read only guest/anonymous accounts and defined
users that can publish.
If per_listener_settings is true, this option applies to the current listener being configured only. If per_listener_settings is false, this option applies to all listeners. Reloaded on reload signal. The currently loaded username and password data will be freed and reloaded. Clients that are already connected will not be affected. See also mosquitto_passwd(1) and https://mosquitto.org/documentation/dynamic-security/ per_listener_settings [ true | false ] If true, then authentication and access control
settings will be controlled on a per-listener basis. The following options are
affected:
password_file, acl_file, psk_file, allow_anonymous, allow_zero_length_clientid, auto_id_prefix. plugin, plugin_opt_*, Note that if set to true, then a durable client (i.e. with clean session set to false) that has disconnected will use the ACL settings defined for the listener that it was most recently connected to. The default behaviour is for this to be set to false, which maintains the settings behaviour from previous versions of mosquitto. Reloaded on reload signal. persistence [ true | false ] If true, connection, subscription and message data
will be written to the disk in mosquitto.db at the location dictated by
persistence_location. When mosquitto is restarted, it will reload the
information stored in mosquitto.db. The data will be written to disk when
mosquitto closes and also at periodic intervals as defined by
autosave_interval. Writing of the persistence database may also be forced by
sending mosquitto the SIGUSR1 signal. If false, the data will be stored
in memory only. Defaults to false.
The persistence file may change its format in a new version. The broker can currently read all old formats, but will only save in the latest format. It should always be safe to upgrade, but cautious users may wish to take a copy of the persistence file before installing a new version so that they can roll back to an earlier version if necessary. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. persistence_file file name The filename to use for the persistent database. Defaults
to mosquitto.db.
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. persistence_location path The path where the persistence database should be stored.
If not given, then the current directory is used.
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. persistent_client_expiration duration This option allows persistent clients (those with clean
session set to false) to be removed if they do not reconnect within a certain
time frame. This is a non-standard option. As far as the MQTT spec is
concerned, persistent clients persist forever.
Badly designed clients may set clean session to false whilst using a randomly generated client id. This leads to persistent clients that will never reconnect. This option allows these clients to be removed. The expiration period should be an integer followed by one of h d w m y for hour, day, week, month and year respectively. For example: •persistent_client_expiration 2m
•persistent_client_expiration 14d
•persistent_client_expiration 1y
As this is a non-standard option, the default if not set is to never expire persistent clients. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. pid_file file path Write a pid file to the file specified. If not given (the
default), no pid file will be written. If the pid file cannot be written,
mosquitto will exit.
If mosquitto is being automatically started by an init script it will usually be required to write a pid file. This should then be configured as e.g. /var/run/mosquitto/mosquitto.pid Not reloaded on reload signal. plugin_opt_* value Options to be passed to the most recent plugin
defined in the configuration file. See the specific plugin instructions for
details of what options are available.
Applies to the current plugin being configured. This is also available as the auth_opt_* option, but this use is deprecated and will be removed in a future version. plugin file path Specify an external module to use for authentication and
access control. This allows custom username/password and access control
functions to be created.
Can be specified multiple times to load multiple plugins. The plugins will be processed in the order that they are specified. If password_file, or acl_file are used in the config file alongsize plugin, the plugin checks will run after the built in checks. Not currently reloaded on reload signal. See also https://mosquitto.org/documentation/dynamic-security/ This is also available as the auth_plugin option, but this use is deprecated and will be removed in a future version. psk_file file path Set the path to a pre-shared-key file. This option
requires a listener to be have PSK support enabled. If defined, the contents
of the file are used to control client access to the broker. Each line should
be in the format "identity:key", where the key is a hexadecimal
string with no leading "0x". A client connecting to a listener that
has PSK support enabled must provide a matching identity and PSK to allow the
encrypted connection to proceed.
If per_listener_settings is true, this option applies to the current listener being configured only. If per_listener_settings is false, this option applies to all listeners. Reloaded on reload signal. The currently loaded identity and key data will be freed and reloaded. Clients that are already connected will not be affected. queue_qos0_messages [ true | false ] Set to true to queue messages with QoS 0 when a
persistent client is disconnected. These messages are included in the limit
imposed by max_queued_messages. Defaults to false.
Note that the MQTT v3.1.1 spec states that only QoS 1 and 2 messages should be saved in this situation so this is a non-standard option. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. retain_available [ true | false ] If set to false, then retained messages are not
supported. Clients that send a message with the retain bit will be
disconnected if this option is set to false. Defaults to true.
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. set_tcp_nodelay [ true | false ] If set to true, the TCP_NODELAY option will be set on
client sockets to disable Nagle's algorithm. This has the effect of reducing
latency of some messages at potentially increasing the number of TCP packets
being sent. Defaults to false.
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. sys_interval seconds The integer number of seconds between updates of the $SYS
subscription hierarchy, which provides status information about the broker. If
unset, defaults to 10 seconds.
Set to 0 to disable publishing the $SYS hierarchy completely. This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. upgrade_outgoing_qos [ true | false ] The MQTT specification requires that the QoS of a message
delivered to a subscriber is never upgraded to match the QoS of the
subscription. Enabling this option changes this behaviour. If
upgrade_outgoing_qos is set true, messages sent to a subscriber
will always match the QoS of its subscription. This is a non-standard option
not provided for by the spec. Defaults to false.
This option applies globally. Reloaded on reload signal. user username When run as root, change to this user and its primary
group on startup. If set to "mosquitto" or left unset, and if the
"mosquitto" user does not exist, then mosquitto will change to the
"nobody" user instead. If this is set to another value and mosquitto
is unable to change to this user and group, it will exit with an error. The
user specified must have read/write access to the persistence database if it
is to be written. If run as a non-root user, this setting has no effect.
Defaults to mosquitto.
This setting has no effect on Windows and so you should run mosquitto as the user you wish it to run as. Not reloaded on reload signal. LISTENERSThe network ports that mosquitto listens on can be controlled using listeners. The default listener options can be overridden and further listeners can be created.General Optionsbind_address addressThis option is deprecated and will be removed in a future
version. Use the listener instead.
Listen for incoming network connections on the specified IP address/hostname only. This is useful to restrict access to certain network interfaces. To restrict access to mosquitto to the local host only, use "bind_address localhost". This only applies to the default listener. Use the listener option to control other listeners. It is recommended to use an explicit listener rather than rely on the implicit default listener options like this. Not reloaded on reload signal. bind_interface device Listen for incoming network connections only on the
specified interface. This is similar to the bind_address option but is
useful when an interface has multiple addresses or the address may change.
If used at the same time as the bind_address for the default listener, or the bind address/host part of the listener, then bind_interface will take priority. This option is not available on Windows. Not reloaded on reload signal. http_dir directory When a listener is using the websockets protocol, it is
possible to serve http data as well. Set http_dir to a directory which
contains the files you wish to serve. If this option is not specified, then no
normal http connections will be possible.
Not reloaded on reload signal. listener port [bind address/host/unix socket path] Listen for incoming network connection on the specified
port. A second optional argument allows the listener to be bound to a specific
ip address/hostname. If this variable is used and neither the global
bind_address nor port options are used then the default listener
will not be started.
The bind address/host option allows this listener to be bound to a specific IP address by passing an IP address or hostname. For websockets listeners, it is only possible to pass an IP address here. On systems that support Unix Domain Sockets, this option can also be used to create a Unix socket rather than opening a TCP socket. In this case, the port must be set to 0, and the unix socket path must be given. This option may be specified multiple times. See also the mount_point option. Not reloaded on reload signal. max_connections count Limit the total number of clients connected for the
current listener. Set to -1 to have "unlimited" connections. Note
that other limits may be imposed that are outside the control of mosquitto.
See e.g. limits.conf().
Not reloaded on reload signal. max_qos value Limit the QoS value allowed for clients connecting to
this listener. Defaults to 2, which means any QoS can be used. Set to 0 or 1
to limit to those QoS values. This makes use of an MQTT v5 feature to notify
clients of the limitation. MQTT v3.1.1 clients will not be aware of the
limitation. Clients publishing to this listener with a too-high QoS will be
disconnected.
Not reloaded on reload signal. max_topic_alias number This option sets the maximum number topic aliases that an
MQTT v5 client is allowed to create. This option applies per listener.
Defaults to 10. Set to 0 to disallow topic aliases. The maximum value possible
is 65535.
Not reloaded on reload signal. mount_point topic prefix This option is used with the listener option to isolate
groups of clients. When a client connects to a listener which uses this
option, the string argument is attached to the start of all topics for this
client. This prefix is removed when any messages are sent to the client. This
means a client connected to a listener with mount point example can
only see messages that are published in the topic hierarchy example and
below.
Not reloaded on reload signal. port port number This option is deprecated and will be removed in a future
version. Use the listener instead.
Set the network port for the default listener to listen on. Defaults to 1883. Not reloaded on reload signal. It is recommended to use an explicit listener rather than rely on the implicit default listener options like this. protocol value Set the protocol to accept for the current listener. Can
be mqtt, the default, or websockets if available.
Websockets support is currently disabled by default at compile time. Certificate based TLS may be used with websockets, except that only the cafile, certfile, keyfile, ciphers, and ciphers_tls1.3 options are supported. Not reloaded on reload signal. socket_domain [ ipv4 | ipv6 ] By default, a listener will attempt to listen on all
supported IP protocol versions. If you do not have an IPv4 or IPv6 interface
you may wish to disable support for either of those protocol versions. In
particular, note that due to the limitations of the websockets library, it
will only ever attempt to open IPv6 sockets if IPv6 support is compiled in,
and so will fail if IPv6 is not available.
Set to ipv4 to force the listener to only use IPv4, or set to ipv6 to force the listener to only use IPv6. If you want support for both IPv4 and IPv6, then do not use the socket_domain option. Not reloaded on reload signal. use_username_as_clientid [ true | false ] Set use_username_as_clientid to true to replace
the clientid that a client connected with its username. This allows
authentication to be tied to the clientid, which means that it is possible to
prevent one client disconnecting another by using the same clientid. Defaults
to false.
If a client connects with no username it will be disconnected as not authorised when this option is set to true. Do not use in conjunction with clientid_prefixes. See also use_identity_as_username. Not reloaded on reload signal. websockets_log_level level Change the websockets logging level. This is a global
option, it is not possible to set per listener. This is an integer that is
interpreted by libwebsockets as a bit mask for its lws_log_levels enum. See
the libwebsockets documentation for more details.
To use this option, log_type websockets must also be enabled. Defaults to 0. websockets_headers_size size Change the websockets headers size. This is a global
option, it is not possible to set per listener. This option sets the size of
the buffer used in the libwebsockets library when reading HTTP headers. If you
are passing large header data such as cookies then you may need to increase
this value. If left unset, or set to 0, then the default of 1024 bytes will be
used.
Certificate based SSL/TLS SupportThe following options are available for all listeners to configure certificate based SSL support. See also "Pre-shared-key based SSL/TLS support".cafile file path cafile is used to define the path to a file
containing the PEM encoded CA certificates that are trusted when checking
incoming client certificates.
capath directory path capath is used to define a directory that contains
PEM encoded CA certificates that are trusted when checking incoming client
certificates. For capath to work correctly, the certificates files must
have ".pem" as the file ending and you must run "openssl rehash
<path to capath>" each time you add/remove a certificate.
certfile file path Path to the PEM encoded server certificate. This option
and keyfile must be present to enable certificate based TLS encryption.
The certificate pointed to by this option will be reloaded when Mosquitto receives a SIGHUP signal. This can be used to load new certificates prior to the existing ones expiring. ciphers cipher:list The list of allowed ciphers for this listener, for TLS
v1.2 and earlier only, each separated with a colon. Available ciphers can be
obtained using the "openssl ciphers" command.
ciphers_tls1.3 cipher:list The list of allowed ciphersuites for this listener, for
TLS v1.3, each separated with a colon.
crlfile file path If you have require_certificate set to
true, you can create a certificate revocation list file to revoke
access to particular client certificates. If you have done this, use crlfile
to point to the PEM encoded revocation file.
dhparamfile file path To allow the use of ephemeral DH key exchange, which
provides forward security, the listener must load DH parameters. This can be
specified with the dhparamfile option. The dhparamfile can be generated with
the command e.g.
openssl dhparam -out dhparam.pem 2048 keyfile file path Path to the PEM encoded server key. This option and
certfile must be present to enable certificate based TLS encryption.
The private key pointed to by this option will be reloaded when Mosquitto receives a SIGHUP signal. This can be used to load new keys prior to the existing ones expiring. require_certificate [ true | false ] By default an SSL/TLS enabled listener will operate in a
similar fashion to a https enabled web server, in that the server has a
certificate signed by a CA and the client will verify that it is a trusted
certificate. The overall aim is encryption of the network traffic. By setting
require_certificate to true, a client connecting to this
listener must provide a valid certificate in order for the network connection
to proceed. This allows access to the broker to be controlled outside of the
mechanisms provided by MQTT.
tls_engine engine A valid openssl engine id. These can be listed with
openssl engine command.
tls_engine_kpass_sha1 engine_kpass_sha1 SHA1 of the private key password when using an TLS
engine. Some TLS engines such as the TPM engine may require the use of a
password in order to be accessed. This option allows a hex encoded SHA1 hash
of the password to the engine directly, instead of the user being prompted for
the password.
tls_keyform [ pem | engine ] Specifies the type of private key in use when making TLS
connections.. This can be "pem" or "engine". This
parameter is useful when a TPM module is being used and the private key has
been created with it. Defaults to "pem", which means normal private
key files are used.
tls_version version Configure the minimum version of the TLS protocol to be
used for this listener. Possible values are tlsv1.3, tlsv1.2 and
tlsv1.1. If left unset, the default of allowing TLS v1.3 and v1.2.
In Mosquitto version 1.6.x and earlier, this option set the only TLS protocol version that was allowed, rather than the minimum. use_identity_as_username [ true | false ] If require_certificate is true, you may set
use_identity_as_username to true to use the CN value from the
client certificate as a username. If this is true, the
password_file option will not be used for this listener.
This takes priority over use_subject_as_username if both are set to true. See also use_subject_as_username use_subject_as_username [ true | false ] If require_certificate is true, you may set
use_subject_as_username to true to use the complete subject
value from the client certificate as a username. If this is true, the
password_file option will not be used for this listener.
The subject will be generated in a form similar to CN=test client,OU=Production,O=Server,L=Nottingham,ST=Nottinghamshire,C=GB. See also use_identity_as_username Pre-shared-key based SSL/TLS SupportThe following options are available for all listeners to configure pre-shared-key based SSL support. See also "Certificate based SSL/TLS support".ciphers cipher:list When using PSK, the encryption ciphers used will be
chosen from the list of available PSK ciphers. If you want to control which
ciphers are available, use this option. The list of available ciphers can be
optained using the "openssl ciphers" command and should be provided
in the same format as the output of that command.
psk_hint hint The psk_hint option enables pre-shared-key support
for this listener and also acts as an identifier for this listener. The hint
is sent to clients and may be used locally to aid authentication. The hint is
a free form string that doesn't have much meaning in itself, so feel free to
be creative.
If this option is provided, see psk_file to define the pre-shared keys to be used or create a security plugin to handle them. tls_version version Configure the minimum version of the TLS protocol to be
used for this listener. Possible values are tlsv1.3, tlsv1.2 and
tlsv1.1. If left unset, the default of allowing TLS v1.3 and v1.2.
In Mosquitto version 1.6.x and earlier, this option set the only TLS protocol version that was allowed, rather than the minimum. use_identity_as_username [ true | false ] Set use_identity_as_username to have the psk
identity sent by the client used as its username. The username will be checked
as normal, so password_file or another means of authentication checking
must be used. No password will be used.
CONFIGURING BRIDGESMultiple bridges (connections to other brokers) can be configured using the following variables.Bridges cannot currently be reloaded on reload signal. address address[:port] [address[:port]], addresses address[:port] [address[:port]] Specify the address and optionally the port of the bridge
to connect to. This must be given for each bridge connection. If the port is
not specified, the default of 1883 is used.
If you use an IPv6 address, then the port is not optional. Multiple host addresses can be specified on the address config. See the round_robin option for more details on the behaviour of bridges with multiple addresses. bridge_attempt_unsubscribe [ true | false ] If a bridge has topics that have "out"
direction, the default behaviour is to send an unsubscribe request to the
remote broker on that topic. This means that changing a topic direction from
"in" to "out" will not keep receiving incoming messages.
Sending these unsubscribe requests is not always desirable, setting
bridge_attempt_unsubscribe to false will disable sending the
unsubscribe request. Defaults to true.
bridge_bind_address ip address If you need to have the bridge connect over a particular
network interface, use bridge_bind_address to tell the bridge which local IP
address the socket should bind to, e.g. bridge_bind_address
192.168.1.10.
bridge_max_packet_size value If you wish to restrict the size of messages sent to a
remote bridge, use this option. This sets the maximum number of bytes for the
total message, including headers and payload. Note that MQTT v5 brokers may
provide their own maximum-packet-size property. In this case, the smaller of
the two limits will be used. Set to 0 for "unlimited".
bridge_outgoing_retain [ true | false ] Some MQTT brokers do not allow retained messages. MQTT v5
gives a mechanism for brokers to tell clients that they do not support
retained messages, but this is not possible for MQTT v3.1.1 or v3.1. If you
need to bridge to a v3.1.1 or v3.1 broker that does not support retained
messages, set the bridge_outgoing_retain option to false. This
will remove the retain bit on all outgoing messages to that bridge, regardless
of any other setting. Defaults to true.
bridge_protocol_version version Set the version of the MQTT protocol to use with for this
bridge. Can be one of mqttv50, mqttv311 or mqttv31.
Defaults to mqttv311.
cleansession [ true | false ] Set the clean session option for this bridge. Setting to
false (the default), means that all subscriptions on the remote broker
are kept in case of the network connection dropping. If set to true,
all subscriptions and messages on the remote broker will be cleaned up if the
connection drops. Note that setting to true may cause a large amount of
retained messages to be sent each time the bridge reconnects.
If you are using bridges with cleansession set to false (the default), then you may get unexpected behaviour from incoming topics if you change what topics you are subscribing to. This is because the remote broker keeps the subscription for the old topic. If you have this problem, connect your bridge with cleansession set to true, then reconnect with cleansession set to false as normal. local_cleansession [ true | false] The regular cleansession covers both the local
subscriptions and the remote subscriptions. local_cleansession allows
splitting this. Setting false will mean that the local connection will
preserve subscription, independent of the remote connection.
Defaults to the value of bridge.cleansession unless explicitly specified. connection name This variable marks the start of a new bridge connection.
It is also used to give the bridge a name which is used as the client id on
the remote broker.
keepalive_interval seconds Set the number of seconds after which the bridge should
send a ping if no other traffic has occurred. Defaults to 60. A minimum value
of 5 seconds is allowed.
idle_timeout seconds Set the amount of time a bridge using the lazy start type
must be idle before it will be stopped. Defaults to 60 seconds.
local_clientid id Set the clientid to use on the local broker. If not
defined, this defaults to local.<remote_clientid>. If you are
bridging a broker to itself, it is important that local_clientid and
remote_clientid do not match.
local_password password Configure the password to be used when connecting this
bridge to the local broker. This may be important when authentication and ACLs
are being used.
local_username username Configure the username to be used when connecting this
bridge to the local broker. This may be important when authentication and ACLs
are being used.
notifications [ true | false ] If set to true, publish notification messages to
the local and remote brokers giving information about the state of the bridge
connection. Retained messages are published to the topic
$SYS/broker/connection/<remote_clientid>/state unless otherwise set with
notification_topics. If the message is 1 then the connection is active,
or 0 if the connection has failed. Defaults to true.
This uses the Last Will and Testament (LWT) feature. notifications_local_only [ true | false ] If set to true, only publish notification messages
to the local broker giving information about the state of the bridge
connection. Defaults to false.
notification_topic topic Choose the topic on which notifications will be published
for this bridge. If not set the messages will be sent on the topic
$SYS/broker/connection/<remote_clientid>/state.
remote_clientid id Set the client id for this bridge connection. If not
defined, this defaults to 'name.hostname', where name is the connection name
and hostname is the hostname of this computer.
This replaces the old "clientid" option to avoid confusion with local/remote sides of the bridge. "clientid" remains valid for the time being. remote_password value Configure a password for the bridge. This is used for
authentication purposes when connecting to a broker that supports MQTT v3.1
and up and requires a username and/or password to connect. This option is only
valid if a remote_username is also supplied.
This replaces the old "password" option to avoid confusion with local/remote sides of the bridge. "password" remains valid for the time being. remote_username name Configure a username for the bridge. This is used for
authentication purposes when connecting to a broker that supports MQTT v3.1
and up and requires a username and/or password to connect. See also the
remote_password option.
This replaces the old "username" option to avoid confusion with local/remote sides of the bridge. "username" remains valid for the time being. restart_timeout base cap, restart_timeout constant Set the amount of time a bridge using the automatic start
type will wait until attempting to reconnect.
This option can be configured to use a constant delay time in seconds, or to use a backoff mechanism based on "Decorrelated Jitter", which adds a degree of randomness to when the restart occurs, starting at the base and increasing up to the cap. Set a constant timeout of 20 seconds: restart_timeout 20 Set backoff with a base (start value) of 10 seconds and a cap (upper limit) of 60 seconds: restart_timeout 10 30 Defaults to jitter with a base of 5 seconds and cap of 30 seconds. round_robin [ true | false ] If the bridge has more than one address given in the
address/addresses configuration, the round_robin option defines the behaviour
of the bridge on a failure of the bridge connection. If round_robin is
false, the default value, then the first address is treated as the main
bridge connection. If the connection fails, the other secondary addresses will
be attempted in turn. Whilst connected to a secondary bridge, the bridge will
periodically attempt to reconnect to the main bridge until successful.
If round_robin is true, then all addresses are treated as equals. If a connection fails, the next address will be tried and if successful will remain connected until it fails. start_type [ automatic | lazy | once ] Set the start type of the bridge. This controls how the
bridge starts and can be one of three types: automatic, lazy and
once. Note that RSMB provides a fourth start type "manual"
which isn't currently supported by mosquitto.
automatic is the default start type and means that the bridge connection will be started automatically when the broker starts and also restarted after a short delay (30 seconds) if the connection fails. Bridges using the lazy start type will be started automatically when the number of queued messages exceeds the number set with the threshold option. It will be stopped automatically after the time set by the idle_timeout parameter. Use this start type if you wish the connection to only be active when it is needed. A bridge using the once start type will be started automatically when the broker starts but will not be restarted if the connection fails. threshold count Set the number of messages that need to be queued for a
bridge with lazy start type to be restarted. Defaults to 10 messages.
topic pattern [[[ out | in | both ] qos-level] local-prefix remote-prefix] Define a topic pattern to be shared between the two
brokers. Any topics matching the pattern (which may include wildcards) are
shared. The second parameter defines the direction that the messages will be
shared in, so it is possible to import messages from a remote broker using
in, export messages to a remote broker using out or share
messages in both directions. If this parameter is not defined, the default of
out is used. The QoS level defines the publish/subscribe QoS level used
for this topic and defaults to 0.
The local-prefix and remote-prefix options allow topics to be remapped when publishing to and receiving from remote brokers. This allows a topic tree from the local broker to be inserted into the topic tree of the remote broker at an appropriate place. For incoming topics, the bridge will prepend the pattern with the remote prefix and subscribe to the resulting topic on the remote broker. When a matching incoming message is received, the remote prefix will be removed from the topic and then the local prefix added. For outgoing topics, the bridge will prepend the pattern with the local prefix and subscribe to the resulting topic on the local broker. When an outgoing message is processed, the local prefix will be removed from the topic then the remote prefix added. When using topic mapping, an empty prefix can be defined using the place marker "". Using the empty marker for the topic itself is also valid. The table below defines what combination of empty or value is valid. The Full Local Topic and Full Remote Topic show the resulting topics that would be used on the local and remote ends of the bridge. For example, for the first table row if you publish to L/topic on the local broker, then the remote broker will receive a message on the topic R/topic.
To remap an entire topic tree, use e.g.: topic # both 2 local/topic/ remote/topic/ This option can be specified multiple times per bridge. Care must be taken to ensure that loops are not created with this option. If you are experiencing high CPU load from a broker, it is possible that you have a loop where each broker is forever forwarding each other the same messages. See also the cleansession option if you have messages arriving on unexpected topics when using incoming topics. Example Bridge Topic Remapping. The configuration below connects a bridge to the broker at test.mosquitto.org. It subscribes to the remote topic $SYS/broker/clients/total and republishes the messages received to the local topic test/mosquitto/org/clients/total connection test-mosquitto-org address test.mosquitto.org cleansession true topic clients/total in 0 test/mosquitto/org/ $SYS/broker/ try_private [ true | false ] If try_private is set to true, the bridge will
attempt to indicate to the remote broker that it is a bridge not an ordinary
client. If successful, this means that loop detection will be more effective
and that retained messages will be propagated correctly. Not all brokers
support this feature so it may be necessary to set try_private to
false if your bridge does not connect properly.
Defaults to true. SSL/TLS SupportThe following options are available for all bridges to configure SSL/TLS support.bridge_alpn alpn Configure the application layer protocol negotiation
option for the TLS session. Useful for brokers that support both websockets
and MQTT on the same port.
bridge_cafile file path One of bridge_cafile or bridge_capath must
be provided to allow SSL/TLS support.
bridge_cafile is used to define the path to a file containing the PEM encoded CA certificates that have signed the certificate for the remote broker. bridge_capath file path One of bridge_capath or bridge_cafile must
be provided to allow SSL/TLS support.
bridge_capath is used to define the path to a directory containing the PEM encoded CA certificates that have signed the certificate for the remote broker. For bridge_capath to work correctly, the certificate files must have ".crt" as the file ending and you must run "openssl rehash <path to bridge_capath>" each time you add/remove a certificate. bridge_certfile file path Path to the PEM encoded client certificate for this
bridge, if required by the remote broker.
bridge_identity identity Pre-shared-key encryption provides an alternative to
certificate based encryption. A bridge can be configured to use PSK with the
bridge_identity and bridge_psk options. This is the client
identity used with PSK encryption. Only one of certificate and PSK based
encryption can be used on one bridge at once.
bridge_insecure [ true | false ] When using certificate based TLS, the bridge will attempt
to verify the hostname provided in the remote certificate matches the
host/address being connected to. This may cause problems in testing scenarios,
so bridge_insecure may be set to true to disable the hostname
verification.
Setting this option to true means that a malicious third party could potentially impersonate your server, so it should always be set to false in production environments. bridge_keyfile file path Path to the PEM encoded private key for this bridge, if
required by the remote broker.
bridge_psk key Pre-shared-key encryption provides an alternative to
certificate based encryption. A bridge can be configured to use PSK with the
bridge_identity and bridge_psk options. This is the
pre-shared-key in hexadecimal format with no "0x". Only one of
certificate and PSK based encryption can be used on one bridge at once.
bridge_require_ocsp [ true | false ] When set to true, the bridge requires OCSP on the TLS
connection it opens as client.
bridge_tls_version version Configure the version of the TLS protocol to be used for
this bridge. Possible values are tlsv1.3, tlsv1.2 and
tlsv1.1. Defaults to tlsv1.2. The remote broker must support the
same version of TLS for the connection to succeed.
FILESmosquitto.confBUGSmosquitto bug information can be found at https://github.com/eclipse/mosquitto/issuesSEE ALSOmosquitto(8), mosquitto_passwd(1), mosquitto-tls(7), mqtt(7), limits.conf(5)AUTHORRoger Light <roger@atchoo.org>
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