# While a lot of configuration in Sentry can be changed via the UI, for all
# new-style config (as of 8.0) you can also declare values here in this file
# to enforce defaults or to ensure they cannot be changed via the UI. For more
# information see the Sentry documentation.
###############
# Mail Server #
# mail.backend: 'smtp' # Use dummy if you want to disable email entirely
# mail.host: 'localhost'
# mail.port: 25
# mail.username: ''
# mail.password: ''
# mail.use-tls: false
# The email address to send on behalf of
# mail.from: 'root@localhost'
# If you'd like to configure email replies, enable this.
# mail.enable-replies: false
# When email-replies are enabled, this value is used in the Reply-To header
# mail.reply-hostname: ''
# If you're using mailgun for inbound mail, set your API key and configure a
# route to forward to /api/hooks/mailgun/inbound/
# mail.mailgun-api-key: ''
###################
# System Settings #
# If this file ever becomes compromised, it's important to regenerate your a new key
# Changing this value will result in all current sessions being invalidated.
# A new key can be generated with `$ sentry config generate-secret-key`
# system.secret-key: 'changeme'
# The ``redis.clusters`` setting is used, unsurprisingly, to configure Redis
# clusters. These clusters can be then referred to by name when configuring
# backends such as the cache, digests, or TSDB backend.
# redis.clusters:
# default:
# hosts:
# 0:
# host: 127.0.0.1
# port: 6379