.. _arguments: Arguments to ``waitress.serve`` ------------------------------- Here are the arguments you can pass to the ``waitress.serve`` function or use in :term:`PasteDeploy` configuration (interchangeably): host Hostname or IP address (string) on which to listen, default ``0.0.0.0``, which means "all IP addresses on this host". .. warning:: May not be used with ``listen`` port TCP port (integer) on which to listen, default ``8080`` .. warning:: May not be used with ``listen`` listen Tell waitress to listen on combinations of ``host:port`` arguments. Combinations should be a quoted, space-delimited list, as in the following examples. .. code-block:: python listen="127.0.0.1:8080 [::1]:8080" listen="*:8080 *:6543" A wildcard for the hostname is also supported and will bind to both IPv4/IPv6 depending on whether they are enabled or disabled. IPv6 IP addresses are supported by surrounding the IP address with brackets. .. versionadded:: 1.0 ipv4 Enable or disable IPv4 (boolean) ipv6 Enable or disable IPv6 (boolean) unix_socket Path of Unix socket (string). If a socket path is specified, a Unix domain socket is made instead of the usual inet domain socket. Not available on Windows. Default: ``None`` unix_socket_perms Octal permissions to use for the Unix domain socket (string). Only used if ``unix_socket`` is not ``None``. Default: ``'600'`` sockets A list of sockets. The sockets can be either Internet or UNIX sockets and have to be bound. Internet and UNIX sockets cannot be mixed. If the socket list is not empty, waitress creates one server for each socket. Default: ``[]`` .. versionadded:: 1.1.1 .. warning:: May not be used with ``listen``, ``host``, ``port`` or ``unix_socket`` threads The number of threads used to process application logic (integer). Default: ``4`` trusted_proxy IP address of a remote peer allowed to override various WSGI environment variables using proxy headers. For unix sockets, set this value to ``localhost`` instead of an IP address. Default: ``None`` trusted_proxy_count How many proxies we trust when chained. For example, ``X-Forwarded-For: 192.0.2.1, "[2001:db8::1]"`` or ``Forwarded: for=192.0.2.1, For="[2001:db8::1]"`` means there were (potentially), two proxies involved. If we know there is only 1 valid proxy, then that initial IP address "192.0.2.1" is not trusted and we completely ignore it. If there are two trusted proxies in the path, this value should be set to 2. If there are more proxies, this value should be set higher. Default: ``1`` .. versionadded:: 1.2.0 trusted_proxy_headers Which of the proxy headers should we trust, this is a set where you either specify "forwarded" or one or more of "x-forwarded-host", "x-forwarded-for", "x-forwarded-proto", "x-forwarded-port", "x-forwarded-by". This list of trusted headers is used when ``trusted_proxy`` is set and will allow waitress to modify the WSGI environment using the values provided by the proxy. .. versionadded:: 1.2.0 .. warning:: If ``trusted_proxy`` is set, the default is ``x-forwarded-proto`` to match older versions of Waitress. Users should explicitly opt-in by selecting the headers to be trusted as future versions of waitress will use an empty default. .. warning:: It is an error to set this value without setting ``trusted_proxy``. log_untrusted_proxy_headers Should waitress log warning messages about proxy headers that are being sent from upstream that are not trusted by ``trusted_proxy_headers`` but are being cleared due to ``clear_untrusted_proxy_headers``? This may be useful for debugging if you expect your upstream proxy server to only send specific headers. Default: ``False`` .. versionadded:: 1.2.0 .. warning:: It is a no-op to set this value without also setting ``clear_untrusted_proxy_headers`` and ``trusted_proxy`` clear_untrusted_proxy_headers This tells Waitress to remove any untrusted proxy headers ("Forwarded", "X-Forwared-For", "X-Forwarded-By", "X-Forwarded-Host", "X-Forwarded-Port", "X-Forwarded-Proto") not explicitly allowed by ``trusted_proxy_headers``. Default: ``False`` .. versionadded:: 1.2.0 .. warning:: The default value is set to ``False`` for backwards compatibility. In future versions of Waitress this default will be changed to ``True``. Warnings will be raised unless the user explicitly provides a value for this option, allowing the user to opt-in to the new safety features automatically. .. warning:: It is an error to set this value without setting ``trusted_proxy``. url_scheme The value of ``wsgi.url_scheme`` in the environ. This can be overridden per-request by the value of the ``X_FORWARDED_PROTO`` header, but only if the client address matches ``trusted_proxy``. Default: ``http`` ident Server identity (string) used in "Server:" header in responses. Default: ``waitress`` backlog The value waitress passes to pass to ``socket.listen()`` (integer). This is the maximum number of incoming TCP connections that will wait in an OS queue for an available channel. From listen(1): "If a connection request arrives when the queue is full, the client may receive an error with an indication of ECONNREFUSED or, if the underlying protocol supports retransmission, the request may be ignored so that a later reattempt at connection succeeds." Default: ``1024`` recv_bytes The argument waitress passes to ``socket.recv()`` (integer). Default: ``8192`` send_bytes The number of bytes to send to ``socket.send()`` (integer). Multiples of 9000 should avoid partly-filled TCP packets, but don't set this larger than the TCP write buffer size. In Linux, ``/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_wmem`` controls the minimum, default, and maximum sizes of TCP write buffers. Default: ``1`` .. deprecated:: 1.3 outbuf_overflow A tempfile should be created if the pending output is larger than outbuf_overflow, which is measured in bytes. The default is conservative. Default: ``1048576`` (1MB) outbuf_high_watermark The app_iter will pause when pending output is larger than this value and will resume once enough data is written to the socket to fall below this threshold. Default: ``16777216`` (16MB) inbuf_overflow A tempfile should be created if the pending input is larger than inbuf_overflow, which is measured in bytes. The default is conservative. Default: ``524288`` (512K) connection_limit Stop creating new channels if too many are already active (integer). Each channel consumes at least one file descriptor, and, depending on the input and output body sizes, potentially up to three, plus whatever file descriptors your application logic happens to open. The default is conservative, but you may need to increase the number of file descriptors available to the Waitress process on most platforms in order to safely change it (see ``ulimit -a`` "open files" setting). Note that this doesn't control the maximum number of TCP connections that can be waiting for processing; the ``backlog`` argument controls that. Default: ``100`` cleanup_interval Minimum seconds between cleaning up inactive channels (integer). See also ``channel_timeout``. Default: ``30`` channel_timeout Maximum seconds to leave an inactive connection open (integer). "Inactive" is defined as "has received no data from a client and has sent no data to a client". Default: ``120`` log_socket_errors Set to ``False`` to not log premature client disconnect tracebacks. Default: ``True`` max_request_header_size Maximum number of bytes of all request headers combined (integer). Default: ``262144`` (256K) max_request_body_size Maximum number of bytes in request body (integer). Default: ``1073741824`` (1GB) expose_tracebacks Set to ``True`` to expose tracebacks of unhandled exceptions to client. Default: ``False`` asyncore_loop_timeout The ``timeout`` value (seconds) passed to ``asyncore.loop`` to run the mainloop. Default: ``1`` .. versionadded:: 0.8.3 asyncore_use_poll Set to ``True`` to switch from using ``select()`` to ``poll()`` in ``asyncore.loop``. By default ``asyncore.loop()`` uses ``select()`` which has a limit of 1024 file descriptors. ``select()`` and ``poll()`` provide basically the same functionality, but ``poll()`` doesn't have the file descriptors limit. Default: ``False`` .. versionadded:: 0.8.6 url_prefix String: the value used as the WSGI ``SCRIPT_NAME`` value. Setting this to anything except the empty string will cause the WSGI ``SCRIPT_NAME`` value to be the value passed minus any trailing slashes you add, and it will cause the ``PATH_INFO`` of any request which is prefixed with this value to be stripped of the prefix. Default: ``''``