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Configuration file

The tunnel configuration file allows you to have fine-grained control over how an instance of cloudflared will operate. In your configuration file, you can specify top-level properties for your cloudflared instance as well as configure origin-specific properties. For a full list of configuration options, type cloudflared tunnel help in your terminal.

In the absence of a configuration file, cloudflared will proxy outbound traffic through port 8080.

​​ File structure for private networks

If you are exposing a private network to end users running WARP, you need to add the warp-routing key and set it to true:

tunnel: <Tunnel-UUID>
credentials-file: /path/<Tunnel-UUID>.json
warp-routing:
enabled: true

​​ File structure for public hostnames

If you are exposing local services to the Internet, you can assign a public hostname to each service:

tunnel: 6ff42ae2-765d-4adf-8112-31c55c1551ef
credentials-file: /root/.cloudflared/6ff42ae2-765d-4adf-8112-31c55c1551ef.json
ingress:
- hostname: gitlab.widgetcorp.tech
service: http://localhost:80
- hostname: gitlab-ssh.widgetcorp.tech
service: ssh://localhost:22
- service: http_status:404

Configuration files that contain ingress rules must always include a catch-all rule that concludes the file. In this example, cloudflared will respond with a 404 status code when the request does not match any of the previous hostnames.

​​ How traffic is matched

When cloudflared receives an incoming request, it evaluates each ingress rule from top to bottom to find which rule matches the request. Rules can match either the hostname or path of an incoming request, or both.

If a rule does not specify a hostname, all hostnames will be matched. If a rule does not specify a path, all paths will be matched.

The last ingress rule must be a catch-all rule that matches all traffic.

Here is an example configuration file that specifies several rules:

tunnel: 6ff42ae2-765d-4adf-8112-31c55c1551ef
credentials-file: /root/.cloudflared/6ff42ae2-765d-4adf-8112-31c55c1551ef.json
ingress:
# Rules map traffic from a hostname to a local service:
- hostname: example.com
service: https://localhost:8000
# Rules can match the request's path to a regular expression:
- hostname: static.example.com
path: \.(jpg|png|css|js)$
service: https://localhost:8001
# Rules can match the request's hostname to a wildcard character:
- hostname: "*.example.com"
service: https://localhost:8002
# An example of a catch-all rule:
- service: https://localhost:8003

​​ Supported protocols

In addition to HTTP, cloudflared supports protocols like SSH, RDP, arbitrary TCP services, and Unix sockets. You can also route traffic to the built-in Hello World test server or respond to traffic with an HTTP status.

tunnel: 6ff42ae2-765d-4adf-8112-31c55c1551ef
credentials-file: /root/.cloudflared/6ff42ae2-765d-4adf-8112-31c55c1551ef.json
ingress:
# Example of a request over TCP:
- hostname: example.com
service: tcp://localhost:8000
# Example of an HTTP request over a Unix socket:
- hostname: staging.example.com
service: unix:/home/production/echo.sock
# Example of a request mapping to the Hello World test server:
- hostname: test.example.com
service: hello_world
# Example of a rule responding to traffic with an HTTP status:
- service: http_status:404
ServiceDescriptionExample service value
HTTP/SIncoming HTTP requests are proxied directly to your local service.https://localhost:8000
HTTP over Unix socketJust like HTTP, but using a Unix socket instead.unix:/home/production/echo.sock
HTTPS over Unix socketJust like HTTPS, but using a Unix socket instead.unix+tls:/home/production/echo.sock
TCPTCP connections are proxied to your local service.tcp://localhost:2222
SSHSSH connections are proxied to your local service. Learn more.ssh://localhost:22
RDPRDP connections are proxied to your local service. Learn more.rdp://localhost:3389
kubectl bastion modecloudflared will act like a jumphost, allowing access to any local address.bastion
Hello WorldTest server for validating your Cloudflare Tunnel setup.hello_world
HTTP statusResponds to all requests with the given HTTP status.http_status:404

​​ Origin configuration

If you need to proxy traffic to multiple origins within one instance of cloudflared, you can define the way cloudflared sends requests to each service by specifying configuration options as part of your ingress rules.

In the following example, the top-level configuration connectTimeout: 30s sets a 30-second connection timeout for all services within that instance of cloudflared. The ingress rule for service: localhost:8002 then configures an exception to the top-level configuration by setting connectTimeout for that service at 10s. The 30-second connection timeout still applies to all other services.

tunnel: 6ff42ae2-765d-4adf-8112-31c55c1551ef
credentials-file: /root/.cloudflared/6ff42ae2-765d-4adf-8112-31c55c1551ef.json
originRequest: # Top-level configuration
connectTimeout: 30s
ingress:
# The localhost:8000 service inherits all root-level configuration.
# In other words, it will use a connectTimeout of 30 seconds.
- hostname: example.com
service: localhost:8000
- hostname: example2.com
service: localhost:8001
# The localhost:8002 service overrides some root-level config.
- service: localhost:8002
originRequest:
connectTimeout: 10s
disableChunkedEncoding: true
# Some built-in services such as `http_status` do not use any configuration.
# The service below will simply respond with HTTP 404.
- service: http_status:404

​​ Validate ingress rules

To validate the ingress rules in your configuration file, run:

$ cloudflared tunnel ingress validate

This will ensure that the set of ingress rules specified in your config file is valid.

​​ Test ingress rules

To verify that cloudflared will proxy the right traffic to the right local service, use cloudflared tunnel ingress rule. This checks a URL against every rule, from first to last, and shows the first rule that matches. For example:

$ cloudflared tunnel ingress rule https://foo.example.com
Using rules from /usr/local/etc/cloudflared/config.yml
Matched rule #3
hostname: *.example.com
service: https://localhost:8000

​​ Update a configuration file

When making changes to the configuration file for a given tunnel, we suggest relying on cloudflared replicas to propagate the new configuration with minimal downtime.

  1. Have a cloudflared instance running with the original version of the configuration file.
  2. Start a cloudflared replica running with the updated version of the configuration file.
  3. Wait for the replica to be fully running and usable.
  4. Stop the first instance of cloudflared.

Your cloudflared will now be running with the updated version of your configuration file.