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docs: Improve docs for Parse Server options masterKeyIps, maintenanceKeyIps (#8814)
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src/Options/Definitions.js

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -344,7 +344,7 @@ module.exports.ParseServerOptions = {
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maintenanceKeyIps: {
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env: 'PARSE_SERVER_MAINTENANCE_KEY_IPS',
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help:
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"(Optional) Restricts the use of maintenance key permissions to a list of IP addresses.<br><br>This option accepts a list of single IP addresses, for example:<br>`['10.0.0.1', '10.0.0.2']`<br><br>You can also use CIDR notation to specify an IP address range, for example:<br>`['10.0.1.0/24']`<br><br>Special cases:<br>- Setting an empty array `[]` means that `maintenanceKey` cannot be used even in Parse Server Cloud Code.<br>- Setting `['0.0.0.0/0']` means disabling the filter and the maintenance key can be used from any IP address.<br><br>Defaults to `['127.0.0.1', '::1']` which means that only `localhost`, the server itself, is allowed to use the maintenance key.",
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"(Optional) Restricts the use of maintenance key permissions to a list of IP addresses or ranges.<br><br>This option accepts a list of single IP addresses, for example `['10.0.0.1', '10.0.0.2']`. You can also use CIDR notation to specify an IP address range, for example `['10.0.1.0/24']`.<br><br><b>Special scenarios:</b><br>- Setting an empty array `[]` means that the maintenance key cannot be used even in Parse Server Cloud Code. This value cannot be set via an environment variable as there is no way to pass an empty array to Parse Server via an environment variable.<br>- Setting `['0.0.0.0/0', '::0']` means to allow any IPv4 and IPv6 address to use the maintenance key and effectively disables the IP filter.<br><br><b>Considerations:</b><br>- IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are not compared against each other. Each IP version (IPv4 and IPv6) needs to be considered separately. For example, `['0.0.0.0/0']` allows any IPv4 address and blocks every IPv6 address. Conversely, `['::0']` allows any IPv6 address and blocks every IPv4 address.<br>- Keep in mind that the IP version in use depends on the network stack of the environment in which Parse Server runs. A local environment may use a different IP version than a remote environment. For example, it's possible that locally the value `['0.0.0.0/0']` allows the request IP because the environment is using IPv4, but when Parse Server is deployed remotely the request IP is blocked because the remote environment is using IPv6.<br>- When setting the option via an environment variable the notation is a comma-separated string, for example `\"0.0.0.0/0,::0\"`.<br>- IPv6 zone indices (`%` suffix) are not supported, for example `fe80::1%eth0`, `fe80::1%1` or `::1%lo`.<br><br>Defaults to `['127.0.0.1', '::1']` which means that only `localhost`, the server instance on which Parse Server runs, is allowed to use the maintenance key.",
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action: parsers.arrayParser,
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default: ['127.0.0.1', '::1'],
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},
@@ -356,7 +356,7 @@ module.exports.ParseServerOptions = {
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masterKeyIps: {
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env: 'PARSE_SERVER_MASTER_KEY_IPS',
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help:
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"(Optional) Restricts the use of master key permissions to a list of IP addresses.<br><br>This option accepts a list of single IP addresses, for example:<br>`['10.0.0.1', '10.0.0.2']`<br><br>You can also use CIDR notation to specify an IP address range, for example:<br>`['10.0.1.0/24']`<br><br>Special cases:<br>- Setting an empty array `[]` means that `masterKey` cannot be used even in Parse Server Cloud Code.<br>- Setting `['0.0.0.0/0']` means disabling the filter and the master key can be used from any IP address.<br><br>To connect Parse Dashboard from a different server requires to add the IP address of the server that hosts Parse Dashboard because Parse Dashboard uses the master key.<br><br>Defaults to `['127.0.0.1', '::1']` which means that only `localhost`, the server itself, is allowed to use the master key.",
359+
"(Optional) Restricts the use of master key permissions to a list of IP addresses or ranges.<br><br>This option accepts a list of single IP addresses, for example `['10.0.0.1', '10.0.0.2']`. You can also use CIDR notation to specify an IP address range, for example `['10.0.1.0/24']`.<br><br><b>Special scenarios:</b><br>- Setting an empty array `[]` means that the master key cannot be used even in Parse Server Cloud Code. This value cannot be set via an environment variable as there is no way to pass an empty array to Parse Server via an environment variable.<br>- Setting `['0.0.0.0/0', '::0']` means to allow any IPv4 and IPv6 address to use the master key and effectively disables the IP filter.<br><br><b>Considerations:</b><br>- IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are not compared against each other. Each IP version (IPv4 and IPv6) needs to be considered separately. For example, `['0.0.0.0/0']` allows any IPv4 address and blocks every IPv6 address. Conversely, `['::0']` allows any IPv6 address and blocks every IPv4 address.<br>- Keep in mind that the IP version in use depends on the network stack of the environment in which Parse Server runs. A local environment may use a different IP version than a remote environment. For example, it's possible that locally the value `['0.0.0.0/0']` allows the request IP because the environment is using IPv4, but when Parse Server is deployed remotely the request IP is blocked because the remote environment is using IPv6.<br>- When setting the option via an environment variable the notation is a comma-separated string, for example `\"0.0.0.0/0,::0\"`.<br>- IPv6 zone indices (`%` suffix) are not supported, for example `fe80::1%eth0`, `fe80::1%1` or `::1%lo`.<br><br>Defaults to `['127.0.0.1', '::1']` which means that only `localhost`, the server instance on which Parse Server runs, is allowed to use the master key.",
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action: parsers.arrayParser,
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default: ['127.0.0.1', '::1'],
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},

src/Options/docs.js

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
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src/Options/index.js

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@@ -52,11 +52,11 @@ export interface ParseServerOptions {
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/* URL to your parse server with http:// or https://.
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:ENV: PARSE_SERVER_URL */
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serverURL: string;
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/* (Optional) Restricts the use of master key permissions to a list of IP addresses.<br><br>This option accepts a list of single IP addresses, for example:<br>`['10.0.0.1', '10.0.0.2']`<br><br>You can also use CIDR notation to specify an IP address range, for example:<br>`['10.0.1.0/24']`<br><br>Special cases:<br>- Setting an empty array `[]` means that `masterKey` cannot be used even in Parse Server Cloud Code.<br>- Setting `['0.0.0.0/0']` means disabling the filter and the master key can be used from any IP address.<br><br>To connect Parse Dashboard from a different server requires to add the IP address of the server that hosts Parse Dashboard because Parse Dashboard uses the master key.<br><br>Defaults to `['127.0.0.1', '::1']` which means that only `localhost`, the server itself, is allowed to use the master key.
55+
/* (Optional) Restricts the use of master key permissions to a list of IP addresses or ranges.<br><br>This option accepts a list of single IP addresses, for example `['10.0.0.1', '10.0.0.2']`. You can also use CIDR notation to specify an IP address range, for example `['10.0.1.0/24']`.<br><br><b>Special scenarios:</b><br>- Setting an empty array `[]` means that the master key cannot be used even in Parse Server Cloud Code. This value cannot be set via an environment variable as there is no way to pass an empty array to Parse Server via an environment variable.<br>- Setting `['0.0.0.0/0', '::0']` means to allow any IPv4 and IPv6 address to use the master key and effectively disables the IP filter.<br><br><b>Considerations:</b><br>- IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are not compared against each other. Each IP version (IPv4 and IPv6) needs to be considered separately. For example, `['0.0.0.0/0']` allows any IPv4 address and blocks every IPv6 address. Conversely, `['::0']` allows any IPv6 address and blocks every IPv4 address.<br>- Keep in mind that the IP version in use depends on the network stack of the environment in which Parse Server runs. A local environment may use a different IP version than a remote environment. For example, it's possible that locally the value `['0.0.0.0/0']` allows the request IP because the environment is using IPv4, but when Parse Server is deployed remotely the request IP is blocked because the remote environment is using IPv6.<br>- When setting the option via an environment variable the notation is a comma-separated string, for example `"0.0.0.0/0,::0"`.<br>- IPv6 zone indices (`%` suffix) are not supported, for example `fe80::1%eth0`, `fe80::1%1` or `::1%lo`.<br><br>Defaults to `['127.0.0.1', '::1']` which means that only `localhost`, the server instance on which Parse Server runs, is allowed to use the master key.
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:DEFAULT: ["127.0.0.1","::1"] */
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masterKeyIps: ?(string[]);
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/* (Optional) Restricts the use of maintenance key permissions to a list of IP addresses.<br><br>This option accepts a list of single IP addresses, for example:<br>`['10.0.0.1', '10.0.0.2']`<br><br>You can also use CIDR notation to specify an IP address range, for example:<br>`['10.0.1.0/24']`<br><br>Special cases:<br>- Setting an empty array `[]` means that `maintenanceKey` cannot be used even in Parse Server Cloud Code.<br>- Setting `['0.0.0.0/0']` means disabling the filter and the maintenance key can be used from any IP address.<br><br>Defaults to `['127.0.0.1', '::1']` which means that only `localhost`, the server itself, is allowed to use the maintenance key.
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:DEFAULT: ["127.0.0.1","::1"] */
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/* (Optional) Restricts the use of maintenance key permissions to a list of IP addresses or ranges.<br><br>This option accepts a list of single IP addresses, for example `['10.0.0.1', '10.0.0.2']`. You can also use CIDR notation to specify an IP address range, for example `['10.0.1.0/24']`.<br><br><b>Special scenarios:</b><br>- Setting an empty array `[]` means that the maintenance key cannot be used even in Parse Server Cloud Code. This value cannot be set via an environment variable as there is no way to pass an empty array to Parse Server via an environment variable.<br>- Setting `['0.0.0.0/0', '::0']` means to allow any IPv4 and IPv6 address to use the maintenance key and effectively disables the IP filter.<br><br><b>Considerations:</b><br>- IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are not compared against each other. Each IP version (IPv4 and IPv6) needs to be considered separately. For example, `['0.0.0.0/0']` allows any IPv4 address and blocks every IPv6 address. Conversely, `['::0']` allows any IPv6 address and blocks every IPv4 address.<br>- Keep in mind that the IP version in use depends on the network stack of the environment in which Parse Server runs. A local environment may use a different IP version than a remote environment. For example, it's possible that locally the value `['0.0.0.0/0']` allows the request IP because the environment is using IPv4, but when Parse Server is deployed remotely the request IP is blocked because the remote environment is using IPv6.<br>- When setting the option via an environment variable the notation is a comma-separated string, for example `"0.0.0.0/0,::0"`.<br>- IPv6 zone indices (`%` suffix) are not supported, for example `fe80::1%eth0`, `fe80::1%1` or `::1%lo`.<br><br>Defaults to `['127.0.0.1', '::1']` which means that only `localhost`, the server instance on which Parse Server runs, is allowed to use the maintenance key.
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:DEFAULT: ["127.0.0.1","::1"] */
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maintenanceKeyIps: ?(string[]);
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/* Sets the app name */
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appName: ?string;
@@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ export interface ParseServerOptions {
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/* Optional. If set to `true`, the `email` property of a user is automatically converted to lowercase before being stored in the database. Consequently, queries must match the case as stored in the database, which would be lowercase in this scenario. If `false`, the `email` property is stored as set, without any case modifications. Default is `false`.
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:DEFAULT: false */
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convertEmailToLowercase: ?boolean;
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/* Optional. If set to `true`, the `username` property of a user is automatically converted to lowercase before being stored in the database. Consequently, queries must match the case as stored in the database, which would be lowercase in this scenario. If `false`, the `username` property is stored as set, without any case modifications. Default is `false`.
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/* Optional. If set to `true`, the `username` property of a user is automatically converted to lowercase before being stored in the database. Consequently, queries must match the case as stored in the database, which would be lowercase in this scenario. If `false`, the `username` property is stored as set, without any case modifications. Default is `false`.
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:DEFAULT: false */
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convertUsernameToLowercase: ?boolean;
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/* Full path to your cloud code main.js */

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