Dapr configuration
Dapr configurations are settings and policies that enable you to change both the behavior of individual Dapr applications, or the global behavior of the Dapr control plane system services.
for more information, read the configuration concept.
Application configuration
Set up application configuration
You can set up application configuration either in self-hosted or Kubernetes mode.
In self hosted mode, the Dapr configuration is a configuration file - for example, config.yaml
. By default, the Dapr sidecar looks in the default Dapr folder for the runtime configuration:
- Linux/MacOs:
$HOME/.dapr/config.yaml
- Windows:
%USERPROFILE%\.dapr\config.yaml
An application can also apply a configuration by using a --config
flag to the file path with dapr run
CLI command.
In Kubernetes mode, the Dapr configuration is a Configuration resource, that is applied to the cluster. For example:
kubectl apply -f myappconfig.yaml
You can use the Dapr CLI to list the Configuration resources for applications.
dapr configurations -k
A Dapr sidecar can apply a specific configuration by using a dapr.io/config
annotation. For example:
annotations:
dapr.io/enabled: "true"
dapr.io/app-id: "nodeapp"
dapr.io/app-port: "3000"
dapr.io/config: "myappconfig"
Note: See all Kubernetes annotations available to configure the Dapr sidecar on activation by sidecar Injector system service.
Application configuration settings
The following menu includes all of the configuration settings you can set on the sidecar.
- Tracing
- Metrics
- Logging
- Middleware
- Name resolution
- Scope secret store access
- Access Control allow lists for building block APIs
- Access Control allow lists for service invocation API
- Disallow usage of certain component types
- Turning on preview features
- Example sidecar configuration
Tracing
Tracing configuration turns on tracing for an application.
The tracing
section under the Configuration
spec contains the following properties:
tracing:
samplingRate: "1"
otel:
endpointAddress: "otelcollector.observability.svc.cluster.local:4317"
zipkin:
endpointAddress: "http://zipkin.default.svc.cluster.local:9411/api/v2/spans"
The following table lists the properties for tracing:
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
samplingRate |
string | Set sampling rate for tracing to be enabled or disabled. |
stdout |
bool | True write more verbose information to the traces |
otel.endpointAddress |
string | Set the Open Telemetry (OTEL) server address to send traces to. This may or may not require the https:// or http:// depending on your OTEL provider. |
otel.isSecure |
bool | Is the connection to the endpoint address encrypted |
otel.protocol |
string | Set to http or grpc protocol |
zipkin.endpointAddress |
string | Set the Zipkin server address to send traces to. This should include the protocol (http:// or https://) on the endpoint. |
samplingRate
samplingRate
is used to enable or disable the tracing. The valid range of samplingRate
is between 0
and 1
inclusive. The sampling rate determines whether a trace span should be sampled or not based on value.
samplingRate : "1"
samples all traces. By default, the sampling rate is (0.0001), or 1 in 10,000 traces.
To disable the sampling rate, set samplingRate : "0"
in the configuration.
otel
The OpenTelemetry (otel
) endpoint can also be configured via an environment variable. The presence of the OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT
environment variable
turns on tracing for the sidecar.
Environment Variable | Description |
---|---|
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT |
Sets the Open Telemetry (OTEL) server address, turns on tracing |
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_INSECURE |
Sets the connection to the endpoint as unencrypted (true/false) |
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_PROTOCOL |
Transport protocol (grpc , http/protobuf , http/json ) |
See Observability distributed tracing for more information.
Metrics
The metrics
section under the Configuration
spec can be used to enable or disable metrics for an application.
The metrics
section contains the following properties:
metrics:
enabled: true
rules: []
latencyDistributionBuckets: []
http:
increasedCardinality: true
pathMatching:
- /items
- /orders/{orderID}
- /orders/{orderID}/items/{itemID}
- /payments/{paymentID}
- /payments/{paymentID}/status
- /payments/{paymentID}/refund
- /payments/{paymentID}/details
excludeVerbs: false
In the examples above, the path filter /orders/{orderID}/items/{itemID}
would return a single metric count matching all the orderID
s and all the itemID
s, rather than multiple metrics for each itemID
. For more information, see HTTP metrics path matching
The following table lists the properties for metrics:
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
enabled |
boolean | When set to true, the default, enables metrics collection and the metrics endpoint. |
rules |
array | Named rule to filter metrics. Each rule contains a set of labels to filter on and a regex expression to apply to the metrics path. |
latencyDistributionBuckets |
array | Array of latency distribution buckets in milliseconds for latency metrics histograms. |
http.increasedCardinality |
boolean | When set to true (default), in the Dapr HTTP server each request path causes the creation of a new “bucket” of metrics. This can cause issues, including excessive memory consumption, when there many different requested endpoints (such as when interacting with RESTful APIs).To mitigate high memory usage and egress costs associated with high cardinality metrics with the HTTP server, you should set the metrics.http.increasedCardinality property to false . |
http.pathMatching |
array | Array of paths for path matching, allowing users to define matching paths to manage cardinality. |
http.excludeVerbs |
boolean | When set to true (default is false), the Dapr HTTP server ignores each request HTTP verb when building the method metric label. |
To further help manage cardinality, path matching allows you to match specified paths according to defined patterns, reducing the number of unique metrics paths and thus controlling metric cardinality. This feature is particularly useful for applications with dynamic URLs, ensuring that metrics remain meaningful and manageable without excessive memory consumption.
Using rules, you can set regular expressions for every metric exposed by the Dapr sidecar. For example:
metrics:
enabled: true
rules:
- name: dapr_runtime_service_invocation_req_sent_total
labels:
- name: method
regex:
"orders/": "orders/.+"
See metrics documentation for more information.
Logging
The logging
section under the Configuration
spec is used to configure how logging works in the Dapr Runtime.
The logging
section contains the following properties:
logging:
apiLogging:
enabled: false
obfuscateURLs: false
omitHealthChecks: false
The following table lists the properties for logging:
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
apiLogging.enabled |
boolean | The default value for the --enable-api-logging flag for daprd (and the corresponding dapr.io/enable-api-logging annotation): the value set in the Configuration spec is used as default unless a true or false value is passed to each Dapr Runtime. Default: false . |
apiLogging.obfuscateURLs |
boolean | When enabled, obfuscates the values of URLs in HTTP API logs (if enabled), logging the abstract route name rather than the full path being invoked, which could contain Personal Identifiable Information (PII). Default: false . |
apiLogging.omitHealthChecks |
boolean | If true , calls to health check endpoints (e.g. /v1.0/healthz ) are not logged when API logging is enabled. This is useful if those calls are adding a lot of noise in your logs. Default: false |
See logging documentation for more information.
Middleware
Middleware configuration sets named HTTP pipeline middleware handlers. The httpPipeline
and the appHttpPipeline
section under the Configuration
spec contain the following properties:
httpPipeline: # for incoming http calls
handlers:
- name: oauth2
type: middleware.http.oauth2
- name: uppercase
type: middleware.http.uppercase
appHttpPipeline: # for outgoing http calls
handlers:
- name: oauth2
type: middleware.http.oauth2
- name: uppercase
type: middleware.http.uppercase
The following table lists the properties for HTTP handlers:
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
string | Name of the middleware component |
type |
string | Type of middleware component |
See Middleware pipelines for more information.
Name resolution component
You can set name resolution components to use within the configuration file. For example, to set the spec.nameResolution.component
property to "sqlite"
, pass configuration options in the spec.nameResolution.configuration
dictionary as shown below.
This is a basic example of a configuration resource:
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Configuration
metadata:
name: appconfig
spec:
nameResolution:
component: "sqlite"
version: "v1"
configuration:
connectionString: "/home/user/.dapr/nr.db"
For more information, see:
- The name resolution component documentation for more examples.
- The Configuration file documentation to learn more about how to configure name resolution per component.
Scope secret store access
See the Scoping secrets guide for information and examples on how to scope secrets to an application.
Access Control allow lists for building block APIs
See the guide for selectively enabling Dapr APIs on the Dapr sidecar for information and examples on how to set access control allow lists (ACLs) on the building block APIs lists.
Access Control allow lists for service invocation API
See the Allow lists for service invocation guide for information and examples on how to set allow lists with ACLs which use the service invocation API.
Disallow usage of certain component types
Using the components.deny
property in the Configuration
spec you can specify a denylist of component types that cannot be initialized.
For example, the configuration below disallows the initialization of components of type bindings.smtp
and secretstores.local.file
:
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Configuration
metadata:
name: myappconfig
spec:
components:
deny:
- bindings.smtp
- secretstores.local.file
Optionally, you can specify a version to disallow by adding it at the end of the component name. For example, state.in-memory/v1
disables initializing components of type state.in-memory
and version v1
, but does not disable a (hypothetical) v2
version of the component.
Note
When you add the component type secretstores.kubernetes
to the denylist, Dapr forbids the creation of additional components of type secretstores.kubernetes
.
However, it does not disable the built-in Kubernetes secret store, which is:
- Created by Dapr automatically
- Used to store secrets specified in Components specs
If you want to disable the built-in Kubernetes secret store, you need to use the dapr.io/disable-builtin-k8s-secret-store
annotation.
Turning on preview features
See the preview features guide for information and examples on how to opt-in to preview features for a release.
Enabling preview features unlock new capabilities to be added for dev/test, since they still need more time before becoming generally available (GA) in the runtime.
Example sidecar configuration
The following YAML shows an example configuration file that can be applied to an applications’ Dapr sidecar.
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Configuration
metadata:
name: myappconfig
namespace: default
spec:
tracing:
samplingRate: "1"
stdout: true
otel:
endpointAddress: "localhost:4317"
isSecure: false
protocol: "grpc"
httpPipeline:
handlers:
- name: oauth2
type: middleware.http.oauth2
secrets:
scopes:
- storeName: localstore
defaultAccess: allow
deniedSecrets: ["redis-password"]
components:
deny:
- bindings.smtp
- secretstores.local.file
accessControl:
defaultAction: deny
trustDomain: "public"
policies:
- appId: app1
defaultAction: deny
trustDomain: 'public'
namespace: "default"
operations:
- name: /op1
httpVerb: ['POST', 'GET']
action: deny
- name: /op2/*
httpVerb: ["*"]
action: allow
Control plane configuration
A single configuration file called daprsystem
is installed with the Dapr control plane system services that applies global settings.
This is only set up when Dapr is deployed to Kubernetes.
Control plane configuration settings
A Dapr control plane configuration contains the following sections:
mtls
for mTLS (Mutual TLS)
mTLS (Mutual TLS)
The mtls
section contains properties for mTLS.
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
enabled |
bool | If true, enables mTLS for communication between services and apps in the cluster. |
allowedClockSkew |
string | Allowed tolerance when checking the expiration of TLS certificates, to allow for clock skew. Follows the format used by Go’s time.ParseDuration. Default is 15m (15 minutes). |
workloadCertTTL |
string | How long a certificate TLS issued by Dapr is valid for. Follows the format used by Go’s time.ParseDuration. Default is 24h (24 hours). |
sentryAddress |
string | Hostname port address for connecting to the Sentry server. |
controlPlaneTrustDomain |
string | Trust domain for the control plane. This is used to verify connection to control plane services. |
tokenValidators |
array | Additional Sentry token validators to use for authenticating certificate requests. |
See the mTLS how-to and security concepts for more information.
Example control plane configuration
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Configuration
metadata:
name: daprsystem
namespace: default
spec:
mtls:
enabled: true
allowedClockSkew: 15m
workloadCertTTL: 24h
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