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Configuration#

It's possible to change some n8n defaults using environment variables.

For a full list of available configurations see Environment Variables.

How to set#

Where you set these environment variables depends on how you are running n8n: with npm or Docker.

npm#

For npm, set your desired environment variables in terminal using the export command as shown below:

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export <variable>=<value>

Docker#

For Docker, you can set your environment variables in the n8n: environment: element of your docker-compose.yaml file. For example:

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n8n:
    environment:
      - N8N_BASIC_AUTH_ACTIVE=true
      - N8N_BASIC_AUTH_USER=<user>
      - N8N_BASIC_AUTH_PASSWORD=<password>

Or using the -e flag from the command line:

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docker run -it --rm \
	--name n8n \
	-p 5678:5678 \
	-e N8N_BASIC_AUTH_ACTIVE="true" \
	-e N8N_BASIC_AUTH_USER="<user>" \
	-e N8N_BASIC_AUTH_PASSWORD="<password>" \
	n8nio/n8n

Configuration by file#

You can also configure n8n using a configuration file.

Only define the values that need to be different from the default in your configuration file. You can use multiple files. For example, you can have a file with generic base settings, and files with specific values for different environments.

Set the path to the JSON configuration file using the environment variable N8N_CONFIG_FILES.

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# Single file
export N8N_CONFIG_FILES=/folder/my-config.json

# Multiple files are comma-separated
export N8N_CONFIG_FILES=/folder/my-config.json,/folder/production.json

A possible configuration file could look like this:

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{
	"executions": {
		"process": "main",
		"saveDataOnSuccess": "none"
	},
	"generic": {
		"timezone": "Europe/Berlin"
	},
	"security": {
		"basicAuth": {
			"active": true,
			"user": "frank",
			"password": "some-secure-password"
		}
	},
	"nodes": {
		"exclude": "[\"n8n-nodes-base.executeCommand\",\"n8n-nodes-base.writeBinaryFile\"]"
	}
}

You can also append _FILE to some individual environment variables to provide their configuration in a separate file, enabling you to avoid passing sensitive details using environment variables. n8n loads the data from the file with the given name, making it possible to load data from Docker- and Kubernetes-Secrets.

The following environment variables support file input:

  • CREDENTIALS_OVERWRITE_DATA_FILE
  • DB_TYPE_FILE
  • DB_MYSQLDB_DATABASE_FILE
  • DB_MYSQLDB_HOST_FILE
  • DB_MYSQLDB_PORT_FILE
  • DB_MYSQLDB_USER_FILE
  • DB_MYSQLDB_PASSWORD_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_DATABASE_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_HOST_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_PASSWORD_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_PORT_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_SSL_CA_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_SSL_CERT_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_SSL_KEY_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_SSL_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_USER_FILE
  • DB_POSTGRESDB_SCHEMA_FILE
  • N8N_BASIC_AUTH_PASSWORD_FILE
  • N8N_BASIC_AUTH_USER_FILE
  • N8N_BASIC_AUTH_HASH_FILE
  • N8N_JWT_AUTH_HEADER_FILE
  • N8N_JWKS_URI_FILE
  • N8N_JWT_AUTH_HEADER_VALUE_PREFIX_FILE
  • N8N_JWT_ISSUER_FILE
  • N8N_JWT_NAMESPACE_FILE
  • N8N_JWT_ALLOWED_TENANT_FILE
  • N8N_JWT_ALLOWED_TENANT_KEY_FILE

Examples#

Base URL#

Requires manual UI build

This variable requires a manual build of the n8n-editor-ui package. You can't use it with the default n8n docker image. The default is /, meaning that it uses the root-domain.

Tells the front end how to reach the REST API of the back end.

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export VUE_APP_URL_BASE_API=https://n8n.example.com/

Encryption key#

n8n creates a random encryption key automatically on the first launch and saves it in the ~/.n8n folder. n8n uses that key to encrypt the credentials before they get saved to the database. It's possible to overwrite the key and set it using an environment variable.

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export N8N_ENCRYPTION_KEY=<SOME RANDOM STRING>

Execute in same process#

All workflows run in their own separate process. This ensures that all CPU cores get used and that they don't block each other on CPU intensive tasks. It also makes sure that one execution crashing doesn't take down the whole application. The disadvantage is that it slows down the start-time considerably and uses much more memory. If your workflows aren't CPU intensive, and they have to start very fast, it's possible to run them all directly in the main-process with this setting.

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export EXECUTIONS_PROCESS=main

Execution timeout#

A workflow times out and gets canceled after this time (in seconds). If the workflow runs in the main process, a soft timeout happens (takes effect after the current node finishes). If a workflow runs in its own process, n8n attempts a soft timeout first, then kills the process after waiting for an additional fifth of the given timeout duration.

EXECUTIONS_TIMEOUT default is -1. For example, if you want to set the timeout to one hour:

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export EXECUTIONS_TIMEOUT=3600

You can also set maximum execution time (in seconds) for each workflow individually. For example, if you want to set maximum execution time to two hours:

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export EXECUTIONS_TIMEOUT_MAX=7200

Custom nodes location#

Every user can add custom nodes that get loaded by n8n on startup. The default location is in the subfolder .n8n/custom of the user who started n8n. You can define additional folders with an environment variable.

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export N8N_CUSTOM_EXTENSIONS="/home/jim/n8n/custom-nodes;/data/n8n/nodes"

Use built-in and external modules in Function-Nodes#

For security reasons, the Function node restricts importing modules. It's possible to lift that restriction for built-in and external modules by setting the following environment variables:

  • NODE_FUNCTION_ALLOW_BUILTIN: For built-in modules
  • NODE_FUNCTION_ALLOW_EXTERNAL: For external modules sourced from n8n/node_modules directory. External module support is disabled when an environment variable isn't set.
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# Allows usage of all builtin modules
export NODE_FUNCTION_ALLOW_BUILTIN=*

# Allows usage of only crypto
export NODE_FUNCTION_ALLOW_BUILTIN=crypto

# Allows usage of only crypto and fs
export NODE_FUNCTION_ALLOW_BUILTIN=crypto,fs

# Allow usage of external npm modules.
export NODE_FUNCTION_ALLOW_EXTERNAL=moment,lodash

Timezone#

The default timezone is "America/New_York". For instance, the Cron node uses it to know at what time the workflow should start. To set a different default timezone, set GENERIC_TIMEZONE to the appropriate value. For example, if you want to set the timezone to Berlin (Germany):

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export GENERIC_TIMEZONE=Europe/Berlin

You can find the name of your timezone here.

User folder#

n8n saves user-specific data like the encryption key, SQLite database file, and the ID of the tunnel (if used) in the subfolder .n8n of the user who started n8n. It's possible to overwrite the user-folder using an environment variable.

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export N8N_USER_FOLDER=/home/jim/n8n

Webhook URL#

n8n creates the webhook URL by combining N8N_PROTOCOL, N8N_HOST and N8N_PORT. If n8n runs behind a reverse proxy, that won't work. That's because n8n runs internally on port 5678 but is exposed to the web using the reverse proxy on port 443. In that case, it's important to set the webhook URL manually so that n8n can display it correctly in the Editor UI and register the correct webhook URLs with external services.

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export WEBHOOK_URL=https://n8n.example.com/

Prometheus#

To collect and expose metrics, n8n uses the prom-client library.

The /metrics endpoint is disabled by default, but it's possible to enable it using the N8N_METRICS environment variable.

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export N8N_METRICS=true

It's also possible to overwrite the prefix of the metric names by setting the N8N_METRICS_PREFIX environment variable.

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export N8N_METRICS_PREFIX=n8n_

Metrics and webhooks

At the moment, n8n doesn't support metrics for webhooks.