LogoLogo
1.10.0
1.10.0
  • Welcome
  • Getting Started
  • Downloads
  • VerneMQ / MQTT Introduction
  • Installation
    • Accepting the VerneMQ EULA
    • Installing on Debian and Ubuntu
    • Installing on CentOS and RHEL
    • Running VerneMQ using Docker
  • Configuration
    • Introduction
    • Auth using files
    • Auth using a database
    • MQTT Options
    • MQTT Listeners
    • HTTP Listeners
    • Non-standard MQTT options
    • Websockets
    • Logging
    • Consumer session balancing
    • Plugins
    • Shared subscriptions
    • Advanced Options
    • Storage
    • MQTT Bridge
  • Clustering
    • Introduction
    • Inter-node Communication
    • Dealing with Netsplits
  • Administration
    • Introduction
    • Inspecting and managing sessions
    • Retained messages
    • Live reconfiguration
    • Managing Listeners
    • HTTP API
    • Tracing
  • Monitoring
    • Introduction
    • $SYSTree
    • Graphite
    • Prometheus
    • Health Checker
    • Status Page
  • Plugindevelopment
    • Introduction
    • Session lifecycle
    • Subscribe Flow
    • Publish Flow
    • Enhanced Auth Flow
    • Erlang Boilerplate
    • Lua Scripting Support
    • Webhooks
  • Guides
    • A typical VerneMQ deployment
    • VerneMQ on Kubernetes
    • Loadtesting VerneMQ
    • Clustering during development
    • Not a tuning guide
    • Change Open File Limits
Powered by GitBook
On this page

Was this helpful?

Edit on Git
Export as PDF
  1. Configuration

HTTP Listeners

How to setup and configure the HTTP listener.

PreviousMQTT ListenersNextNon-standard MQTT options

Last updated 5 years ago

Was this helpful?

The VerneMQ HTTP listener is used to serve various VerneMQ subsystems such as:

By default it runs on port 8888. To disable the HTTP listener or change the port, adapt the configuration in vernemq.conf:

listener.http.default = 127.0.0.1:8888
Status page
Prometheus metrics
management API
Health check