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@@ -48,6 +48,7 @@ Additionally, you can specify one of several environment variable (via `-e`) to
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* `NGROK_PROTOCOL` - Can either be `HTTP` or `TCP`, and it defaults to `HTTP` if not specified. If set to `TCP`, Ngrok will allocate a port instead of a subdomain and proxy TCP requests directly to your application.
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* `NGROK_PROTOCOL` - Can either be `HTTP` or `TCP`, and it defaults to `HTTP` if not specified. If set to `TCP`, Ngrok will allocate a port instead of a subdomain and proxy TCP requests directly to your application.
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* `NGROK_PORT` - Port to expose (defaults to `80` for `HTTP` protocol). If the server is non-local, the hostname can also be specified, e.g. `192.168.0.102:80`.
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* `NGROK_PORT` - Port to expose (defaults to `80` for `HTTP` protocol). If the server is non-local, the hostname can also be specified, e.g. `192.168.0.102:80`.
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* `NGROK_REGION` - Location of the ngrok tunnel server; can be `us` (United States, default), `eu` (Europe), `ap` (Asia/Pacific) or `au` (Australia)
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* `NGROK_REGION` - Location of the ngrok tunnel server; can be `us` (United States, default), `eu` (Europe), `ap` (Asia/Pacific) or `au` (Australia)
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+ * `NGROK_LOOK_DOMAIN` - This is the domain name referred to by ngrok. (default: localhost).
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* `NGROK_BINDTLS` - Toggle tunneling only HTTP or HTTPS traffic. When `true`, Ngrok only opens the HTTPS endpoint. When `false`, Ngrok only opens the HTTP endpoint
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* `NGROK_BINDTLS` - Toggle tunneling only HTTP or HTTPS traffic. When `true`, Ngrok only opens the HTTPS endpoint. When `false`, Ngrok only opens the HTTP endpoint
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#### Full example
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#### Full example
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