Drupal investigation

settings.php 31KB

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  1. <?php
  2. /**
  3. * @file
  4. * Drupal site-specific configuration file.
  5. *
  6. * IMPORTANT NOTE:
  7. * This file may have been set to read-only by the Drupal installation program.
  8. * If you make changes to this file, be sure to protect it again after making
  9. * your modifications. Failure to remove write permissions to this file is a
  10. * security risk.
  11. *
  12. * In order to use the selection rules below the multisite aliasing file named
  13. * sites/sites.php must be present. Its optional settings will be loaded, and
  14. * the aliases in the array $sites will override the default directory rules
  15. * below. See sites/example.sites.php for more information about aliases.
  16. *
  17. * The configuration directory will be discovered by stripping the website's
  18. * hostname from left to right and pathname from right to left. The first
  19. * configuration file found will be used and any others will be ignored. If no
  20. * other configuration file is found then the default configuration file at
  21. * 'sites/default' will be used.
  22. *
  23. * For example, for a fictitious site installed at
  24. * https://www.drupal.org:8080/mysite/test/, the 'settings.php' file is searched
  25. * for in the following directories:
  26. *
  27. * - sites/8080.www.drupal.org.mysite.test
  28. * - sites/www.drupal.org.mysite.test
  29. * - sites/drupal.org.mysite.test
  30. * - sites/org.mysite.test
  31. *
  32. * - sites/8080.www.drupal.org.mysite
  33. * - sites/www.drupal.org.mysite
  34. * - sites/drupal.org.mysite
  35. * - sites/org.mysite
  36. *
  37. * - sites/8080.www.drupal.org
  38. * - sites/www.drupal.org
  39. * - sites/drupal.org
  40. * - sites/org
  41. *
  42. * - sites/default
  43. *
  44. * Note that if you are installing on a non-standard port number, prefix the
  45. * hostname with that number. For example,
  46. * https://www.drupal.org:8080/mysite/test/ could be loaded from
  47. * sites/8080.www.drupal.org.mysite.test/.
  48. *
  49. * @see example.sites.php
  50. * @see \Drupal\Core\DrupalKernel::getSitePath()
  51. *
  52. * In addition to customizing application settings through variables in
  53. * settings.php, you can create a services.yml file in the same directory to
  54. * register custom, site-specific service definitions and/or swap out default
  55. * implementations with custom ones.
  56. */
  57. /**
  58. * Database settings:
  59. *
  60. * The $databases array specifies the database connection or
  61. * connections that Drupal may use. Drupal is able to connect
  62. * to multiple databases, including multiple types of databases,
  63. * during the same request.
  64. *
  65. * One example of the simplest connection array is shown below. To use the
  66. * sample settings, copy and uncomment the code below between the @code and
  67. * @endcode lines and paste it after the $databases declaration. You will need
  68. * to replace the database username and password and possibly the host and port
  69. * with the appropriate credentials for your database system.
  70. *
  71. * The next section describes how to customize the $databases array for more
  72. * specific needs.
  73. *
  74. * @code
  75. * $databases['default']['default'] = array (
  76. * 'database' => 'databasename',
  77. * 'username' => 'sqlusername',
  78. * 'password' => 'sqlpassword',
  79. * 'host' => 'localhost',
  80. * 'port' => '3306',
  81. * 'driver' => 'mysql',
  82. * 'prefix' => '',
  83. * 'collation' => 'utf8mb4_general_ci',
  84. * );
  85. * @endcode
  86. */
  87. $databases = array();
  88. /**
  89. * Customizing database settings.
  90. *
  91. * Many of the values of the $databases array can be customized for your
  92. * particular database system. Refer to the sample in the section above as a
  93. * starting point.
  94. *
  95. * The "driver" property indicates what Drupal database driver the
  96. * connection should use. This is usually the same as the name of the
  97. * database type, such as mysql or sqlite, but not always. The other
  98. * properties will vary depending on the driver. For SQLite, you must
  99. * specify a database file name in a directory that is writable by the
  100. * webserver. For most other drivers, you must specify a
  101. * username, password, host, and database name.
  102. *
  103. * Transaction support is enabled by default for all drivers that support it,
  104. * including MySQL. To explicitly disable it, set the 'transactions' key to
  105. * FALSE.
  106. * Note that some configurations of MySQL, such as the MyISAM engine, don't
  107. * support it and will proceed silently even if enabled. If you experience
  108. * transaction related crashes with such configuration, set the 'transactions'
  109. * key to FALSE.
  110. *
  111. * For each database, you may optionally specify multiple "target" databases.
  112. * A target database allows Drupal to try to send certain queries to a
  113. * different database if it can but fall back to the default connection if not.
  114. * That is useful for primary/replica replication, as Drupal may try to connect
  115. * to a replica server when appropriate and if one is not available will simply
  116. * fall back to the single primary server (The terms primary/replica are
  117. * traditionally referred to as master/slave in database server documentation).
  118. *
  119. * The general format for the $databases array is as follows:
  120. * @code
  121. * $databases['default']['default'] = $info_array;
  122. * $databases['default']['replica'][] = $info_array;
  123. * $databases['default']['replica'][] = $info_array;
  124. * $databases['extra']['default'] = $info_array;
  125. * @endcode
  126. *
  127. * In the above example, $info_array is an array of settings described above.
  128. * The first line sets a "default" database that has one primary database
  129. * (the second level default). The second and third lines create an array
  130. * of potential replica databases. Drupal will select one at random for a given
  131. * request as needed. The fourth line creates a new database with a name of
  132. * "extra".
  133. *
  134. * You can optionally set prefixes for some or all database table names
  135. * by using the 'prefix' setting. If a prefix is specified, the table
  136. * name will be prepended with its value. Be sure to use valid database
  137. * characters only, usually alphanumeric and underscore. If no prefixes
  138. * are desired, leave it as an empty string ''.
  139. *
  140. * To have all database names prefixed, set 'prefix' as a string:
  141. * @code
  142. * 'prefix' => 'main_',
  143. * @endcode
  144. *
  145. * Per-table prefixes are deprecated as of Drupal 8.2, and will be removed in
  146. * Drupal 9.0. After that, only a single prefix for all tables will be
  147. * supported.
  148. *
  149. * To provide prefixes for specific tables, set 'prefix' as an array.
  150. * The array's keys are the table names and the values are the prefixes.
  151. * The 'default' element is mandatory and holds the prefix for any tables
  152. * not specified elsewhere in the array. Example:
  153. * @code
  154. * 'prefix' => array(
  155. * 'default' => 'main_',
  156. * 'users' => 'shared_',
  157. * 'sessions' => 'shared_',
  158. * 'role' => 'shared_',
  159. * 'authmap' => 'shared_',
  160. * ),
  161. * @endcode
  162. * You can also use a reference to a schema/database as a prefix. This may be
  163. * useful if your Drupal installation exists in a schema that is not the default
  164. * or you want to access several databases from the same code base at the same
  165. * time.
  166. * Example:
  167. * @code
  168. * 'prefix' => array(
  169. * 'default' => 'main.',
  170. * 'users' => 'shared.',
  171. * 'sessions' => 'shared.',
  172. * 'role' => 'shared.',
  173. * 'authmap' => 'shared.',
  174. * );
  175. * @endcode
  176. * NOTE: MySQL and SQLite's definition of a schema is a database.
  177. *
  178. * Advanced users can add or override initial commands to execute when
  179. * connecting to the database server, as well as PDO connection settings. For
  180. * example, to enable MySQL SELECT queries to exceed the max_join_size system
  181. * variable, and to reduce the database connection timeout to 5 seconds:
  182. * @code
  183. * $databases['default']['default'] = array(
  184. * 'init_commands' => array(
  185. * 'big_selects' => 'SET SQL_BIG_SELECTS=1',
  186. * ),
  187. * 'pdo' => array(
  188. * PDO::ATTR_TIMEOUT => 5,
  189. * ),
  190. * );
  191. * @endcode
  192. *
  193. * WARNING: The above defaults are designed for database portability. Changing
  194. * them may cause unexpected behavior, including potential data loss. See
  195. * https://www.drupal.org/developing/api/database/configuration for more
  196. * information on these defaults and the potential issues.
  197. *
  198. * More details can be found in the constructor methods for each driver:
  199. * - \Drupal\Core\Database\Driver\mysql\Connection::__construct()
  200. * - \Drupal\Core\Database\Driver\pgsql\Connection::__construct()
  201. * - \Drupal\Core\Database\Driver\sqlite\Connection::__construct()
  202. *
  203. * Sample Database configuration format for PostgreSQL (pgsql):
  204. * @code
  205. * $databases['default']['default'] = array(
  206. * 'driver' => 'pgsql',
  207. * 'database' => 'databasename',
  208. * 'username' => 'sqlusername',
  209. * 'password' => 'sqlpassword',
  210. * 'host' => 'localhost',
  211. * 'prefix' => '',
  212. * );
  213. * @endcode
  214. *
  215. * Sample Database configuration format for SQLite (sqlite):
  216. * @code
  217. * $databases['default']['default'] = array(
  218. * 'driver' => 'sqlite',
  219. * 'database' => '/path/to/databasefilename',
  220. * );
  221. * @endcode
  222. */
  223. /**
  224. * Location of the site configuration files.
  225. *
  226. * The $config_directories array specifies the location of file system
  227. * directories used for configuration data. On install, the "sync" directory is
  228. * created. This is used for configuration imports. The "active" directory is
  229. * not created by default since the default storage for active configuration is
  230. * the database rather than the file system. (This can be changed. See "Active
  231. * configuration settings" below).
  232. *
  233. * The default location for the "sync" directory is inside a randomly-named
  234. * directory in the public files path. The setting below allows you to override
  235. * the "sync" location.
  236. *
  237. * If you use files for the "active" configuration, you can tell the
  238. * Configuration system where this directory is located by adding an entry with
  239. * array key CONFIG_ACTIVE_DIRECTORY.
  240. *
  241. * Example:
  242. * @code
  243. * $config_directories = array(
  244. * CONFIG_SYNC_DIRECTORY => '/directory/outside/webroot',
  245. * );
  246. * @endcode
  247. */
  248. $config_directories = array();
  249. /**
  250. * Settings:
  251. *
  252. * $settings contains environment-specific configuration, such as the files
  253. * directory and reverse proxy address, and temporary configuration, such as
  254. * security overrides.
  255. *
  256. * @see \Drupal\Core\Site\Settings::get()
  257. */
  258. /**
  259. * The active installation profile.
  260. *
  261. * Changing this after installation is not recommended as it changes which
  262. * directories are scanned during extension discovery. If this is set prior to
  263. * installation this value will be rewritten according to the profile selected
  264. * by the user.
  265. *
  266. * @see install_select_profile()
  267. *
  268. * @deprecated in Drupal 8.3.0 and will be removed before Drupal 9.0.0. The
  269. * install profile is written to the core.extension configuration. If a
  270. * service requires the install profile use the 'install_profile' container
  271. * parameter. Functional code can use \Drupal::installProfile().
  272. */
  273. # $settings['install_profile'] = '';
  274. /**
  275. * Salt for one-time login links, cancel links, form tokens, etc.
  276. *
  277. * This variable will be set to a random value by the installer. All one-time
  278. * login links will be invalidated if the value is changed. Note that if your
  279. * site is deployed on a cluster of web servers, you must ensure that this
  280. * variable has the same value on each server.
  281. *
  282. * For enhanced security, you may set this variable to the contents of a file
  283. * outside your document root; you should also ensure that this file is not
  284. * stored with backups of your database.
  285. *
  286. * Example:
  287. * @code
  288. * $settings['hash_salt'] = file_get_contents('/home/example/salt.txt');
  289. * @endcode
  290. */
  291. $settings['hash_salt'] = 'adhECEKQwSaWIItR4GT3j4QHuLmKTlJb8m5Sxh8pMZk3-ghpAnqXyliINb3s3lZYndRFgsEsTA';
  292. /**
  293. * Deployment identifier.
  294. *
  295. * Drupal's dependency injection container will be automatically invalidated and
  296. * rebuilt when the Drupal core version changes. When updating contributed or
  297. * custom code that changes the container, changing this identifier will also
  298. * allow the container to be invalidated as soon as code is deployed.
  299. */
  300. # $settings['deployment_identifier'] = \Drupal::VERSION;
  301. /**
  302. * Access control for update.php script.
  303. *
  304. * If you are updating your Drupal installation using the update.php script but
  305. * are not logged in using either an account with the "Administer software
  306. * updates" permission or the site maintenance account (the account that was
  307. * created during installation), you will need to modify the access check
  308. * statement below. Change the FALSE to a TRUE to disable the access check.
  309. * After finishing the upgrade, be sure to open this file again and change the
  310. * TRUE back to a FALSE!
  311. */
  312. $settings['update_free_access'] = FALSE;
  313. /**
  314. * External access proxy settings:
  315. *
  316. * If your site must access the Internet via a web proxy then you can enter the
  317. * proxy settings here. Set the full URL of the proxy, including the port, in
  318. * variables:
  319. * - $settings['http_client_config']['proxy']['http']: The proxy URL for HTTP
  320. * requests.
  321. * - $settings['http_client_config']['proxy']['https']: The proxy URL for HTTPS
  322. * requests.
  323. * You can pass in the user name and password for basic authentication in the
  324. * URLs in these settings.
  325. *
  326. * You can also define an array of host names that can be accessed directly,
  327. * bypassing the proxy, in $settings['http_client_config']['proxy']['no'].
  328. */
  329. # $settings['http_client_config']['proxy']['http'] = 'http://proxy_user:proxy_pass@example.com:8080';
  330. # $settings['http_client_config']['proxy']['https'] = 'http://proxy_user:proxy_pass@example.com:8080';
  331. # $settings['http_client_config']['proxy']['no'] = ['127.0.0.1', 'localhost'];
  332. /**
  333. * Reverse Proxy Configuration:
  334. *
  335. * Reverse proxy servers are often used to enhance the performance
  336. * of heavily visited sites and may also provide other site caching,
  337. * security, or encryption benefits. In an environment where Drupal
  338. * is behind a reverse proxy, the real IP address of the client should
  339. * be determined such that the correct client IP address is available
  340. * to Drupal's logging, statistics, and access management systems. In
  341. * the most simple scenario, the proxy server will add an
  342. * X-Forwarded-For header to the request that contains the client IP
  343. * address. However, HTTP headers are vulnerable to spoofing, where a
  344. * malicious client could bypass restrictions by setting the
  345. * X-Forwarded-For header directly. Therefore, Drupal's proxy
  346. * configuration requires the IP addresses of all remote proxies to be
  347. * specified in $settings['reverse_proxy_addresses'] to work correctly.
  348. *
  349. * Enable this setting to get Drupal to determine the client IP from
  350. * the X-Forwarded-For header (or $settings['reverse_proxy_header'] if set).
  351. * If you are unsure about this setting, do not have a reverse proxy,
  352. * or Drupal operates in a shared hosting environment, this setting
  353. * should remain commented out.
  354. *
  355. * In order for this setting to be used you must specify every possible
  356. * reverse proxy IP address in $settings['reverse_proxy_addresses'].
  357. * If a complete list of reverse proxies is not available in your
  358. * environment (for example, if you use a CDN) you may set the
  359. * $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'] variable directly in settings.php.
  360. * Be aware, however, that it is likely that this would allow IP
  361. * address spoofing unless more advanced precautions are taken.
  362. */
  363. # $settings['reverse_proxy'] = TRUE;
  364. /**
  365. * Specify every reverse proxy IP address in your environment.
  366. * This setting is required if $settings['reverse_proxy'] is TRUE.
  367. */
  368. # $settings['reverse_proxy_addresses'] = array('a.b.c.d', ...);
  369. /**
  370. * Set this value if your proxy server sends the client IP in a header
  371. * other than X-Forwarded-For.
  372. */
  373. # $settings['reverse_proxy_header'] = 'X_CLUSTER_CLIENT_IP';
  374. /**
  375. * Set this value if your proxy server sends the client protocol in a header
  376. * other than X-Forwarded-Proto.
  377. */
  378. # $settings['reverse_proxy_proto_header'] = 'X_FORWARDED_PROTO';
  379. /**
  380. * Set this value if your proxy server sends the client protocol in a header
  381. * other than X-Forwarded-Host.
  382. */
  383. # $settings['reverse_proxy_host_header'] = 'X_FORWARDED_HOST';
  384. /**
  385. * Set this value if your proxy server sends the client protocol in a header
  386. * other than X-Forwarded-Port.
  387. */
  388. # $settings['reverse_proxy_port_header'] = 'X_FORWARDED_PORT';
  389. /**
  390. * Set this value if your proxy server sends the client protocol in a header
  391. * other than Forwarded.
  392. */
  393. # $settings['reverse_proxy_forwarded_header'] = 'FORWARDED';
  394. /**
  395. * Page caching:
  396. *
  397. * By default, Drupal sends a "Vary: Cookie" HTTP header for anonymous page
  398. * views. This tells a HTTP proxy that it may return a page from its local
  399. * cache without contacting the web server, if the user sends the same Cookie
  400. * header as the user who originally requested the cached page. Without "Vary:
  401. * Cookie", authenticated users would also be served the anonymous page from
  402. * the cache. If the site has mostly anonymous users except a few known
  403. * editors/administrators, the Vary header can be omitted. This allows for
  404. * better caching in HTTP proxies (including reverse proxies), i.e. even if
  405. * clients send different cookies, they still get content served from the cache.
  406. * However, authenticated users should access the site directly (i.e. not use an
  407. * HTTP proxy, and bypass the reverse proxy if one is used) in order to avoid
  408. * getting cached pages from the proxy.
  409. */
  410. # $settings['omit_vary_cookie'] = TRUE;
  411. /**
  412. * Cache TTL for client error (4xx) responses.
  413. *
  414. * Items cached per-URL tend to result in a large number of cache items, and
  415. * this can be problematic on 404 pages which by their nature are unbounded. A
  416. * fixed TTL can be set for these items, defaulting to one hour, so that cache
  417. * backends which do not support LRU can purge older entries. To disable caching
  418. * of client error responses set the value to 0. Currently applies only to
  419. * page_cache module.
  420. */
  421. # $settings['cache_ttl_4xx'] = 3600;
  422. /**
  423. * Class Loader.
  424. *
  425. * If the APC extension is detected, the Symfony APC class loader is used for
  426. * performance reasons. Detection can be prevented by setting
  427. * class_loader_auto_detect to false, as in the example below.
  428. */
  429. # $settings['class_loader_auto_detect'] = FALSE;
  430. /*
  431. * If the APC extension is not detected, either because APC is missing or
  432. * because auto-detection has been disabled, auto-loading falls back to
  433. * Composer's ClassLoader, which is good for development as it does not break
  434. * when code is moved in the file system. You can also decorate the base class
  435. * loader with another cached solution than the Symfony APC class loader, as
  436. * all production sites should have a cached class loader of some sort enabled.
  437. *
  438. * To do so, you may decorate and replace the local $class_loader variable. For
  439. * example, to use Symfony's APC class loader without automatic detection,
  440. * uncomment the code below.
  441. */
  442. /*
  443. if ($settings['hash_salt']) {
  444. $prefix = 'drupal.' . hash('sha256', 'drupal.' . $settings['hash_salt']);
  445. $apc_loader = new \Symfony\Component\ClassLoader\ApcClassLoader($prefix, $class_loader);
  446. unset($prefix);
  447. $class_loader->unregister();
  448. $apc_loader->register();
  449. $class_loader = $apc_loader;
  450. }
  451. */
  452. /**
  453. * Authorized file system operations:
  454. *
  455. * The Update Manager module included with Drupal provides a mechanism for
  456. * site administrators to securely install missing updates for the site
  457. * directly through the web user interface. On securely-configured servers,
  458. * the Update manager will require the administrator to provide SSH or FTP
  459. * credentials before allowing the installation to proceed; this allows the
  460. * site to update the new files as the user who owns all the Drupal files,
  461. * instead of as the user the webserver is running as. On servers where the
  462. * webserver user is itself the owner of the Drupal files, the administrator
  463. * will not be prompted for SSH or FTP credentials (note that these server
  464. * setups are common on shared hosting, but are inherently insecure).
  465. *
  466. * Some sites might wish to disable the above functionality, and only update
  467. * the code directly via SSH or FTP themselves. This setting completely
  468. * disables all functionality related to these authorized file operations.
  469. *
  470. * @see https://www.drupal.org/node/244924
  471. *
  472. * Remove the leading hash signs to disable.
  473. */
  474. # $settings['allow_authorize_operations'] = FALSE;
  475. /**
  476. * Default mode for directories and files written by Drupal.
  477. *
  478. * Value should be in PHP Octal Notation, with leading zero.
  479. */
  480. # $settings['file_chmod_directory'] = 0775;
  481. # $settings['file_chmod_file'] = 0664;
  482. /**
  483. * Public file base URL:
  484. *
  485. * An alternative base URL to be used for serving public files. This must
  486. * include any leading directory path.
  487. *
  488. * A different value from the domain used by Drupal to be used for accessing
  489. * public files. This can be used for a simple CDN integration, or to improve
  490. * security by serving user-uploaded files from a different domain or subdomain
  491. * pointing to the same server. Do not include a trailing slash.
  492. */
  493. # $settings['file_public_base_url'] = 'http://downloads.example.com/files';
  494. /**
  495. * Public file path:
  496. *
  497. * A local file system path where public files will be stored. This directory
  498. * must exist and be writable by Drupal. This directory must be relative to
  499. * the Drupal installation directory and be accessible over the web.
  500. */
  501. # $settings['file_public_path'] = 'sites/default/files';
  502. /**
  503. * Private file path:
  504. *
  505. * A local file system path where private files will be stored. This directory
  506. * must be absolute, outside of the Drupal installation directory and not
  507. * accessible over the web.
  508. *
  509. * Note: Caches need to be cleared when this value is changed to make the
  510. * private:// stream wrapper available to the system.
  511. *
  512. * See https://www.drupal.org/documentation/modules/file for more information
  513. * about securing private files.
  514. */
  515. # $settings['file_private_path'] = '';
  516. /**
  517. * Session write interval:
  518. *
  519. * Set the minimum interval between each session write to database.
  520. * For performance reasons it defaults to 180.
  521. */
  522. # $settings['session_write_interval'] = 180;
  523. /**
  524. * String overrides:
  525. *
  526. * To override specific strings on your site with or without enabling the Locale
  527. * module, add an entry to this list. This functionality allows you to change
  528. * a small number of your site's default English language interface strings.
  529. *
  530. * Remove the leading hash signs to enable.
  531. *
  532. * The "en" part of the variable name, is dynamic and can be any langcode of
  533. * any added language. (eg locale_custom_strings_de for german).
  534. */
  535. # $settings['locale_custom_strings_en'][''] = array(
  536. # 'forum' => 'Discussion board',
  537. # '@count min' => '@count minutes',
  538. # );
  539. /**
  540. * A custom theme for the offline page:
  541. *
  542. * This applies when the site is explicitly set to maintenance mode through the
  543. * administration page or when the database is inactive due to an error.
  544. * The template file should also be copied into the theme. It is located inside
  545. * 'core/modules/system/templates/maintenance-page.html.twig'.
  546. *
  547. * Note: This setting does not apply to installation and update pages.
  548. */
  549. # $settings['maintenance_theme'] = 'bartik';
  550. /**
  551. * PHP settings:
  552. *
  553. * To see what PHP settings are possible, including whether they can be set at
  554. * runtime (by using ini_set()), read the PHP documentation:
  555. * http://php.net/manual/ini.list.php
  556. * See \Drupal\Core\DrupalKernel::bootEnvironment() for required runtime
  557. * settings and the .htaccess file for non-runtime settings.
  558. * Settings defined there should not be duplicated here so as to avoid conflict
  559. * issues.
  560. */
  561. /**
  562. * If you encounter a situation where users post a large amount of text, and
  563. * the result is stripped out upon viewing but can still be edited, Drupal's
  564. * output filter may not have sufficient memory to process it. If you
  565. * experience this issue, you may wish to uncomment the following two lines
  566. * and increase the limits of these variables. For more information, see
  567. * http://php.net/manual/pcre.configuration.php.
  568. */
  569. # ini_set('pcre.backtrack_limit', 200000);
  570. # ini_set('pcre.recursion_limit', 200000);
  571. /**
  572. * Active configuration settings.
  573. *
  574. * By default, the active configuration is stored in the database in the
  575. * {config} table. To use a different storage mechanism for the active
  576. * configuration, do the following prior to installing:
  577. * - Create an "active" directory and declare its path in $config_directories
  578. * as explained under the 'Location of the site configuration files' section
  579. * above in this file. To enhance security, you can declare a path that is
  580. * outside your document root.
  581. * - Override the 'bootstrap_config_storage' setting here. It must be set to a
  582. * callable that returns an object that implements
  583. * \Drupal\Core\Config\StorageInterface.
  584. * - Override the service definition 'config.storage.active'. Put this
  585. * override in a services.yml file in the same directory as settings.php
  586. * (definitions in this file will override service definition defaults).
  587. */
  588. # $settings['bootstrap_config_storage'] = array('Drupal\Core\Config\BootstrapConfigStorageFactory', 'getFileStorage');
  589. /**
  590. * Configuration overrides.
  591. *
  592. * To globally override specific configuration values for this site,
  593. * set them here. You usually don't need to use this feature. This is
  594. * useful in a configuration file for a vhost or directory, rather than
  595. * the default settings.php.
  596. *
  597. * Note that any values you provide in these variable overrides will not be
  598. * viewable from the Drupal administration interface. The administration
  599. * interface displays the values stored in configuration so that you can stage
  600. * changes to other environments that don't have the overrides.
  601. *
  602. * There are particular configuration values that are risky to override. For
  603. * example, overriding the list of installed modules in 'core.extension' is not
  604. * supported as module install or uninstall has not occurred. Other examples
  605. * include field storage configuration, because it has effects on database
  606. * structure, and 'core.menu.static_menu_link_overrides' since this is cached in
  607. * a way that is not config override aware. Also, note that changing
  608. * configuration values in settings.php will not fire any of the configuration
  609. * change events.
  610. */
  611. # $config['system.site']['name'] = 'My Drupal site';
  612. # $config['system.theme']['default'] = 'stark';
  613. # $config['user.settings']['anonymous'] = 'Visitor';
  614. /**
  615. * Fast 404 pages:
  616. *
  617. * Drupal can generate fully themed 404 pages. However, some of these responses
  618. * are for images or other resource files that are not displayed to the user.
  619. * This can waste bandwidth, and also generate server load.
  620. *
  621. * The options below return a simple, fast 404 page for URLs matching a
  622. * specific pattern:
  623. * - $config['system.performance']['fast_404']['exclude_paths']: A regular
  624. * expression to match paths to exclude, such as images generated by image
  625. * styles, or dynamically-resized images. The default pattern provided below
  626. * also excludes the private file system. If you need to add more paths, you
  627. * can add '|path' to the expression.
  628. * - $config['system.performance']['fast_404']['paths']: A regular expression to
  629. * match paths that should return a simple 404 page, rather than the fully
  630. * themed 404 page. If you don't have any aliases ending in htm or html you
  631. * can add '|s?html?' to the expression.
  632. * - $config['system.performance']['fast_404']['html']: The html to return for
  633. * simple 404 pages.
  634. *
  635. * Remove the leading hash signs if you would like to alter this functionality.
  636. */
  637. # $config['system.performance']['fast_404']['exclude_paths'] = '/\/(?:styles)|(?:system\/files)\//';
  638. # $config['system.performance']['fast_404']['paths'] = '/\.(?:txt|png|gif|jpe?g|css|js|ico|swf|flv|cgi|bat|pl|dll|exe|asp)$/i';
  639. # $config['system.performance']['fast_404']['html'] = '<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><title>404 Not Found</title></head><body><h1>Not Found</h1><p>The requested URL "@path" was not found on this server.</p></body></html>';
  640. /**
  641. * Load services definition file.
  642. */
  643. $settings['container_yamls'][] = $app_root . '/' . $site_path . '/services.yml';
  644. /**
  645. * Override the default service container class.
  646. *
  647. * This is useful for example to trace the service container for performance
  648. * tracking purposes, for testing a service container with an error condition or
  649. * to test a service container that throws an exception.
  650. */
  651. # $settings['container_base_class'] = '\Drupal\Core\DependencyInjection\Container';
  652. /**
  653. * Override the default yaml parser class.
  654. *
  655. * Provide a fully qualified class name here if you would like to provide an
  656. * alternate implementation YAML parser. The class must implement the
  657. * \Drupal\Component\Serialization\SerializationInterface interface.
  658. */
  659. # $settings['yaml_parser_class'] = NULL;
  660. /**
  661. * Trusted host configuration.
  662. *
  663. * Drupal core can use the Symfony trusted host mechanism to prevent HTTP Host
  664. * header spoofing.
  665. *
  666. * To enable the trusted host mechanism, you enable your allowable hosts
  667. * in $settings['trusted_host_patterns']. This should be an array of regular
  668. * expression patterns, without delimiters, representing the hosts you would
  669. * like to allow.
  670. *
  671. * For example:
  672. * @code
  673. * $settings['trusted_host_patterns'] = array(
  674. * '^www\.example\.com$',
  675. * );
  676. * @endcode
  677. * will allow the site to only run from www.example.com.
  678. *
  679. * If you are running multisite, or if you are running your site from
  680. * different domain names (eg, you don't redirect http://www.example.com to
  681. * http://example.com), you should specify all of the host patterns that are
  682. * allowed by your site.
  683. *
  684. * For example:
  685. * @code
  686. * $settings['trusted_host_patterns'] = array(
  687. * '^example\.com$',
  688. * '^.+\.example\.com$',
  689. * '^example\.org$',
  690. * '^.+\.example\.org$',
  691. * );
  692. * @endcode
  693. * will allow the site to run off of all variants of example.com and
  694. * example.org, with all subdomains included.
  695. */
  696. /**
  697. * The default list of directories that will be ignored by Drupal's file API.
  698. *
  699. * By default ignore node_modules and bower_components folders to avoid issues
  700. * with common frontend tools and recursive scanning of directories looking for
  701. * extensions.
  702. *
  703. * @see file_scan_directory()
  704. * @see \Drupal\Core\Extension\ExtensionDiscovery::scanDirectory()
  705. */
  706. $settings['file_scan_ignore_directories'] = [
  707. 'node_modules',
  708. 'bower_components',
  709. ];
  710. /**
  711. * Load local development override configuration, if available.
  712. *
  713. * Use settings.local.php to override variables on secondary (staging,
  714. * development, etc) installations of this site. Typically used to disable
  715. * caching, JavaScript/CSS compression, re-routing of outgoing emails, and
  716. * other things that should not happen on development and testing sites.
  717. *
  718. * Keep this code block at the end of this file to take full effect.
  719. */
  720. #
  721. # if (file_exists($app_root . '/' . $site_path . '/settings.local.php')) {
  722. # include $app_root . '/' . $site_path . '/settings.local.php';
  723. # }
  724. $databases['default']['default'] = array (
  725. 'database' => 'drupaldb',
  726. 'username' => 'drupaluser',
  727. 'password' => 'asd123',
  728. 'prefix' => '',
  729. 'host' => 'localhost',
  730. 'port' => '3306',
  731. 'namespace' => 'Drupal\\Core\\Database\\Driver\\mysql',
  732. 'driver' => 'mysql',
  733. );
  734. $settings['install_profile'] = 'standard';
  735. $config_directories['sync'] = 'sites/default/files/config_SP4UrU2R4hzA0f0DZZCkZ_znPr0m8zuQTKw8UU6kOLqdaj6jAKsJekc4AnooEGqYxjfTlEy0KQ/sync';