<?php /** * Elgg settings * * Elgg manages most of its configuration from the admin panel. However, we need you to * include your database settings below. * * @todo Turn this into something we handle more automatically. */ global $CONFIG; if (!isset($CONFIG)) $CONFIG = new stdClass; /* * Standard configuration * * You will use the same database connection for reads and writes. * This is the easiest configuration, and will suit 99.99% of setups. However, if you're * running a really popular site, you'll probably want to spread out your database connections * and implement database replication. That's beyond the scope of this configuration file * to explain, but if you know you need it, skip past this section. */ // Database username $CONFIG->dbuser = '{{CONFIG_DBUSER}}'; // Database password $CONFIG->dbpass = '{{CONFIG_DBPASS}}'; // Database name $CONFIG->dbname = '{{CONFIG_DBNAME}}'; // Database server // (For most configurations, you can leave this as 'localhost') $CONFIG->dbhost = '{{CONFIG_DBHOST}}'; // Database table prefix // If you're sharing a database with other applications, you will want to use this // to differentiate Elgg's tables. $CONFIG->dbprefix = '{{CONFIG_DBPREFIX}}'; /* * Multiple database connections * * Here you can set up multiple connections for reads and writes. To do this, uncomment out * the lines below. */ /* // Yes! We want to split reads and writes $CONFIG->db->split = true; // READS // Database username $CONFIG->db['read']->dbuser = ""; // Database password $CONFIG->db['read']->dbpass = ""; // Database name $CONFIG->db['read']->dbname = ""; // Database server // (For most configurations, you can leave this as 'localhost') $CONFIG->db['read']->dbhost = "localhost"; // WRITES // Database username $CONFIG->db['write']->dbuser = ""; // Database password $CONFIG->db['write']->dbpass = ""; // Database name $CONFIG->db['write']->dbname = ""; // Database server // (For most configurations, you can leave this as 'localhost') $CONFIG->db['write']->dbhost = "localhost"; */ /* * For extra connections for both reads and writes, you can turn both * $CONFIG->db['read'] and $CONFIG->db['write'] into an array, eg: * * $CONFIG->db['read'][0]->dbhost = "localhost"; * * Note that the array keys must be numeric and consecutive, i.e., they start * at 0, the next one must be at 1, etc. */ /** * Url - I am not sure if this will be here ? **/ // URL $CONFIG->url = ""; ?>