dbtype = 'pgsql'; // 'pgsql', 'mariadb', 'mysqli', 'mssql', 'sqlsrv' or 'oci' $CFG->dblibrary = 'native'; // 'native' only at the moment $CFG->dbhost = 'localhost'; // eg 'localhost' or 'db.isp.com' or IP $CFG->dbname = 'moodle'; // database name, eg moodle $CFG->dbuser = 'username'; // your database username $CFG->dbpass = 'password'; // your database password $CFG->prefix = 'mdl_'; // prefix to use for all table names $CFG->dboptions = array( 'dbpersist' => false, // should persistent database connections be // used? set to 'false' for the most stable // setting, 'true' can improve performance // sometimes 'dbsocket' => false, // should connection via UNIX socket be used? // if you set it to 'true' or custom path // here set dbhost to 'localhost', // (please note mysql is always using socket // if dbhost is 'localhost' - if you need // local port connection use '127.0.0.1') 'dbport' => '', // the TCP port number to use when connecting // to the server. keep empty string for the // default port ); //========================================================================= // 2. WEB SITE LOCATION //========================================================================= // Now you need to tell Moodle where it is located. Specify the full // web address to where moodle has been installed. If your web site // is accessible via multiple URLs then choose the most natural one // that your students would use. Do not include a trailing slash // // If you need both intranet and Internet access please read // http://docs.moodle.org/en/masquerading $CFG->wwwroot = 'http://example.com/moodle'; //========================================================================= // 3. DATA FILES LOCATION //========================================================================= // Now you need a place where Moodle can save uploaded files. This // directory should be readable AND WRITEABLE by the web server user // (usually 'nobody' or 'apache'), but it should not be accessible // directly via the web. // // - On hosting systems you might need to make sure that your "group" has // no permissions at all, but that "others" have full permissions. // // - On Windows systems you might specify something like 'c:\moodledata' $CFG->dataroot = '/home/example/moodledata'; //========================================================================= // 4. DATA FILES PERMISSIONS //========================================================================= // The following parameter sets the permissions of new directories // created by Moodle within the data directory. The format is in // octal format (as used by the Unix utility chmod, for example). // The default is usually OK, but you may want to change it to 0750 // if you are concerned about world-access to the files (you will need // to make sure the web server process (eg Apache) can access the files. // NOTE: the prefixed 0 is important, and don't use quotes. $CFG->directorypermissions = 02777; //========================================================================= // 5. DIRECTORY LOCATION (most people can just ignore this setting) //========================================================================= // A very few webhosts use /admin as a special URL for you to access a // control panel or something. Unfortunately this conflicts with the // standard location for the Moodle admin pages. You can work around this // by renaming the admin directory in your installation, and putting that // new name here. eg "moodleadmin". This should fix all admin links in Moodle. // After any change you need to visit your new admin directory // and purge all caches. $CFG->admin = 'admin'; //========================================================================= // 6. OTHER MISCELLANEOUS SETTINGS (ignore these for new installations) //========================================================================= // // These are additional tweaks for which no GUI exists in Moodle yet. // // Starting in PHP 5.3 administrators should specify default timezone // in PHP.ini, you can also specify it here if needed. // See details at: http://php.net/manual/en/function.date-default-timezone-set.php // List of time zones at: http://php.net/manual/en/timezones.php // date_default_timezone_set('Australia/Perth'); // // Change the key pair lifetime for Moodle Networking // The default is 28 days. You would only want to change this if the key // was not getting regenerated for any reason. You would probably want // make it much longer. Note that you'll need to delete and manually update // any existing key. // $CFG->mnetkeylifetime = 28; // // Not recommended: Set the following to true to allow the use // off non-Moodle standard characters in usernames. // $CFG->extendedusernamechars = true; // // Allow user passwords to be included in backup files. Very dangerous // setting as far as it publishes password hashes that can be unencrypted // if the backup file is publicy available. Use it only if you can guarantee // that all your backup files remain only privacy available and are never // shared out from your site/institution! // $CFG->includeuserpasswordsinbackup = true; // // Completely disable user creation when restoring a course, bypassing any // permissions granted via roles and capabilities. Enabling this setting // results in the restore process stopping when a user attempts to restore a // course requiring users to be created. // $CFG->disableusercreationonrestore = true; // // Keep the temporary directories used by backup and restore without being // deleted at the end of the process. Use it if you want to debug / view // all the information stored there after the process has ended. Note that // those directories may be deleted (after some ttl) both by cron and / or // by new backup / restore invocations. // $CFG->keeptempdirectoriesonbackup = true; // // Modify the restore process in order to force the "user checks" to assume // that the backup originated from a different site, so detection of matching // users is performed with different (more "relaxed") rules. Note that this is // only useful if the backup file has been created using Moodle < 1.9.4 and the // site has been rebuilt from scratch using backup files (not the best way btw). // If you obtain user conflicts on restore, rather than enabling this setting // permanently, try restoring the backup on a different site, back it up again // and then restore on the target server. // $CFG->forcedifferentsitecheckingusersonrestore = true; // // Force the backup system to continue to create backups in the legacy zip // format instead of the new tgz format. Does not affect restore, which // auto-detects the underlying file format. // $CFG->usezipbackups = true; // // Prevent stats processing and hide the GUI // $CFG->disablestatsprocessing = true; // // Setting this to true will enable admins to edit any post at any time // $CFG->admineditalways = true; // // These variables define DEFAULT block variables for new courses // If this one is set it overrides all others and is the only one used. // $CFG->defaultblocks_override = 'participants,activity_modules,search_forums,course_list:news_items,calendar_upcoming,recent_activity'; // // These variables define the specific settings for defined course formats. // They override any settings defined in the formats own config file. // $CFG->defaultblocks_site = 'site_main_menu,course_list:course_summary,calendar_month'; // $CFG->defaultblocks_social = 'participants,search_forums,calendar_month,calendar_upcoming,social_activities,recent_activity,course_list'; // $CFG->defaultblocks_topics = 'participants,activity_modules,search_forums,course_list:news_items,calendar_upcoming,recent_activity'; // $CFG->defaultblocks_weeks = 'participants,activity_modules,search_forums,course_list:news_items,calendar_upcoming,recent_activity'; // // These blocks are used when no other default setting is found. // $CFG->defaultblocks = 'participants,activity_modules,search_forums,course_list:news_items,calendar_upcoming,recent_activity'; // // You can specify a different class to be created for the $PAGE global, and to // compute which blocks appear on each page. However, I cannot think of any good // reason why you would need to change that. It just felt wrong to hard-code the // the class name. You are strongly advised not to use these to settings unless // you are absolutely sure you know what you are doing. // $CFG->moodlepageclass = 'moodle_page'; // $CFG->moodlepageclassfile = "$CFG->dirroot/local/myplugin/mypageclass.php"; // $CFG->blockmanagerclass = 'block_manager'; // $CFG->blockmanagerclassfile = "$CFG->dirroot/local/myplugin/myblockamanagerclass.php"; // // Seconds for files to remain in caches. Decrease this if you are worried // about students being served outdated versions of uploaded files. // $CFG->filelifetime = 60*60*6; // // Some web servers can offload the file serving from PHP process, // comment out one the following options to enable it in Moodle: // $CFG->xsendfile = 'X-Sendfile'; // Apache {@see https://tn123.org/mod_xsendfile/} // $CFG->xsendfile = 'X-LIGHTTPD-send-file'; // Lighttpd {@see http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd/wiki/X-LIGHTTPD-send-file} // $CFG->xsendfile = 'X-Accel-Redirect'; // Nginx {@see http://wiki.nginx.org/XSendfile} // If your X-Sendfile implementation (usually Nginx) uses directory aliases specify them // in the following array setting: // $CFG->xsendfilealiases = array( // '/dataroot/' => $CFG->dataroot, // '/cachedir/' => '/var/www/moodle/cache', // for custom $CFG->cachedir locations // '/localcachedir/' => '/var/local/cache', // for custom $CFG->localcachedir locations // '/tempdir/' => '/var/www/moodle/temp', // for custom $CFG->tempdir locations // '/filedir' => '/var/www/moodle/filedir', // for custom $CFG->filedir locations // ); // // YUI caching may be sometimes improved by slasharguments: // $CFG->yuislasharguments = 1; // Some servers may need a special rewrite rule to work around internal path length limitations: // RewriteRule (^.*/theme/yui_combo\.php)(/.*) $1?file=$2 // // // Following settings may be used to select session driver, uncomment only one of the handlers. // Database session handler (not compatible with MyISAM): // $CFG->session_handler_class = '\core\session\database'; // $CFG->session_database_acquire_lock_timeout = 120; // // File session handler (file system locking required): // $CFG->session_handler_class = '\core\session\file'; // $CFG->session_file_save_path = $CFG->dataroot.'/sessions'; // // Memcached session handler (requires memcached server and extension): // $CFG->session_handler_class = '\core\session\memcached'; // $CFG->session_memcached_save_path = '127.0.0.1:11211'; // $CFG->session_memcached_prefix = 'memc.sess.key.'; // $CFG->session_memcached_acquire_lock_timeout = 120; // $CFG->session_memcached_lock_expire = 7200; // Ignored if PECL memcached is below version 2.2.0 // // Memcache session handler (requires memcached server and memcache extension): // $CFG->session_handler_class = '\core\session\memcache'; // $CFG->session_memcache_save_path = '127.0.0.1:11211'; // $CFG->session_memcache_acquire_lock_timeout = 120; // ** NOTE: Memcache extension has less features than memcached and may be // less reliable. Use memcached where possible or if you encounter // session problems. ** // // Please be aware that when selecting either Memcached or Memcache for sessions that it is advised to use a dedicated // memcache server. The memcache and memcached extensions do not provide isolated environments for individual uses. // Using the same server for other purposes (MUC for example) can lead to sessions being prematurely removed should // the other uses of the server purge the cache. // // Following setting allows you to alter how frequently is timemodified updated in sessions table. // $CFG->session_update_timemodified_frequency = 20; // In seconds. // // If this setting is set to true, then Moodle will track the IP of the // current user to make sure it hasn't changed during a session. This // will prevent the possibility of sessions being hijacked via XSS, but it // may break things for users coming using proxies that change all the time, // like AOL. // $CFG->tracksessionip = true; // // The following lines are for handling email bounces. // $CFG->handlebounces = true; // $CFG->minbounces = 10; // $CFG->bounceratio = .20; // The next lines are needed both for bounce handling and any other email to module processing. // mailprefix must be EXACTLY four characters. // Uncomment and customise this block for Postfix // $CFG->mailprefix = 'mdl+'; // + is the separator for Exim and Postfix. // $CFG->mailprefix = 'mdl-'; // - is the separator for qmail // $CFG->maildomain = 'youremaildomain.com'; // // Enable when setting up advanced reverse proxy load balancing configurations, // it may be also necessary to enable this when using port forwarding. // $CFG->reverseproxy = true; // // Enable when using external SSL appliance for performance reasons. // Please note that site may be accessible via http: or https:, but not both! // $CFG->sslproxy = true; // // This setting will cause the userdate() function not to fix %d in // date strings, and just let them show with a zero prefix. // $CFG->nofixday = true; // // This setting will make some graphs (eg user logs) use lines instead of bars // $CFG->preferlinegraphs = true; // // Enabling this will allow custom scripts to replace existing moodle scripts. // For example: if $CFG->customscripts/course/view.php exists then // it will be used instead of $CFG->wwwroot/course/view.php // At present this will only work for files that include config.php and are called // as part of the url (index.php is implied). // Some examples are: // http://my.moodle.site/course/view.php // http://my.moodle.site/index.php // http://my.moodle.site/admin (index.php implied) // Custom scripts should not include config.php // Warning: Replacing standard moodle scripts may pose security risks and/or may not // be compatible with upgrades. Use this option only if you are aware of the risks // involved. // Specify the full directory path to the custom scripts // $CFG->customscripts = '/home/example/customscripts'; // // Performance profiling // // If you set Debug to "Yes" in the Configuration->Variables page some // performance profiling data will show up on your footer (in default theme). // With these settings you get more granular control over the capture // and printout of the data // // Capture performance profiling data // define('MDL_PERF' , true); // // Capture additional data from DB // define('MDL_PERFDB' , true); // // Print to log (for passive profiling of production servers) // define('MDL_PERFTOLOG' , true); // // Print to footer (works with the default theme) // define('MDL_PERFTOFOOT', true); // // Enable earlier profiling that causes more code to be covered // on every request (db connections, config load, other inits...). // Requires extra configuration to be defined in config.php like: // profilingincluded, profilingexcluded, profilingautofrec, // profilingallowme, profilingallowall, profilinglifetime // $CFG->earlyprofilingenabled = true; // // Force displayed usernames // A little hack to anonymise user names for all students. If you set these // then all non-teachers will always see these for every person. // $CFG->forcefirstname = 'Bruce'; // $CFG->forcelastname = 'Simpson'; // // The following setting will turn on username logging into Apache log. For full details regarding setting // up of this function please refer to the install section of the document. // $CFG->apacheloguser = 0; // Turn this feature off. Default value. // $CFG->apacheloguser = 1; // Log user id. // $CFG->apacheloguser = 2; // Log full name in cleaned format. ie, Darth Vader will be displayed as darth_vader. // $CFG->apacheloguser = 3; // Log username. // To get the values logged in Apache's log, add to your httpd.conf // the following statements. In the General part put: // LogFormat "%h %l %{MOODLEUSER}n %t \"%r\" %s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-Agent}i\"" moodleformat // And in the part specific to your Moodle install / virtualhost: // CustomLog "/your/path/to/log" moodleformat // CAUTION: Use of this option will expose usernames in the Apache log, // If you are going to publish your log, or the output of your web stats analyzer // this will weaken the security of your website. // // Email database connection errors to someone. If Moodle cannot connect to the // database, then email this address with a notice. // // $CFG->emailconnectionerrorsto = 'your@emailaddress.com'; // // Set the priority of themes from highest to lowest. This is useful (for // example) in sites where the user theme should override all other theme // settings for accessibility reasons. You can also disable types of themes // (other than site) by removing them from the array. The default setting is: // $CFG->themeorder = array('course', 'category', 'session', 'user', 'site'); // NOTE: course, category, session, user themes still require the // respective settings to be enabled // // It is possible to add extra themes directory stored outside of $CFG->dirroot. // This local directory does not have to be accessible from internet. // // $CFG->themedir = '/location/of/extra/themes'; // // It is possible to specify different cache and temp directories, use local fast filesystem // for normal web servers. Server clusters MUST use shared filesystem for cachedir! // Localcachedir is intended for server clusters, it does not have to be shared by cluster nodes. // The directories must not be accessible via web. // // $CFG->tempdir = '/var/www/moodle/temp'; // Directory MUST BE SHARED by all clsuter nodes. // $CFG->cachedir = '/var/www/moodle/cache'; // Directory MUST BE SHARED by all cluster nodes, locking required. // $CFG->localcachedir = '/var/local/cache'; // Intended for local node caching. // // Some filesystems such as NFS may not support file locking operations. // Locking resolves race conditions and is strongly recommended for production servers. // $CFG->preventfilelocking = false; // // Site default language can be set via standard administration interface. If you // want to have initial error messages for eventual database connection problems // localized too, you have to set your language code here. // // $CFG->lang = 'yourlangcode'; // for example 'cs' // // When Moodle is about to perform an intensive operation it raises PHP's memory // limit. The following setting should be used on large sites to set the raised // memory limit to something higher. // The value for the settings should be a valid PHP memory value. e.g. 512M, 1G // // $CFG->extramemorylimit = '1024M'; // // Moodle 2.4 introduced a new cache API. // The cache API stores a configuration file within the Moodle data directory and // uses that rather than the database in order to function in a stand-alone manner. // Using altcacheconfigpath you can change the location where this config file is // looked for. // It can either be a directory in which to store the file, or the full path to the // file if you want to take full control. Either way it must be writable by the // webserver. // // $CFG->altcacheconfigpath = '/var/www/shared/moodle.cache.config.php // // The CSS files the Moodle produces can be extremely large and complex, especially // if you are using a custom theme that builds upon several other themes. // In Moodle 2.3 a CSS optimiser was added as an experimental feature for advanced // users. The CSS optimiser organises the CSS in order to reduce the overall number // of rules and styles being sent to the client. It does this by collating the // CSS before it is cached removing excess styles and rules and stripping out any // extraneous content such as comments and empty rules. // The following settings are used to enable and control the optimisation. // // Enable the CSS optimiser. This will only optimise the CSS if themedesignermode // is not enabled. This can be set through the UI however it is noted here as well // because the other CSS optimiser settings can not be set through the UI. // // $CFG->enablecssoptimiser = true; // // If set the CSS optimiser will add stats about the optimisation to the top of // the optimised CSS file. You can then inspect the CSS to see the affect the CSS // optimiser is having. // // $CFG->cssoptimiserstats = true; // // If set the CSS that is optimised will still retain a minimalistic formatting // so that anyone wanting to can still clearly read it. // // $CFG->cssoptimiserpretty = true; // // Use the following flag to completely disable the Available update notifications // feature and hide it from the server administration UI. // // $CFG->disableupdatenotifications = true; // // Use the following flag to completely disable the installation of plugins // (new plugins, available updates and missing dependencies) and related // features (such as cancelling the plugin installation or upgrade) via the // server administration web interface. // // $CFG->disableupdateautodeploy = true; // // Use the following flag to disable modifications to scheduled tasks // whilst still showing the state of tasks. // // $CFG->preventscheduledtaskchanges = true; // // As of version 2.4 Moodle serves icons as SVG images if the users browser appears // to support SVG. // For those wanting to control the serving of SVG images the following setting can // be defined in your config.php. // If it is not defined then the default (browser detection) will occur. // // To ensure they are always used when available: // $CFG->svgicons = true; // // To ensure they are never used even when available: // $CFG->svgicons = false; // // Some administration options allow setting the path to executable files. This can // potentially cause a security risk. Set this option to true to disable editing // those config settings via the web. They will need to be set explicitly in the // config.php file // $CFG->preventexecpath = true; // // Use the following flag to set userid for noreply user. If not set then moodle will // create dummy user and use -ve value as user id. // $CFG->noreplyuserid = -10; // // As of version 2.6 Moodle supports admin to set support user. If not set, all mails // will be sent to supportemail. // $CFG->supportuserid = -20; // // Moodle 2.7 introduces a locking api for critical tasks (e.g. cron). // The default locking system to use is DB locking for Postgres, and file locking for // MySQL, Oracle and SQLServer. If $CFG->preventfilelocking is set, then the default // will always be DB locking. It can be manually set to one of the lock // factory classes listed below, or one of your own custom classes implementing the // \core\lock\lock_factory interface. // // $CFG->lock_factory = "auto"; // // The list of available lock factories is: // // "\\core\\lock\\file_lock_factory" - File locking // Uses lock files stored by default in the dataroot. Whether this // works on clusters depends on the file system used for the dataroot. // // "\\core\\lock\\db_record_lock_factory" - DB locking based on table rows. // // "\\core\\lock\\postgres_lock_factory" - DB locking based on postgres advisory locks. // // Settings used by the lock factories // // Location for lock files used by the File locking factory. This must exist // on a shared file system that supports locking. // $CFG->lock_file_root = $CFG->dataroot . '/lock'; // // Moodle 2.9 allows administrators to customise the list of supported file types. // To add a new filetype or override the definition of an existing one, set the // customfiletypes variable like this: // // $CFG->customfiletypes = array( // (object)array( // 'extension' => 'frog', // 'icon' => 'archive', // 'type' => 'application/frog', // 'customdescription' => 'Amphibian-related file archive' // ) // ); // // The extension, icon, and type fields are required. The icon field can refer to // any icon inside the pix/f folder. You can also set the customdescription field // (shown above) and (for advanced use) the groups, string, and defaulticon fields. // // Upgrade key // // If the upgrade key is defined here, then the value must be provided every time // the site is being upgraded though the web interface, regardless of whether the // administrator is logged in or not. This prevents anonymous access to the upgrade // screens where the real authentication and authorization mechanisms can not be // relied on. // // It is strongly recommended to use a value different from your real account // password. // // $CFG->upgradekey = 'put_some_password-like_value_here'; // //========================================================================= // 7. SETTINGS FOR DEVELOPMENT SERVERS - not intended for production use!!! //========================================================================= // // Force a debugging mode regardless the settings in the site administration // @error_reporting(E_ALL | E_STRICT); // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // @ini_set('display_errors', '1'); // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // $CFG->debug = (E_ALL | E_STRICT); // === DEBUG_DEVELOPER - NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // $CFG->debugdisplay = 1; // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // // You can specify a comma separated list of user ids that that always see // debug messages, this overrides the debug flag in $CFG->debug and $CFG->debugdisplay // for these users only. // $CFG->debugusers = '2'; // // Prevent theme caching // $CFG->themedesignermode = true; // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // // Prevent JS caching // $CFG->cachejs = false; // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // // Restrict which YUI logging statements are shown in the browser console. // For details see the upstream documentation: // http://yuilibrary.com/yui/docs/api/classes/config.html#property_logInclude // http://yuilibrary.com/yui/docs/api/classes/config.html#property_logExclude // $CFG->yuiloginclude = array( // 'moodle-core-dock-loader' => true, // 'moodle-course-categoryexpander' => true, // ); // $CFG->yuilogexclude = array( // 'moodle-core-dock' => true, // 'moodle-core-notification' => true, // ); // // Set the minimum log level for YUI logging statements. // For details see the upstream documentation: // http://yuilibrary.com/yui/docs/api/classes/config.html#property_logLevel // $CFG->yuiloglevel = 'debug'; // // Prevent core_string_manager application caching // $CFG->langstringcache = false; // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // // When working with production data on test servers, no emails or other messages // should ever be send to real users // $CFG->noemailever = true; // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // // Divert all outgoing emails to this address to test and debug emailing features // $CFG->divertallemailsto = 'root@localhost.local'; // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // // Uncomment if you want to allow empty comments when modifying install.xml files. // $CFG->xmldbdisablecommentchecking = true; // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // // Since 2.0 sql queries are not shown during upgrade by default. // Please note that this setting may produce very long upgrade page on large sites. // $CFG->upgradeshowsql = true; // NOT FOR PRODUCTION SERVERS! // // Add SQL queries to the output of cron, just before their execution // $CFG->showcronsql = true; // // Force developer level debug and add debug info to the output of cron // $CFG->showcrondebugging = true; // //========================================================================= // 8. FORCED SETTINGS //========================================================================= // It is possible to specify normal admin settings here, the point is that // they can not be changed through the standard admin settings pages any more. // // Core settings are specified directly via assignment to $CFG variable. // Example: // $CFG->somecoresetting = 'value'; // // Plugin settings have to be put into a special array. // Example: // $CFG->forced_plugin_settings = array('pluginname' => array('settingname' => 'value', 'secondsetting' => 'othervalue'), // 'otherplugin' => array('mysetting' => 'myvalue', 'thesetting' => 'thevalue')); // Module default settings with advanced/locked checkboxes can be set too. To do this, add // an extra config with '_adv' or '_locked' as a suffix and set the value to true or false. // Example: // $CFG->forced_plugin_settings = array('pluginname' => array('settingname' => 'value', 'settingname_locked' => true, 'settingname_adv' => true)); // //========================================================================= // 9. PHPUNIT SUPPORT //========================================================================= // $CFG->phpunit_prefix = 'phpu_'; // $CFG->phpunit_dataroot = '/home/example/phpu_moodledata'; // $CFG->phpunit_directorypermissions = 02777; // optional // // //========================================================================= // 10. SECRET PASSWORD SALT //========================================================================= // A site-wide password salt is no longer used in new installations. // If upgrading from 2.6 or older, keep all existing salts in config.php file. // // $CFG->passwordsaltmain = 'a_very_long_random_string_of_characters#@6&*1'; // // You may also have some alternative salts to allow migration from previously // used salts. // // $CFG->passwordsaltalt1 = ''; // $CFG->passwordsaltalt2 = ''; // $CFG->passwordsaltalt3 = ''; // .... // $CFG->passwordsaltalt19 = ''; // $CFG->passwordsaltalt20 = ''; // // //========================================================================= // 11. BEHAT SUPPORT //========================================================================= // Behat test site needs a unique www root, data directory and database prefix: // // $CFG->behat_wwwroot = 'http://127.0.0.1/moodle'; // $CFG->behat_prefix = 'bht_'; // $CFG->behat_dataroot = '/home/example/bht_moodledata'; // // You can override default Moodle configuration for Behat and add your own // params; here you can add more profiles, use different Mink drivers than Selenium... // These params would be merged with the default Moodle behat.yml, giving priority // to the ones specified here. The array format is YAML, following the Behat // params hierarchy. More info: http://docs.behat.org/guides/7.config.html // Example: // $CFG->behat_config = array( // 'default' => array( // 'formatter' => array( // 'name' => 'pretty', // 'parameters' => array( // 'decorated' => true, // 'verbose' => false // ) // ) // ), // 'Mac-Firefox' => array( // 'extensions' => array( // 'Behat\MinkExtension\Extension' => array( // 'selenium2' => array( // 'browser' => 'firefox', // 'capabilities' => array( // 'platform' => 'OS X 10.6', // 'version' => 20 // ) // ) // ) // ) // ), // 'Mac-Safari' => array( // 'extensions' => array( // 'Behat\MinkExtension\Extension' => array( // 'selenium2' => array( // 'browser' => 'safari', // 'capabilities' => array( // 'platform' => 'OS X 10.8', // 'version' => 6 // ) // ) // ) // ) // ) // ); // // You can force the browser session (not user's sessions) to restart after N seconds. This could // be useful if you are using a cloud-based service with time restrictions in the browser side. // Setting this value the browser session that Behat is using will be restarted. Set the time in // seconds. Is not recommended to use this setting if you don't explicitly need it. // Example: // $CFG->behat_restart_browser_after = 7200; // Restarts the browser session after 2 hours // // All this page's extra Moodle settings are compared against a white list of allowed settings // (the basic and behat_* ones) to avoid problems with production environments. This setting can be // used to expand the default white list with an array of extra settings. // Example: // $CFG->behat_extraallowedsettings = array('somecoresetting', ...); // // You should explicitly allow the usage of the deprecated behat steps, otherwise an exception will // be thrown when using them. The setting is disabled by default. // Example: // $CFG->behat_usedeprecated = true; // // Including feature files from directories outside the dirroot is possible if required. The setting // requires that the running user has executable permissions on all parent directories in the paths. // Example: // $CFG->behat_additionalfeatures = array('/home/developer/code/wipfeatures'); // // You can make behat save several dumps when a scenario fails. The dumps currently saved are: // * a dump of the DOM in it's state at the time of failure; and // * a screenshot (JavaScript is required for the screenshot functionality, so not all browsers support this option) // Example: // $CFG->behat_faildump_path = '/my/path/to/save/failure/dumps'; // // You can specify db, selenium wd_host etc. for behat parallel run by setting following variable. // Example: // $CFG->behat_parallel_run = array ( // array ( // 'dbtype' => 'mysqli', // 'dblibrary' => 'native', // 'dbhost' => 'localhost', // 'dbname' => 'moodletest', // 'dbuser' => 'moodle', // 'dbpass' => 'moodle', // 'behat_prefix' => 'mdl_', // 'wd_host' => 'http://127.0.0.1:4444/wd/hub', // 'behat_wwwroot' => 'http://127.0.0.1/moodle', // 'behat_dataroot' => '/home/example/bht_moodledata' // ), // ); // // To change name of behat parallel run site, define BEHAT_PARALLEL_SITE_NAME and parallel run sites will be suffixed // with this value // Example: // define('BEHAT_PARALLEL_SITE_NAME', 'behatparallelsite'); // // Command line output for parallel behat install is limited to 80 chars, if you are installing more then 4 sites and // want to expand output to more then 80 chars, then define BEHAT_MAX_CMD_LINE_OUTPUT // Example: // define('BEHAT_MAX_CMD_LINE_OUTPUT', 120); // // Behat feature files will be distributed randomly between the processes by default. If you have timing file or want // to create timing file then define BEHAT_FEATURE_TIMING_FILE with path to timing file. It will be updated for each // run with latest time taken to execute feature. // Example: // define('BEHAT_FEATURE_TIMING_FILE', '/PATH_TO_TIMING_FILE/timing.json'); // // If you don't have timing file and want some stable distribution of features, then you can use step counts to // distribute the features. You can generate step file by executing php admin/tool/behat/cli/util.php --updatesteps // this will update step file which is defined by BEHAT_FEATURE_STEP_FILE. // Example: // define('BEHAT_FEATURE_STEP_FILE', '/PATH_TO_FEATURE_STEP_COUNT_FILE/stepcount.json'); // // Feature distribution for each process is displayed as histogram. you can disable it by setting // BEHAT_DISABLE_HISTOGRAM // Example: // define('BEHAT_DISABLE_HISTOGRAM', true); // //========================================================================= // 12. DEVELOPER DATA GENERATOR //========================================================================= // // The developer data generator tool is intended to be used only in development or testing sites and // it's usage in production environments is not recommended; if it is used to create JMeter test plans // is even less recommended as JMeter needs to log in as site course users. JMeter needs to know the // users passwords but would be dangerous to have a default password as everybody would know it, which would // be specially dangerouse if somebody uses this tool in a production site, so in order to prevent unintended // uses of the tool and undesired accesses as well, is compulsory to set a password for the users // generated by this tool, but only in case you want to generate a JMeter test. The value should be a string. // Example: // $CFG->tool_generator_users_password = 'examplepassword'; // //========================================================================= // 13. SYSTEM PATHS (You need to set following, depending on your system) //========================================================================= // Ghostscript path. // On most Linux installs, this can be left as '/usr/bin/gs'. // On Windows it will be something like 'c:\gs\bin\gswin32c.exe' (make sure // there are no spaces in the path - if necessary copy the files 'gswin32c.exe' // and 'gsdll32.dll' to a new folder without a space in the path) // $CFG->pathtogs = '/usr/bin/gs'; // // Clam AV path. // Probably something like /usr/bin/clamscan or /usr/bin/clamdscan. You need // this in order for clam AV to run. // $CFG->pathtoclam = ''; // // Path to du. // Probably something like /usr/bin/du. If you enter this, pages that display // directory contents will run much faster for directories with a lot of files. // $CFG->pathtodu = ''; // // Path to aspell. // To use spell-checking within the editor, you MUST have aspell 0.50 or later // installed on your server, and you must specify the correct path to access the // aspell binary. On Unix/Linux systems, this path is usually /usr/bin/aspell, // but it might be something else. // $CFG->aspellpath = ''; // // Path to dot. // Probably something like /usr/bin/dot. To be able to generate graphics from // DOT files, you must have installed the dot executable and point to it here. // Note that, for now, this only used by the profiling features // (Development->Profiling) built into Moodle. // $CFG->pathtodot = ''; //========================================================================= // ALL DONE! To continue installation, visit your main page with a browser //========================================================================= require_once(dirname(__FILE__) . '/lib/setup.php'); // Do not edit // There is no php closing tag in this file, // it is intentional because it prevents trailing whitespace problems!