moodle/config-dist.php
2003-04-10 13:57:21 +00:00

142 lines
7.3 KiB
PHP

<?PHP // $Id$
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// //
// Moodle configuration file //
// //
// This file should be renamed "config.php" in the top-level directory //
// //
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// //
// NOTICE OF COPYRIGHT //
// //
// Moodle - Modular Object-Oriented Dynamic Learning Environment //
// http://moodle.com //
// //
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Martin Dougiamas http://dougiamas.com //
// //
// This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify //
// it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by //
// the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or //
// (at your option) any later version. //
// //
// This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, //
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of //
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the //
// GNU General Public License for more details: //
// //
// http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html //
// //
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//=========================================================================
// 1. DATABASE SETUP
//=========================================================================
// First, you need to configure the database where all Moodle data //
// will be stored. This database must already have been created //
// and a username/password created to access it. //
// //
// mysql - the prefix is optional, but useful when installing //
// into databases that already contain tables. //
//
// postgres7 - the prefix is REQUIRED, regardless of whether the //
// database already contains tables. //
$CFG->dbtype = "mysql"; // mysql or postgres7 (for now)
$CFG->dbhost = "localhost"; // eg localhost or db.isp.com
$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
//=========================================================================
// 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.
$CFG->wwwroot = "http://example.com/moodle";
//=========================================================================
// 3. SERVER FILES LOCATION
//=========================================================================
// Next, specify the full OS directory path to this same location
// For Windows this might be something like this:
//
// $CFG->dirroot = "C:\Program Files\Easyphp\www\moodle"
//
// NOTE: Make sure all the upper/lower case is EXACTLY the same as it is
// on your computer otherwise you may experience some problems (bug in PHP)
$CFG->dirroot = "/web/moodle";
//=========================================================================
// 4. 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/moodledata";
//=========================================================================
// 5. 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.
$CFG->directorypermissions = 0777;
//=========================================================================
// 6. ADMIN 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 fix this by
// renaming the admin directory in your installation, and putting that
// new name here. eg "moodleadmin". This will fix admin links in Moodle.
$CFG->admin = "admin";
//=========================================================================
// 7. TROUBLESHOOTING (most people can just ignore this setting)
//=========================================================================
// A very small percentage of servers have a bug which causes HTTP_REFERER
// not to work. The symptoms of this are that you fill out the configure
// form during Moodle setup but when hit save you find yourself on the
// same form, unable to progress. If this happens to you, come back here
// and set the following to true. Otherwise this should always be false.
$CFG->buggy_referer = false;
//=========================================================================
// ALL DONE! To continue your setup, visit your Moodle web page.
//=========================================================================
require_once("$CFG->dirroot/lib/setup.php"); // Do not change this
// MAKE SURE WHEN YOU EDIT THIS FILE THAT THERE ARE NO SPACES, BLANK LINES,
// RETURNS, OR ANYTHING ELSE AFTER THE TWO CHARACTERS ON THE NEXT LINE.
?>