| ###################### |
| Database Configuration |
| ###################### |
| |
| CodeIgniter has a config file that lets you store your database |
| connection values (username, password, database name, etc.). The config |
| file is located at application/config/database.php. You can also set |
| database connection values for specific |
| :doc:`environments <../libraries/config>` by placing **database.php** |
| it the respective environment config folder. |
| |
| The config settings are stored in a multi-dimensional array with this |
| prototype:: |
| |
| $db['default']['hostname'] = "localhost"; |
| $db['default']['username'] = "root"; |
| $db['default']['password'] = ""; |
| $db['default']['database'] = "database_name"; |
| $db['default']['dbdriver'] = "mysql"; |
| $db['default']['dbprefix'] = ""; |
| $db['default']['pconnect'] = TRUE; |
| $db['default']['db_debug'] = FALSE; |
| $db['default']['cache_on'] = FALSE; |
| $db['default']['cachedir'] = ""; |
| $db['default']['char_set'] = "utf8"; |
| $db['default']['dbcollat'] = "utf8_general_ci"; |
| $db['default']['swap_pre'] = ""; |
| $db['default']['autoinit'] = TRUE; |
| $db['default']['stricton'] = FALSE; |
| |
| The reason we use a multi-dimensional array rather than a more simple |
| one is to permit you to optionally store multiple sets of connection |
| values. If, for example, you run multiple environments (development, |
| production, test, etc.) under a single installation, you can set up a |
| connection group for each, then switch between groups as needed. For |
| example, to set up a "test" environment you would do this:: |
| |
| $db['test']['hostname'] = "localhost"; |
| $db['test']['username'] = "root"; |
| $db['test']['password'] = ""; |
| $db['test']['database'] = "database_name"; |
| $db['test']['dbdriver'] = "mysql"; |
| $db['test']['dbprefix'] = ""; |
| $db['test']['pconnect'] = TRUE; |
| $db['test']['db_debug'] = FALSE; |
| $db['test']['cache_on'] = FALSE; |
| $db['test']['cachedir'] = ""; |
| $db['test']['char_set'] = "utf8"; |
| $db['test']['dbcollat'] = "utf8_general_ci"; |
| $db['test']['swap_pre'] = ""; |
| $db['test']['autoinit'] = TRUE; |
| $db['test']['stricton'] = FALSE; |
| |
| Then, to globally tell the system to use that group you would set this |
| variable located in the config file:: |
| |
| $active_group = "test"; |
| |
| Note: The name "test" is arbitrary. It can be anything you want. By |
| default we've used the word "default" for the primary connection, but it |
| too can be renamed to something more relevant to your project. |
| |
| Active Record |
| ------------- |
| |
| The :doc:`Active Record Class <active_record>` is globally enabled or |
| disabled by setting the $active_record variable in the database |
| configuration file to TRUE/FALSE (boolean). If you are not using the |
| active record class, setting it to FALSE will utilize fewer resources |
| when the database classes are initialized. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| $active_record = TRUE; |
| |
| .. note:: that some CodeIgniter classes such as Sessions require Active |
| Records be enabled to access certain functionality. |
| |
| Explanation of Values: |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| ====================== ================================================================================================== |
| Name Config Description |
| ====================== ================================================================================================== |
| **hostname** The hostname of your database server. Often this is "localhost". |
| **username** The username used to connect to the database. |
| **password** The password used to connect to the database. |
| **database** The name of the database you want to connect to. |
| **dbdriver** The database type. ie: mysql, postgres, odbc, etc. Must be specified in lower case. |
| **dbprefix** An optional table prefix which will added to the table name when running :doc: |
| `Active Record <active_record>` queries. This permits multiple CodeIgniter installations |
| to share one database. |
| **pconnect** TRUE/FALSE (boolean) - Whether to use a persistent connection. |
| **db_debug** TRUE/FALSE (boolean) - Whether database errors should be displayed. |
| **cache_on** TRUE/FALSE (boolean) - Whether database query caching is enabled, |
| see also :doc:`Database Caching Class <caching>`. |
| **cachedir** The absolute server path to your database query cache directory. |
| **char_set** The character set used in communicating with the database. |
| **dbcollat** The character collation used in communicating with the database |
| |
| .. note:: For MySQL and MySQLi databases, this setting is only used |
| as a backup if your server is running PHP < 5.2.3 or MySQL < 5.0.7 |
| (and in table creation queries made with DB Forge). There is an |
| incompatibility in PHP with mysql_real_escape_string() which can |
| make your site vulnerable to SQL injection if you are using a |
| multi-byte character set and are running versions lower than these. |
| Sites using Latin-1 or UTF-8 database character set and collation are |
| unaffected. |
| |
| **swap_pre** A default table prefix that should be swapped with dbprefix. This is useful for distributed |
| applications where you might run manually written queries, and need the prefix to still be |
| customizable by the end user. |
| **autoinit** Whether or not to automatically connect to the database when the library loads. If set to false, |
| the connection will take place prior to executing the first query. |
| **stricton** TRUE/FALSE (boolean) - Whether to force "Strict Mode" connections, good for ensuring strict SQL |
| while developing an application. |
| **port** The database port number. To use this value you have to add a line to the database config array. |
| :: |
| $db['default']['port'] = 5432; |
| ====================== ================================================================================================== |
| |
| .. note:: Depending on what database platform you are using (MySQL, |
| Postgres, etc.) not all values will be needed. For example, when using |
| SQLite you will not need to supply a username or password, and the |
| database name will be the path to your database file. The information |
| above assumes you are using MySQL. |