# If you are using Apache as your web server, Bugzilla can create .htaccess # files for you that will instruct Apache not to serve files that shouldn't # be accessed from the web browser (like your local configuration data and non-cgi # executable files). For this to work, the directory your Bugzilla # installation is in must be within the jurisdiction of a block # in the httpd.conf file that has 'AllowOverride Limit' in it. If it has # 'AllowOverride All' or other options with Limit, that's fine. # (Older Apache installations may use an access.conf file to store these # blocks.) # If this is set to 1, Bugzilla will create these files if they don't exist. # If this is set to 0, Bugzilla will not create these files. $create_htaccess = 0; # Usually, this is the group your web server runs as. # If you have a Windows box, ignore this setting. # If you have use_suexec switched on below, this is the group Apache switches # to in order to run Bugzilla scripts. # If you do not have access to the group your scripts will run under, # set this to "". If you do set this to "", then your Bugzilla installation # will be _VERY_ insecure, because some files will be world readable/writable, # and so anyone who can get local access to your machine can do whatever they # want. You should only have this set to "" if this is a testing installation # and you cannot set this up any other way. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED! # If you set this to anything other than "", you will need to run checksetup.pl # asroot, or as a user who is a member of the specified group. $webservergroup = 'apache'; # Set this if Bugzilla runs in an Apache SuexecUserGroup environment. # (If your web server runs control panel software (cPanel, Plesk or similar), # or if your Bugzilla is to run in a shared hosting environment, then you are # almost certainly in an Apache SuexecUserGroup environment.) # If you have a Windows box, ignore this setting. # If set to 0, Bugzilla will set file permissions as tightly as possible. # If set to 1, Bugzilla will set file permissions so that it may work in an # SuexecUserGroup environment. The difference is that static files (CSS, # JavaScript and so on) will receive world read permissions. $use_suexec = 0; # What SQL database to use. Default is mysql. List of supported databases # can be obtained by listing Bugzilla/DB directory - every module corresponds # to one supported database and the name corresponds to a driver name. $db_driver = 'pg'; # The DNS name of the host that the database server runs on. $db_host = 'pgsql.mageia.org'; # The name of the database $db_name = 'bugs'; # Who we connect to the database as. $db_user = 'bugs'; # Enter your database password here. It's normally advisable to specify # a password for your bugzilla database user. # If you use apostrophe (') or a backslash (\) in your password, you'll # need to escape it by preceding it with a '\' character. (\') or (\) # (Far simpler just not to use those characters.) $db_pass = 'bugs'; # Sometimes the database server is running on a non-standard port. If that's # the case for your database server, set this to the port number that your # database server is running on. Setting this to 0 means "use the default # port for my database server." $db_port = 0; # MySQL Only: Enter a path to the unix socket for MySQL. If this is # blank, then MySQL's compiled-in default will be used. You probably # want that. $db_sock = ''; # Should checksetup.pl try to verify that your database setup is correct? # (with some combinations of database servers/Perl modules/moonphase this # doesn't work) $db_check = 1; # With the introduction of a configurable index page using the # template toolkit, Bugzilla's main index page is now index.cgi. # Most web servers will allow you to use index.cgi as a directory # index, and many come preconfigured that way, but if yours doesn't # then you'll need an index.html file that provides redirection # to index.cgi. Setting $index_html to 1 below will allow # checksetup.pl to create one for you if it doesn't exist. # NOTE: checksetup.pl will not replace an existing file, so if you # wish to have checksetup.pl create one for you, you must # make sure that index.html doesn't already exist $index_html = 0; # For some optional functions of Bugzilla (such as the pretty-print patch # viewer), we need the cvs binary to access files and revisions. # Because it's possible that this program is not in your path, you can specify # its location here. Please specify the full path to the executable. $cvsbin = '/usr/bin/cvs'; # For some optional functions of Bugzilla (such as the pretty-print patch # viewer), we need the interdiff binary to make diffs between two patches. # Because it's possible that this program is not in your path, you can specify # its location here. Please specify the full path to the executable. $interdiffbin = '/usr/bin/interdiff'; # The interdiff feature needs diff, so we have to have that path. # Please specify the directory name only; do not use trailing slash. $diffpath = '/usr/bin'; # This secret key is used by your installation for the creation and # validation of encrypted tokens to prevent unsolicited changes, # such as bug changes. A random string is generated by default. # It's very important that this key is kept secret. It also must be # very long. $site_wide_secret = 'FLDtMWoTaBMifoR5CXo8yAFkeHNzCDra8BwWv6HDgGIvRLVMahTgl6wmD43RaY2pwrrY2xcTUkEX0sGOw7ZPnjwbqx56DtNqHMNDnkS43wywBMfhw0w798zFqAOMYySyPPdEIGg9ZJ1KOtHPk4jW6WVvaHpLjZQEmJYqygVmUaxsSwxdWCQcRPKmQtZqGjvWCwuiTtGOKUhEBbpCIIX20Yw5N50tNq95VzYC08Qw4FGp0stDsx82wNNxdnK1m9KZ';