Configuration file
The name for Moodle's configuration file is config.php. The file is located in the moodle directory. It is not included in the Moodle download packages and is created by the installation process from the template file config-dist.php (which is included in Moodle packages).
Sample config.php file
Although the installation process creates the config.php file for you, there may be times when you want to do this yourself. Here is a sample config.php file to work from.
WARNING: You may want to edit the config.php file directly if, for example, you change you database password or change servers completely. If you do so, be very careful that there are no spaces or line breaks after the final "?>" in the file. If there are such spaces, you may get blank pages.
<?php /// Moodle Configuration File unset($CFG); $CFG->dbtype = 'mysql'; $CFG->dbhost = 'localhost'; $CFG->dbname = 'moodle17'; $CFG->dbuser = 'moodleuser'; $CFG->dbpass = 'xxxxxx'; $CFG->dbpersist = false; $CFG->prefix = 'mdl_'; $CFG->wwwroot = 'http://www.mymoodle.com/moodle'; $CFG->dirroot = '/var/www/moodle'; $CFG->dataroot = '/var/moodledata'; $CFG->admin = 'admin'; $CFG->directorypermissions = 00777; // try 02777 on a server in Safe Mode $CFG->unicodedb = true; // Database is utf8 require_once("$CFG->dirroot/lib/setup.php"); // 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. ?>
Enabling password salting
See Password salting.
Including passwords in backups
Hashed user passwords are no longer saved in backup files containing user data in Moodle 1.8.11 and 1.9.7 onwards.
If you really need passwords to be saved (in the rare case of restoring a backup with user data to a different site), the following line may be added to config.php:
$CFG->includeuserpasswordsinbackups
Changing default block layout for new courses
See Block layout.
The config-dist.php file
The config-dist.php file http://cvs.moodle.org/moodle/config-dist.php?view=markup is the template file. It contains the usual settings of a config.php file, with lots of additional settings that don't currently have a UI for them. To use these settings you have to add them to the configuration file.
See also
- Using Moodle Moodle Salting forum discussion