| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677787980818283848586 |
- # PostgreSQL. Versions 9.3 and up are supported.
- #
- # Install the pg driver:
- # gem install pg
- # On macOS with Homebrew:
- # gem install pg -- --with-pg-config=/usr/local/bin/pg_config
- # On macOS with MacPorts:
- # gem install pg -- --with-pg-config=/opt/local/lib/postgresql84/bin/pg_config
- # On Windows:
- # gem install pg
- # Choose the win32 build.
- # Install PostgreSQL and put its /bin directory on your path.
- #
- # Configure Using Gemfile
- # gem 'pg'
- #
- default: &default
- adapter: postgresql
- encoding: unicode
- # For details on connection pooling, see Rails configuration guide
- # https://guides.rubyonrails.org/configuring.html#database-pooling
- pool: <%= ENV.fetch("RAILS_MAX_THREADS") { 5 } %>
- development:
- <<: *default
- database: mint_development
- # The specified database role being used to connect to postgres.
- # To create additional roles in postgres see `$ createuser --help`.
- # When left blank, postgres will use the default role. This is
- # the same name as the operating system user running Rails.
- #username: mint
- # The password associated with the postgres role (username).
- #password:
- # Connect on a TCP socket. Omitted by default since the client uses a
- # domain socket that doesn't need configuration. Windows does not have
- # domain sockets, so uncomment these lines.
- #host: localhost
- # The TCP port the server listens on. Defaults to 5432.
- # If your server runs on a different port number, change accordingly.
- #port: 5432
- # Schema search path. The server defaults to $user,public
- #schema_search_path: myapp,sharedapp,public
- # Minimum log levels, in increasing order:
- # debug5, debug4, debug3, debug2, debug1,
- # log, notice, warning, error, fatal, and panic
- # Defaults to warning.
- #min_messages: notice
- # Warning: The database defined as "test" will be erased and
- # re-generated from your development database when you run "rake".
- # Do not set this db to the same as development or production.
- test:
- <<: *default
- database: mint_test
- # As with config/credentials.yml, you never want to store sensitive information,
- # like your database password, in your source code. If your source code is
- # ever seen by anyone, they now have access to your database.
- #
- # Instead, provide the password or a full connection URL as an environment
- # variable when you boot the app. For example:
- #
- # DATABASE_URL="postgres://myuser:mypass@localhost/somedatabase"
- #
- # If the connection URL is provided in the special DATABASE_URL environment
- # variable, Rails will automatically merge its configuration values on top of
- # the values provided in this file. Alternatively, you can specify a connection
- # URL environment variable explicitly:
- #
- # production:
- # url: <%= ENV['MY_APP_DATABASE_URL'] %>
- #
- # Read https://guides.rubyonrails.org/configuring.html#configuring-a-database
- # for a full overview on how database connection configuration can be specified.
- #
- production:
- <<: *default
- database: mint_production
- username: mint
- password: <%= ENV['MINT_DATABASE_PASSWORD'] %>
|