The settings.yml Configuration File
Most aspects of symfony can be configured either via a configuration file
written in YAML, or with plain PHP. In this section, the main configuration
file for an application, settings.yml
, will be described.
The main settings.yml
configuration file for an application can be found in
the apps/APP_NAME/config/
directory.
As discussed in the introduction, the settings.yml
file is
environment-aware, and benefits from
the configuration cascade mechanism.
Each environment section has two sub-sections: .actions
and .settings
. All
configuration directives go under the .settings
sub-section, except for the
default actions to be rendered for some common pages.
note
The settings.yml
configuration file is cached as a PHP file; the process is
automatically managed by the sfDefineEnvironmentConfigHandler
class.
Settings
.actions
.settings
The .actions
Sub-Section
Default configuration:
default: .actions: error_404_module: default error_404_action: error404 login_module: default login_action: login secure_module: default secure_action: secure module_disabled_module: default module_disabled_action: disabled
The .actions
sub-section defines the action to execute when common pages
must be rendered. Each definition has two components: one for the module
(suffixed by _module
), and one for the action (suffixed by _action
).
error_404
The error_404
action is executed when a 404 page must be rendered.
login
The login
action is executed when a non-authenticated user tries to access a
secure page.
secure
The secure
action is executed when a user doesn't have the required
credentials.
module_disabled
The module_disabled
action is executed when a user requests a disabled
module.
The .settings
Sub-Section
The .settings
sub-section is where the framework configuration occurs. The
paragraphs below describe all possible settings and are roughly ordered by
importance.
All settings defined in the .settings
section are available anywhere in the
code by using the sfConfig
object and prefixing the setting with sf_
. For
instance, to get the value of the charset
setting, use:
sfConfig::get('sf_charset');
escaping_strategy
Default: true
The escaping_strategy
setting is a Boolean setting that determines if the
output escaper sub-framework is enabled. When enabled, all variables made
available in the templates are automatically escaped by calling the helper
function defined by the escaping_method
setting (see below).
Be careful that the escaping_method
is the default helper used by symfony,
but this can be overridden on a case by case basis, when outputting a variable
in a JavaScript script tag for example.
The output escaper sub-framework uses the charset
setting for the escaping.
It is highly recommended to leave the default value to true
.
tip
This settings can be set when you create an application with the
generate:app
task by using the --escaping-strategy
option.
escaping_method
Default: ESC_SPECIALCHARS
The escaping_method
defines the default function to use for escaping
variables in templates (see the escaping_strategy
setting above).
You can choose one of the built-in values: ESC_SPECIALCHARS
, ESC_RAW
,
ESC_ENTITIES
, ESC_JS
, ESC_JS_NO_ENTITIES
, and
ESC_SPECIALCHARS
, or create your own function.
Most of the time, the default value is fine. The ESC_ENTITIES
helper can
also be used, especially if you are only working with English or European
languages.
csrf_secret
Default: a randomly generated secret
The csrf_secret
is a unique secret for your application. If not set to
false
, it enables CSRF protection for all forms defined with the form
framework. This settings is also used by the link_to()
helper when it needs
to convert a link to a form (to simulate a DELETE
HTTP method for example).
It is highly recommended to change the default value to a unique secret of your choice.
tip
This settings can be set when you create an application with the
generate:app
task by using the --csrf-secret
option.
charset
Default: utf-8
The charset
setting is the charset that will be used everywhere in the
framework: from the response Content-Type
header, to the output escaping
feature.
Most of the time, the default is fine.
warning
This setting is used in many different places in the framework, and so its value is cached in several places. After changing it, the configuration cache must be cleared, even in the development environment.
enabled_modules
Default: [default]
The enabled_modules
is an array of module names to enable for this
application. Modules defined in plugins or in the symfony core are not enabled
by default, and must be listed in this setting to be accessible.
Adding a module is as simple as appending it to the list (the order of the modules do not matter):
enabled_modules: [default, sfGuardAuth]
The default
module defined in the framework contains all the default actions
set in the .actions
sub-section of settings.yml
. It is recommended that
you customize all of them, and then remove the default
module from this
setting.
default_timezone
Default: none
The default_timezone
setting defines the default timezone used by PHP. It
can be any timezone
recognized by PHP.
note
If you don't define a timezone, you are advised to define one in the
php.ini
file. If not, symfony will try to guess the best timezone by
calling the
date_default_timezone_get()
PHP function.
cache
Default: false
The cache
setting enables or disables template caching.
tip
The general configuration of the cache system is done in
the view_cache_manager
and
view_cache
sections of the factories.yml
configuration file. The fined-grained configuration is done in
the cache.yml
configuration file.
etag
Default: true
by default except for the dev
and test
environments
The etag
setting enables or disables the automatic generation of ETag
HTTP
headers. The ETag generated by symfony is a simple md5 of the response
content.
i18n
Default: false
The i18n
setting is a Boolean that enables or disables the i18n
sub-framework. If your application is internationalized, set it to true
.
tip
The general configuration of the i18n system is to be done in the
i18n
section of the factories.yml
configuration
file.
default_culture
Default: en
The default_culture
setting defines the default culture used by the i18n
sub-framework. It can be any valid culture.
standard_helpers
Default: [Partial, Cache]
The standard_helpers
setting is an array of helper groups to load for all
templates (name of the group helper without the Helper
suffix).
no_script_name
Default: true
for the prod
environment of the first application created,
false
for all others
The no_script_name
setting determines whether the front controller script
name is prepended to generated URLs or not. By default, it is set to true
by
the generate:app
task for the prod
environment of the first application
created.
Obviously, only one application and environment can have this setting set to
true
if all front controllers are in the same directory (web/
). If you want
more than one application with no_script_name
set to true
, move the
corresponding front controller(s) under a sub-directory of the web root
directory.
lazy_cache_key
Default: true
for new projects, false
for upgraded projects
When enabled, the lazy_cache_key
setting delays the creation of a cache key
until after checking whether an action or partial is cacheable. This can
result in a big performance improvement, depending on your usage of template
partials.
file_link_format
Default: none
In the debug message, file paths are clickable links if the
sf_file_link_format
or if the xdebug.file_link_format
PHP configuration
value is set.
For example, if you want to open files in TextMate, you can use the following value:
txmt://open?url=file://%f&line=%l
The %f
placeholder will be replaced with file's absolute path and the %l
placeholder will be replaced with the line number.
logging_enabled
Default: true
for all environments except prod
The logging_enabled
setting enables the logging sub-framework. Setting it to
false
bypasses the logging mechanism completely and provides a small
performance gain.
tip
The fined-grained configuration of the logging is to be done in the
factories.yml
configuration file.
web_debug
Default: false
for all environments except dev
The web_debug
setting enables the web debug toolbar. The web debug toolbar
is injected into a page when the response content type is HTML.
error_reporting
Default:
prod
: E_PARSE | E_COMPILE_ERROR | E_ERROR | E_CORE_ERROR | E_USER_ERRORdev
: E_ALL | E_STRICTtest
: (E_ALL | E_STRICT) ^ E_NOTICE- default: E_PARSE | E_COMPILE_ERROR | E_ERROR | E_CORE_ERROR | E_USER_ERROR
The error_reporting
setting controls the level of PHP error reporting (to be
displayed in the browser and written to the logs).
tip
The PHP website has some information about how to use bitwise operators.
The default configuration is the most sensible one, and should not be altered.
note
The display of errors in the browser is automatically disabled for
front controllers that have debug
disabled, which is the case by default
for the prod
environment.
compressed
Default: false
The compressed
setting enables native PHP response compression. If set to
true
, symfony will use ob_gzhandler
as a
callback function for ob_start()
.
It is recommended to keep it to false
, and use the native compression
mechanism of your web server instead.
use_database
Default: true
The use_database
determines if the application uses a database or not.
check_lock
Default: false
The check_lock
setting enables or disables the application lock system
triggered by some tasks like cache:clear
and project:disable
.
If set to true
, all requests to disabled applications are automatically
redirected to the symfony core lib/exception/data/unavailable.php
page.
tip
You can override the default unavailable template by adding a
config/unavailable.php
file to your project or application.
web_debug_web_dir
Default: /sf/sf_web_debug
The web_debug_web_dir
sets the web path to the web debug toolbar assets
(images, stylesheets, and JavaScript files).
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