feat: update config

This commit is contained in:
he3als
2024-11-17 13:00:27 +00:00
parent 02728bc732
commit bcf445e45f
11 changed files with 232 additions and 160 deletions

View File

@@ -18,9 +18,10 @@ return [
| Application Name
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This value is the name of your application. This value is used when the
| This value is the name of your application, which will be used when the
| framework needs to place the application's name in a notification or
| any other location as required by the application or its packages.
| other UI elements where an application name needs to be displayed.
|
*/
'name' => env('APP_NAME', 'Pyrodactyl'),
@@ -32,7 +33,7 @@ return [
|
| This value determines the "environment" your application is currently
| running in. This may determine how you prefer to configure various
| services your application utilizes. Set this in your ".env" file.
| services the application utilizes. Set this in your ".env" file.
|
*/
@@ -49,7 +50,7 @@ return [
|
*/
'debug' => env('APP_DEBUG', false),
'debug' => (bool) env('APP_DEBUG', false),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -58,7 +59,7 @@ return [
|
| This URL is used by the console to properly generate URLs when using
| the Artisan command line tool. You should set this to the root of
| your application so that it is used when running Artisan tasks.
| the application so that it's available within Artisan commands.
|
*/
@@ -70,8 +71,8 @@ return [
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may specify the default timezone for your application, which
| will be used by the PHP date and date-time functions. We have gone
| ahead and set this to a sensible default for you out of the box.
| will be used by the PHP date and date-time functions. The timezone
| is set to "UTC" by default as it is suitable for most use cases.
|
*/
@@ -83,55 +84,36 @@ return [
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The application locale determines the default locale that will be used
| by the translation service provider. You are free to set this value
| to any of the locales which will be supported by the application.
| by Laravel's translation / localization methods. This option can be
| set to any locale for which you plan to have translation strings.
|
*/
'locale' => env('APP_LOCALE', 'en'),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Application Fallback Locale
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| The fallback locale determines the locale to use when the current one
| is not available. You may change the value to correspond to any of
| the language folders that are provided through your application.
|
*/
'fallback_locale' => env('APP_FALLBACK_LOCALE', 'en'),
'fallback_locale' => 'en',
'faker_locale' => env('APP_FAKER_LOCALE', 'en_US'),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Encryption Key
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This key is used by the Illuminate encrypter service and should be set
| to a random, 32 character string, otherwise these encrypted strings
| will not be safe. Please do this before deploying an application!
| This key is utilized by Laravel's encryption services and should be set
| to a random, 32 character string to ensure that all encrypted values
| are secure. You should do this prior to deploying the application.
|
*/
'key' => env('APP_KEY'),
'cipher' => 'AES-256-CBC',
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Exception Reporter Configuration
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| If you're encountering weird behavior with the Panel and no exceptions
| are being logged try changing the environment variable below to be true.
| This will override the default "don't report" behavior of the Panel and log
| all exceptions. This will be quite noisy.
|
*/
'key' => env('APP_KEY'),
'exceptions' => [
'report_all' => env('APP_REPORT_ALL_EXCEPTIONS', false),
'previous_keys' => [
...array_filter(
explode(',', env('APP_PREVIOUS_KEYS', ''))
),
],
/*
@@ -148,7 +130,24 @@ return [
*/
'maintenance' => [
'driver' => 'file',
'driver' => env('APP_MAINTENANCE_DRIVER', 'file'),
'store' => env('APP_MAINTENANCE_STORE', 'database'),
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Exception Reporter Configuration
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| If you're encountering weird behavior with the Panel and no exceptions
| are being logged try changing the environment variable below to be true.
| This will override the default "don't report" behavior of the Panel and log
| all exceptions. This will be quite noisy.
|
*/
'exceptions' => [
'report_all' => env('APP_REPORT_ALL_EXCEPTIONS', false),
],
/*

View File

@@ -11,6 +11,7 @@ return [
| password incorrectly.
|
*/
'lockout' => [
'time' => 2,
'attempts' => 3,
@@ -21,8 +22,8 @@ return [
| Authentication Defaults
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This option controls the default authentication "guard" and password
| reset options for your application. You may change these defaults
| This option defines the default authentication "guard" and password
| reset "broker" for your application. You may change these values
| as required, but they're a perfect start for most applications.
|
*/
@@ -39,11 +40,11 @@ return [
|
| Next, you may define every authentication guard for your application.
| Of course, a great default configuration has been defined for you
| here which uses session storage and the Eloquent user provider.
| which utilizes session storage plus the Eloquent user provider.
|
| All authentication drivers have a user provider. This defines how the
| All authentication guards have a user provider, which defines how the
| users are actually retrieved out of your database or other storage
| mechanisms used by this application to persist your user's data.
| system used by the application. Typically, Eloquent is utilized.
|
| Supported: "session", "token"
|
@@ -66,12 +67,12 @@ return [
| User Providers
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| All authentication drivers have a user provider. This defines how the
| All authentication guards have a user provider, which defines how the
| users are actually retrieved out of your database or other storage
| mechanisms used by this application to persist your user's data.
| system used by the application. Typically, Eloquent is utilized.
|
| If you have multiple user tables or models you may configure multiple
| sources which represent each model / table. These sources may then
| providers to represent the model / table. These providers may then
| be assigned to any extra authentication guards you have defined.
|
| Supported: "database", "eloquent"
@@ -90,18 +91,18 @@ return [
| Resetting Passwords
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may set the options for resetting passwords including the view
| that is your password reset e-mail. You may also set the name of the
| table that maintains all of the reset tokens for your application.
| These configuration options specify the behavior of Laravel's password
| reset functionality, including the table utilized for token storage
| and the user provider that is invoked to actually retrieve users.
|
| You may specify multiple password reset configurations if you have more
| than one user table or model in the application and you want to have
| separate password reset settings based on the specific user types.
|
| The expire time is the number of minutes that the reset token should be
| The expiry time is the number of minutes that each reset token will be
| considered valid. This security feature keeps tokens short-lived so
| they have less time to be guessed. You may change this as needed.
|
| The throttle setting is the number of seconds a user must wait before
| generating more password reset tokens. This prevents the user from
| quickly generating a very large amount of password reset tokens.
|
*/
'passwords' => [
@@ -119,10 +120,10 @@ return [
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may define the amount of seconds before a password confirmation
| times out and the user is prompted to re-enter their password via the
| window expires and users are asked to re-enter their password via the
| confirmation screen. By default, the timeout lasts for three hours.
|
*/
'password_timeout' => 10800,
'password_timeout' => env('AUTH_PASSWORD_TIMEOUT', 10800),
];

View File

@@ -8,13 +8,13 @@ return [
| Default Cache Store
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This option controls the default cache connection that gets used while
| using this caching library. This connection is used when another is
| not explicitly specified when executing a given caching function.
| This option controls the default cache store that will be used by the
| framework. This connection is utilized if another isn't explicitly
| specified when running a cache operation inside the application.
|
*/
'default' => env('CACHE_DRIVER', 'redis'),
'default' => env('CACHE_STORE', env('CACHE_DRIVER', 'redis')),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -25,16 +25,12 @@ return [
| well as their drivers. You may even define multiple stores for the
| same cache driver to group types of items stored in your caches.
|
| Supported drivers: "apc", "array", "database", "file",
| "memcached", "redis", "dynamodb", "octane", "null"
| Supported drivers: "array", "database", "file", "memcached",
| "redis", "octane", "null"
|
*/
'stores' => [
'apc' => [
'driver' => 'apc',
],
'array' => [
'driver' => 'array',
'serialize' => false,
@@ -42,14 +38,16 @@ return [
'database' => [
'driver' => 'database',
'table' => 'cache',
'connection' => null,
'lock_connection' => null,
'connection' => env('DB_CACHE_CONNECTION'),
'table' => env('DB_CACHE_TABLE', 'cache'),
'lock_connection' => env('DB_CACHE_LOCK_CONNECTION'),
'lock_table' => env('DB_CACHE_LOCK_TABLE'),
],
'file' => [
'driver' => 'file',
'path' => storage_path('framework/cache/data'),
'lock_path' => storage_path('framework/cache/data'),
],
'memcached' => [
@@ -60,7 +58,7 @@ return [
env('MEMCACHED_PASSWORD'),
],
'options' => [
// Memcached::OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT => 2000,
// Memcached::OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT => 2000,
],
'servers' => [
[
@@ -73,8 +71,8 @@ return [
'redis' => [
'driver' => 'redis',
'connection' => 'default',
'lock_connection' => 'default',
'connection' => env('REDIS_CACHE_CONNECTION', 'default'),
'lock_connection' => env('REDIS_CACHE_LOCK_CONNECTION', 'default'),
],
'sessions' => [

View File

@@ -10,8 +10,9 @@ return [
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may specify which of the database connections below you wish
| to use as your default connection for all database work. Of course
| you may use many connections at once using the Database library.
| to use as your default connection for database operations. This is
| the connection which will be utilized unless another connection
| is explicitly specified when you execute a query / statement.
|
*/
@@ -36,18 +37,44 @@ return [
'connections' => [
'mysql' => [
'driver' => 'mysql',
'url' => env('DATABASE_URL'),
'url' => env('DB_URL', env('DATABASE_URL')),
'host' => env('DB_HOST', '127.0.0.1'),
'port' => env('DB_PORT', '3306'),
'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', 'panel'),
'username' => env('DB_USERNAME', 'pterodactyl'),
'password' => env('DB_PASSWORD', ''),
'unix_socket' => env('DB_SOCKET', ''),
'charset' => 'utf8mb4',
'collation' => 'utf8mb4_unicode_ci',
'charset' => env('DB_CHARSET', 'utf8mb4'),
'collation' => env('DB_COLLATION', 'utf8mb4_unicode_ci'),
'prefix' => env('DB_PREFIX', ''),
'prefix_indexes' => true,
'strict' => env('DB_STRICT_MODE', false),
'strict' => env('DB_STRICT_MODE', false), // TODO: true by default
'engine' => null,
'timezone' => env('DB_TIMEZONE', Time::getMySQLTimezoneOffset(env('APP_TIMEZONE', 'UTC'))),
'sslmode' => env('DB_SSLMODE', 'prefer'),
'options' => extension_loaded('pdo_mysql') ? array_filter([
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_CA => env('MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_CA'),
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_CERT => env('MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_CERT'),
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_KEY => env('MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_KEY'),
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT => env('MYSQL_ATTR_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT', true),
]) : [],
],
'mariadb' => [
'driver' => 'mariadb',
'url' => env('DB_URL', env('DATABASE_URL')),
'host' => env('DB_HOST', '127.0.0.1'),
'port' => env('DB_PORT', '3306'),
'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', 'panel'),
'username' => env('DB_USERNAME', 'pterodactyl'),
'password' => env('DB_PASSWORD', ''),
'unix_socket' => env('DB_SOCKET', ''),
'charset' => env('DB_CHARSET', 'utf8mb4'),
'collation' => env('DB_COLLATION', 'utf8mb4_unicode_ci'),
'prefix' => env('DB_PREFIX', ''),
'prefix_indexes' => true,
'strict' => env('DB_STRICT_MODE', true),
'engine' => null,
'timezone' => env('DB_TIMEZONE', Time::getMySQLTimezoneOffset(env('APP_TIMEZONE', 'UTC'))),
'sslmode' => env('DB_SSLMODE', 'prefer'),
'options' => extension_loaded('pdo_mysql') ? array_filter([
@@ -66,11 +93,14 @@ return [
|
| This table keeps track of all the migrations that have already run for
| your application. Using this information, we can determine which of
| the migrations on disk haven't actually been run in the database.
| the migrations on disk haven't actually been run on the database.
|
*/
'migrations' => 'migrations',
'migrations' => [
'table' => 'migrations',
'update_date_on_publish' => true,
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -78,8 +108,8 @@ return [
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Redis is an open source, fast, and advanced key-value store that also
| provides a richer set of commands than a typical key-value systems
| such as APC or Memcached. Laravel makes it easy to dig right in.
| provides a richer body of commands than a typical key-value system
| such as Memcached. You may define your connection settings here.
|
*/

View File

@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ return [
|
| Here you may specify the default filesystem disk that should be used
| by the framework. The "local" disk, as well as a variety of cloud
| based disks are available to your application. Just store away!
| based disks are available to your application for file storage.
|
*/
@@ -19,18 +19,19 @@ return [
| Filesystem Disks
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may configure as many filesystem "disks" as you wish, and you
| may even configure multiple disks of the same driver. Defaults have
| been set up for each driver as an example of the required values.
| Below you may configure as many filesystem disks as necessary, and you
| may even configure multiple disks for the same driver. Examples for
| most supported storage drivers are configured here for reference.
|
| Supported Drivers: "local", "ftp", "sftp", "s3"
| Supported drivers: "local", "ftp", "sftp", "s3"
|
*/
'disks' => [
'local' => [
'driver' => 'local',
'root' => storage_path('app'),
'root' => storage_path('app/private'),
'serve' => true,
'throw' => false,
],

View File

@@ -3,6 +3,7 @@
use Monolog\Handler\NullHandler;
use Monolog\Handler\StreamHandler;
use Monolog\Handler\SyslogUdpHandler;
use Monolog\Processor\PsrLogMessageProcessor;
return [
/*
@@ -10,9 +11,9 @@ return [
| Default Log Channel
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This option defines the default log channel that gets used when writing
| messages to the logs. The name specified in this option should match
| one of the channels defined in the "channels" configuration array.
| This option defines the default log channel that is utilized to write
| messages to your logs. The value provided here should match one of
| the channels present in the list of "channels" configured below.
|
*/
@@ -31,7 +32,7 @@ return [
'deprecations' => [
'channel' => env('LOG_DEPRECATIONS_CHANNEL', 'null'),
'trace' => false,
'trace' => env('LOG_DEPRECATIONS_TRACE', false),
],
/*
@@ -39,20 +40,19 @@ return [
| Log Channels
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may configure the log channels for your application. Out of
| the box, Laravel uses the Monolog PHP logging library. This gives
| you a variety of powerful log handlers / formatters to utilize.
| Here you may configure the log channels for your application. Laravel
| utilizes the Monolog PHP logging library, which includes a variety
| of powerful log handlers and formatters that you're free to use.
|
| Available Drivers: "single", "daily", "slack", "syslog",
| "errorlog", "monolog",
| "custom", "stack"
| Available drivers: "single", "daily", "slack", "syslog",
| "errorlog", "monolog", "custom", "stack"
|
*/
'channels' => [
'stack' => [
'driver' => 'stack',
'channels' => ['single'],
'channels' => explode(',', env('LOG_STACK', 'single')),
'ignore_exceptions' => false,
],
@@ -60,21 +60,24 @@ return [
'driver' => 'single',
'path' => storage_path('logs/laravel.log'),
'level' => env('LOG_LEVEL', 'debug'),
'replace_placeholders' => true,
],
'daily' => [
'driver' => 'daily',
'path' => storage_path('logs/laravel.log'),
'level' => env('LOG_LEVEL', 'debug'),
'days' => 7,
'days' => env('LOG_DAILY_DAYS', 7),
'replace_placeholders' => true,
],
'slack' => [
'driver' => 'slack',
'url' => env('LOG_SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL'),
'username' => 'Laravel Log',
'emoji' => ':boom:',
'username' => env('LOG_SLACK_USERNAME', 'Laravel Log'),
'emoji' => env('LOG_SLACK_EMOJI', ':boom:'),
'level' => env('LOG_LEVEL', 'critical'),
'replace_placeholders' => true,
],
'papertrail' => [
@@ -86,6 +89,7 @@ return [
'port' => env('PAPERTRAIL_PORT'),
'connectionString' => 'tls://' . env('PAPERTRAIL_URL') . ':' . env('PAPERTRAIL_PORT'),
],
'processors' => [PsrLogMessageProcessor::class],
],
'stderr' => [
@@ -96,16 +100,20 @@ return [
'with' => [
'stream' => 'php://stderr',
],
'processors' => [PsrLogMessageProcessor::class],
],
'syslog' => [
'driver' => 'syslog',
'level' => env('LOG_LEVEL', 'debug'),
'facility' => env('LOG_SYSLOG_FACILITY', LOG_USER),
'replace_placeholders' => true,
],
'errorlog' => [
'driver' => 'errorlog',
'level' => env('LOG_LEVEL', 'debug'),
'replace_placeholders' => true,
],
'null' => [

View File

@@ -35,8 +35,8 @@ return [
'mailers' => [
'smtp' => [
'transport' => 'smtp',
'host' => env('MAIL_HOST', 'smtp.mailgun.org'),
'port' => env('MAIL_PORT', 587),
'host' => env('MAIL_HOST', '127.0.0.1'),
'port' => env('MAIL_PORT', 2525),
'encryption' => env('MAIL_ENCRYPTION', 'tls'),
'username' => env('MAIL_USERNAME'),
'password' => env('MAIL_PASSWORD'),
@@ -84,9 +84,9 @@ return [
| Global "From" Address
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| You may wish for all e-mails sent by your application to be sent from
| the same address. Here, you may specify a name and address that is
| used globally for all e-mails that are sent by your application.
| You may wish for all emails sent by your application to be sent from
| the same address. Here you may specify a name and address that is
| used globally for all emails that are sent by your application.
|
*/

View File

@@ -6,9 +6,9 @@ return [
| Default Queue Connection Name
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Laravel's queue API supports an assortment of back-ends via a single
| API, giving you convenient access to each back-end using the same
| syntax for every one. Here you may define a default connection.
| Laravel's queue supports a variety of backends via a single, unified
| API, giving you convenient access to each backend using identical
| syntax for each. The default queue connection is defined below.
|
*/
@@ -19,9 +19,11 @@ return [
| Queue Connections
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may configure the connection information for each server that
| is used by your application. A default configuration has been added
| for each back-end shipped with Laravel. You are free to add more.
| Here you may configure the connection options for every queue backend
| used by your application. An example configuration is provided for
| each backend supported by Laravel. You're also free to add more.
|
| Drivers: "sync", "database", "beanstalkd", "sqs", "redis", "null"
|
*/
@@ -32,9 +34,19 @@ return [
'database' => [
'driver' => 'database',
'table' => 'jobs',
'queue' => env('QUEUE_STANDARD', 'standard'),
'retry_after' => 90,
'connection' => env('DB_QUEUE_CONNECTION'),
'table' => env('DB_QUEUE_TABLE', 'jobs'),
'queue' => env('DB_QUEUE', 'standard'),
'retry_after' => (int) env('DB_QUEUE_RETRY_AFTER', 90),
'after_commit' => false,
],
'beanstalkd' => [
'driver' => 'beanstalkd',
'host' => env('BEANSTALKD_QUEUE_HOST', 'localhost'),
'queue' => env('BEANSTALKD_QUEUE', 'default'),
'retry_after' => (int) env('BEANSTALKD_QUEUE_RETRY_AFTER', 90),
'block_for' => 0,
'after_commit' => false,
],
@@ -43,7 +55,7 @@ return [
'key' => env('AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID'),
'secret' => env('AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY'),
'prefix' => env('SQS_PREFIX', 'https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/your-account-id'),
'queue' => env('SQS_QUEUE', env('QUEUE_STANDARD', 'standard')),
'queue' => env('SQS_QUEUE', 'default'),
'suffix' => env('SQS_SUFFIX'),
'region' => env('AWS_DEFAULT_REGION', 'us-east-1'),
'after_commit' => false,
@@ -51,9 +63,9 @@ return [
'redis' => [
'driver' => 'redis',
'connection' => 'default',
'connection' => env('REDIS_QUEUE_CONNECTION', 'default'),
'queue' => env('REDIS_QUEUE', env('QUEUE_STANDARD', 'standard')),
'retry_after' => 90,
'retry_after' => (int) env('REDIS_QUEUE_RETRY_AFTER', 90),
'block_for' => null,
'after_commit' => false,
],
@@ -65,8 +77,10 @@ return [
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| These options configure the behavior of failed queue job logging so you
| can control which database and table are used to store the jobs that
| have failed. You may change them to any database / table you wish.
| can control how and where failed jobs are stored. Laravel ships with
| support for storing failed jobs in a simple file or in a database.
|
| Supported drivers: "database-uuids", "dynamodb", "file", "null"
|
*/

View File

@@ -57,7 +57,8 @@ return [
*/
'middleware' => [
'verify_csrf_token' => Pterodactyl\Http\Middleware\VerifyCsrfToken::class,
'authenticate_session' => Laravel\Sanctum\Http\Middleware\AuthenticateSession::class,
'encrypt_cookies' => Pterodactyl\Http\Middleware\EncryptCookies::class,
'verify_csrf_token' => Pterodactyl\Http\Middleware\VerifyCsrfToken::class,
],
];

View File

@@ -13,13 +13,6 @@ return [
|
*/
'mailgun' => [
'domain' => env('MAILGUN_DOMAIN'),
'secret' => env('MAILGUN_SECRET'),
'endpoint' => env('MAILGUN_ENDPOINT', 'api.mailgun.net'),
'scheme' => 'https',
],
'postmark' => [
'token' => env('POSTMARK_TOKEN'),
],
@@ -29,4 +22,15 @@ return [
'secret' => env('AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY'),
'region' => env('AWS_DEFAULT_REGION', 'us-east-1'),
],
'resend' => [
'key' => env('RESEND_KEY'),
],
'slack' => [
'notifications' => [
'bot_user_oauth_token' => env('SLACK_BOT_USER_OAUTH_TOKEN'),
'channel' => env('SLACK_BOT_USER_DEFAULT_CHANNEL'),
],
],
];

View File

@@ -8,9 +8,9 @@ return [
| Default Session Driver
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This option controls the default session "driver" that will be used on
| requests. By default, we will use the lightweight native driver but
| you may specify any of the other wonderful drivers provided here.
| This option determines the default session driver that is utilized for
| incoming requests. Laravel supports a variety of storage options to
| persist session data. Database storage is a great default choice.
|
| Supported: "file", "cookie", "database", "apc",
| "memcached", "redis", "dynamodb", "array"
@@ -26,13 +26,14 @@ return [
|
| Here you may specify the number of minutes that you wish the session
| to be allowed to remain idle before it expires. If you want them
| to immediately expire on the browser closing, set that option.
| to expire immediately when the browser is closed then you may
| indicate that via the expire_on_close configuration option.
|
*/
'lifetime' => env('SESSION_LIFETIME', 720),
'expire_on_close' => false,
'expire_on_close' => env('SESSION_EXPIRE_ON_CLOSE', false),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -40,21 +41,21 @@ return [
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This option allows you to easily specify that all of your session data
| should be encrypted before it is stored. All encryption will be run
| automatically by Laravel and you can use the Session like normal.
| should be encrypted before it's stored. All encryption is performed
| automatically by Laravel and you may use the session like normal.
|
*/
'encrypt' => true,
'encrypt' => env('SESSION_ENCRYPT', true),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Session File Location
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| When using the native session driver, we need a location where session
| files may be stored. A default has been set for you but a different
| location may be specified. This is only needed for file sessions.
| When utilizing the "file" session driver, the session files are placed
| on disk. The default storage location is defined here; however, you
| are free to provide another location where they should be stored.
|
*/
@@ -78,22 +79,22 @@ return [
| Session Database Table
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| When using the "database" session driver, you may specify the table we
| should use to manage the sessions. Of course, a sensible default is
| provided for you; however, you are free to change this as needed.
| When using the "database" session driver, you may specify the table to
| be used to store sessions. Of course, a sensible default is defined
| for you; however, you're welcome to change this to another table.
|
*/
'table' => 'sessions',
'table' => env('SESSION_TABLE', 'sessions'),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Session Cache Store
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| While using one of the framework's cache driven session backends you may
| list a cache store that should be used for these sessions. This value
| must match with one of the application's configured cache "stores".
| When using one of the framework's cache driven session backends, you may
| define the cache store which should be used to store the session data
| between requests. This must match one of your defined cache stores.
|
| Affects: "apc", "dynamodb", "memcached", "redis"
|
@@ -119,9 +120,9 @@ return [
| Session Cookie Name
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may change the name of the cookie used to identify a session
| instance by ID. The name specified here will get used every time a
| new session cookie is created by the framework for every driver.
| Here you may change the name of the session cookie that is created by
| the framework. Typically, you should not need to change this value
| since doing so does not grant a meaningful security improvement.
|
*/
@@ -137,20 +138,20 @@ return [
|
| The session cookie path determines the path for which the cookie will
| be regarded as available. Typically, this will be the root path of
| your application but you are free to change this when necessary.
| your application, but you're free to change this when necessary.
|
*/
'path' => '/',
'path' => env('SESSION_PATH', '/'),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Session Cookie Domain
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may change the domain of the cookie used to identify a session
| in your application. This will determine which domains the cookie is
| available to in your application. A sensible default has been set.
| This value determines the domain and subdomains the session cookie is
| available to. By default, the cookie will be available to the root
| domain and all subdomains. Typically, this shouldn't be changed.
|
*/
@@ -176,11 +177,11 @@ return [
|
| Setting this value to true will prevent JavaScript from accessing the
| value of the cookie and the cookie will only be accessible through
| the HTTP protocol. You are free to modify this option if needed.
| the HTTP protocol. It's unlikely you should disable this option.
|
*/
'http_only' => true,
'http_only' => env('SESSION_HTTP_ONLY', true),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -189,11 +190,26 @@ return [
|
| This option determines how your cookies behave when cross-site requests
| take place, and can be used to mitigate CSRF attacks. By default, we
| will set this value to "lax" since this is a secure default value.
| will set this value to "lax" to permit secure cross-site requests.
|
| See: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Set-Cookie#samesitesamesite-value
|
| Supported: "lax", "strict", "none", null
|
*/
'same_site' => env('SESSION_SAMESITE_COOKIE', 'lax'),
'same_site' => env('SESSION_SAME_SITE', 'lax'),
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Partitioned Cookies
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Setting this value to true will tie the cookie to the top-level site for
| a cross-site context. Partitioned cookies are accepted by the browser
| when flagged "secure" and the Same-Site attribute is set to "none".
|
*/
'partitioned' => env('SESSION_PARTITIONED_COOKIE', false),
];