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tenancy/assets/config.php
Nick Kitchen cc6d4fe0dd
[4.x] Added support for Microsoft Sql Server (#715)
* added support for microsoft sql server database

* added support for microsoft sql server database

* trigger ci

* revert change

* trigger ci

* Try installing pdo_sqlsrv

* different approach for installing sqlsrv via pecl

* add dependencies

* add gnupg2

* Update Dockerfile

* try skipping msodbcsql17

* Update Dockerfile

* add dependency back

* update before installing

* try to add mssql

* mssql host

* TENANCY_TEST_MSSQL_HOST env var

* add env vars for mssql

* add sqlsrv vars to TestCase

* rename vars to SQLSRV [skip ci]

* MSSQL -> SQLSRV

Co-authored-by: Samuel Štancl <samuel@archte.ch>
Co-authored-by: Samuel Štancl <samuel.stancl@gmail.com>
2022-06-23 13:04:53 +02:00

199 lines
7.6 KiB
PHP

<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Stancl\Tenancy\Database\Models\Domain;
use Stancl\Tenancy\Database\Models\Tenant;
return [
'tenant_model' => Tenant::class,
'id_generator' => Stancl\Tenancy\UUIDGenerator::class,
'domain_model' => Domain::class,
/**
* The list of domains hosting your central app.
*
* Only relevant if you're using the domain or subdomain identification middleware.
*/
'central_domains' => [
'127.0.0.1',
'localhost',
],
/**
* Tenancy bootstrappers are executed when tenancy is initialized.
* Their responsibility is making Laravel features tenant-aware.
*
* To configure their behavior, see the config keys below.
*/
'bootstrappers' => [
Stancl\Tenancy\Bootstrappers\DatabaseTenancyBootstrapper::class,
Stancl\Tenancy\Bootstrappers\CacheTenancyBootstrapper::class,
Stancl\Tenancy\Bootstrappers\FilesystemTenancyBootstrapper::class,
Stancl\Tenancy\Bootstrappers\QueueTenancyBootstrapper::class,
// Stancl\Tenancy\Bootstrappers\RedisTenancyBootstrapper::class, // Note: phpredis is needed
],
/**
* Database tenancy config. Used by DatabaseTenancyBootstrapper.
*/
'database' => [
'central_connection' => env('DB_CONNECTION', 'central'),
/**
* Connection used as a "template" for the dynamically created tenant database connection.
* Note: don't name your template connection tenant. That name is reserved by package.
*/
'template_tenant_connection' => null,
/**
* Tenant database names are created like this:
* prefix + tenant_id + suffix.
*/
'prefix' => 'tenant',
'suffix' => '',
/**
* TenantDatabaseManagers are classes that handle the creation & deletion of tenant databases.
*/
'managers' => [
'sqlite' => Stancl\Tenancy\TenantDatabaseManagers\SQLiteDatabaseManager::class,
'mysql' => Stancl\Tenancy\TenantDatabaseManagers\MySQLDatabaseManager::class,
'pgsql' => Stancl\Tenancy\TenantDatabaseManagers\PostgreSQLDatabaseManager::class,
'sqlsrv' => Stancl\Tenancy\TenantDatabaseManagers\MicrosoftSQLDatabaseManager::class,
/**
* Use this database manager for MySQL to have a DB user created for each tenant database.
* You can customize the grants given to these users by changing the $grants property.
*/
// 'mysql' => Stancl\Tenancy\TenantDatabaseManagers\PermissionControlledMySQLDatabaseManager::class,
/**
* Disable the pgsql manager above, and enable the one below if you
* want to separate tenant DBs by schemas rather than databases.
*/
// 'pgsql' => Stancl\Tenancy\TenantDatabaseManagers\PostgreSQLSchemaManager::class, // Separate by schema instead of database
],
],
/**
* Cache tenancy config. Used by CacheTenancyBootstrapper.
*
* This works for all Cache facade calls, cache() helper
* calls and direct calls to injected cache stores.
*
* Each key in cache will have a tag applied on it. This tag is used to
* scope the cache both when writing to it and when reading from it.
*
* You can clear cache selectively by specifying the tag.
*/
'cache' => [
'tag_base' => 'tenant', // This tag_base, followed by the tenant_id, will form a tag that will be applied on each cache call.
],
/**
* Filesystem tenancy config. Used by FilesystemTenancyBootstrapper.
* https://tenancyforlaravel.com/docs/v3/tenancy-bootstrappers/#filesystem-tenancy-boostrapper.
*/
'filesystem' => [
/**
* Each disk listed in the 'disks' array will be suffixed by the suffix_base, followed by the tenant_id.
*/
'suffix_base' => 'tenant',
'disks' => [
'local',
'public',
// 's3',
],
/**
* Use this for local disks.
*
* See https://tenancyforlaravel.com/docs/v3/tenancy-bootstrappers/#filesystem-tenancy-boostrapper
*/
'root_override' => [
// Disks whose roots should be overriden after storage_path() is suffixed.
'local' => '%storage_path%/app/',
'public' => '%storage_path%/app/public/',
],
/**
* Should storage_path() be suffixed.
*
* Note: Disabling this will likely break local disk tenancy. Only disable this if you're using an external file storage service like S3.
*
* For the vast majority of applications, this feature should be enabled. But in some
* edge cases, it can cause issues (like using Passport with Vapor - see #196), so
* you may want to disable this if you are experiencing these edge case issues.
*/
'suffix_storage_path' => true,
/**
* By default, asset() calls are made multi-tenant too. You can use global_asset() and mix()
* for global, non-tenant-specific assets. However, you might have some issues when using
* packages that use asset() calls inside the tenant app. To avoid such issues, you can
* disable asset() helper tenancy and explicitly use tenant_asset() calls in places
* where you want to use tenant-specific assets (product images, avatars, etc).
*/
'asset_helper_tenancy' => true,
],
/**
* Redis tenancy config. Used by RedisTenancyBoostrapper.
*
* Note: You need phpredis to use Redis tenancy.
*
* Note: You don't need to use this if you're using Redis only for cache.
* Redis tenancy is only relevant if you're making direct Redis calls,
* either using the Redis facade or by injecting it as a dependency.
*/
'redis' => [
'prefix_base' => 'tenant', // Each key in Redis will be prepended by this prefix_base, followed by the tenant id.
'prefixed_connections' => [ // Redis connections whose keys are prefixed, to separate one tenant's keys from another.
// 'default',
],
],
/**
* Features are classes that provide additional functionality
* not needed for tenancy to be bootstrapped. They are run
* regardless of whether tenancy has been initialized.
*
* See the documentation page for each class to
* understand which ones you want to enable.
*/
'features' => [
// Stancl\Tenancy\Features\UserImpersonation::class,
// Stancl\Tenancy\Features\TelescopeTags::class,
// Stancl\Tenancy\Features\UniversalRoutes::class,
// Stancl\Tenancy\Features\TenantConfig::class, // https://tenancyforlaravel.com/docs/v3/features/tenant-config
// Stancl\Tenancy\Features\CrossDomainRedirect::class, // https://tenancyforlaravel.com/docs/v3/features/cross-domain-redirect
],
/**
* Should tenancy routes be registered.
*
* Tenancy routes include tenant asset routes. By default, this route is
* enabled. But it may be useful to disable them if you use external
* storage (e.g. S3 / Dropbox) or have a custom asset controller.
*/
'routes' => true,
/**
* Parameters used by the tenants:migrate command.
*/
'migration_parameters' => [
'--force' => true, // This needs to be true to run migrations in production.
'--path' => [database_path('migrations/tenant')],
'--realpath' => true,
],
/**
* Parameters used by the tenants:seed command.
*/
'seeder_parameters' => [
'--class' => 'DatabaseSeeder', // root seeder class
// '--force' => true,
],
];