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357 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
357 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
# Configuration in SilverStripe
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## Introduction
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SilverStripe 3 comes with a comprehensive code based configuration system.
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It primarily relies on declarative [YAML](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAML) files,
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and falls back to procedural PHP code, as well as PHP static variables.
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Configuration can be seen as separate from other forms of variables (such as per-member or per-site settings) in the
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SilverStripe system due to three properties:
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- Configuration is per class, not per instance
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- Configuration is normally set once during initialisation and then not changed
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- Configuration is normally set by a knowledgeable technical user, such as a developer, not the end user
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In SilverStripe 3, each class has it's configuration specified as set of named properties and associated values. The
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values at any given time are calculated by merging several sources using rules explained below.
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These sources are as follows (in highest -> lowest priority order):
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- Values set via a call to `[api:Config::update()]`
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- Values taken from YAML files in specially named directories
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- Statics set on an "extra config source" class (such as an extension) named the same as the name of the property
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(optionally)
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- Statics set on the class named the same as the name of the property
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- The parent of the class (optionally)
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Like statics, configuration values may only contain a literal or constant; neither objects nor expressions are allowed.
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## Finding Configuration
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Since configuration settings are just static properties on any SilverStripe class,
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there's no exhaustive list. All configurable statics are marked with a `@config` docblock
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though, so you can search for them in the codebase. The same docblock will also contain
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a description of the configuration setting.
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## Customizing Configuration (through merging)
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Each named class configuration property can contain either an array or a non-array value.
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If the value is an array, each value in the array may also be one of those three types
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As mentioned, this value of any specific class configuration property comes from several sources. These sources do not
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override each other (except in one specific circumstance) - instead the values from each source are merged together
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to give the final configuration value, using these rules:
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- If the value is an array, each array is added to the _beginning_ of the composite array in ascending priority order.
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If a higher priority item has a non-integer key which is the same as a lower priority item, the value of those items
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is merged using these same rules, and the result of the merge is located in the same location the higher priority item
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would be if there was no key clash. Other than in this key-clash situation, within the particular array, order is preserved.
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- If the value is not an array, the highest priority value is used without any attempt to merge
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It is an error to have mixed types of the same named property in different locations (but an error will not necessarily
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be raised due to optimisations in the lookup code)
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The exception to this is "false-ish" values - empty arrays, empty strings, etc. When merging a non-false-ish value with a
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false-ish value, the result will be the non-false-ish value regardless of priority. When merging two false-sh values
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the result will be the higher priority false-ish value.
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The locations that configuration values are taken from in highest -> lowest priority order are:
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- Any values set via a call to Config#update
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- The configuration values taken from the YAML files in `_config/` directories (internally sorted in before / after order, where
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the item that is latest is highest priority)
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- Any static set on an "additional static source" class (such as an extension) named the same as the name of the property
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- Any static set on the class named the same as the name of the property
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- The composite configuration value of the parent class of this class
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At some of these levels you can also set masks. These remove values from the composite value at their priority point rather than add.
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They are much simpler. They consist of a list of key / value pairs. When applied against the current composite value
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- If the composite value is a sequential array, any member of that array that matches any value in the mask is removed
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- If the composite value is an associative array, any member of that array that matches both the key and value of any pair in the mask is removed
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- If the composite value is not an array, if that value matches any value in the mask it is removed
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## Reading and updating via the Config class
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The Config class is both the primary manner of getting configuration values and one of the locations you can set
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configuration values.
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Note: There is no way currently to restrict read or write access to any configuration property,
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or influence/check the values being read or written.
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### Global access
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The first thing you need to do to use the Config class is to get the singleton instance of that class. This can be
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done by calling the static method `[api:Config::inst()]`, like so:
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$config = Config::inst();
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There are then three public methods available on the instance so obtained
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- Config#get() returns the value of a specified classes' property
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- Config#remove() removes information from the value of a specified classes' property.
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To remove all values, use the `Config::anything()` placeholder.
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- Config#update() adds additional information into the value of a specified classes' property
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Note that there is no "set" method. Because of the merge, it is not possible to completely set the value of a classes'
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property (unless you're setting it to a true-ish literal). Update adds new values that are treated as the highest
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priority in the merge, and remove adds a merge mask that filters out values.
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### Short-hand access
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Within any subclass of Object you can call the config() instance method to get an instance of a proxy object
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which accesses the Config class with the class parameter already set.
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For instance, instead of writing:
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:::php
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Config::inst()->get($this->class, 'my_property');
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Config::inst()->update($this->class, 'my_other_property', 2);
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You can write:
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:::php
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$this->config()->get('my_property');
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$this->config()->update('my_other_property', 2);
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Or even shorter:
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:::php
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$this->config()->my_property; // getter
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$this->config()->my_other_property = 2; // setter
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This also works statically:
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MyClass::config()->my_property; // getter
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MyClass::config()->my_property = 2; // setter
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## Setting configuration via YAML files
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Each module can (in fact, should - see below for why) have a directory immediately underneath the main module
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directory called `_config/`.
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Inside this directory you can add yaml files that contain values for the configuration system.
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The structure of each yaml file is a series of headers and values separated by YAML document separators. If there
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is only one set of values the header can be omitted.
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### The header
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Each value section of a YAML file has
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- A reference path, made up of the module name, the config file name, and a fragment identifier
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- A set of rules for the value section's priority relative to other value sections
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- A set of rules that might exclude the value section from being used
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The fragment identifier component of the reference path and the two sets of rules are specified for each
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value section in the header section that immediately preceeds the value section.
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#### Reference paths and fragment identifiers
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Each value section has a reference path. Each path looks a little like a URL,
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and is of this form: `module/file#fragment`.
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- "module" is the name of the module this YAML file is in
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- "file" is the name of this YAML file, stripped of the extension (so for routes.yml, it would be routes)
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- "fragment" is a specified identifier. It is specified by putting a `Name: {fragment}` key / value pair into the header
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section. If you don't specify a name, a random one will be assigned.
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This reference path has no affect on the value section itself, but is how other header sections refer to this value
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section in their priority chain rules
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#### Priorities
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Values for a specific class property can be specified in several value sections across several modules. These values are
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merged together using the same rules as the configuration system as a whole.
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However unlike the configuration system itself, there is no inherent priority amongst the various value sections.
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Instead, each value section can have rules that indicate priority. Each rule states that this value section
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must come before (lower priority than) or after (higher priority than) some other value section.
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To specify these rules you add an "After" and/or "Before" key to the relevant header section. The value for these
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keys is a list of reference paths to other value sections. A basic example:
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:::yml
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---
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Name: adminroutes
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After: 'framework/routes#rootroutes', 'framework/routes#coreroutes'
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---
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Director:
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rules:
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'admin': 'AdminRootController'
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---
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You do not have to specify all portions of a reference path. Any portion may be replaced with a wildcard "\*", or left
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out all together. Either has the same affect - that portion will be ignored when checking a value section's reference
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path, and will always match. You may even specify just "\*", which means "all value sections".
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When a particular value section matches both a Before _and_ an After rule, this may be a problem. Clearly
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one value section can not be both before _and_ after another. However when you have used wildcards, if there
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was a difference in how many wildcards were used, the one with the least wildcards will be kept and the other one
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ignored.
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A more complex example, taken from framework/_config/routes.yml
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:::yml
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---
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Name: adminroutes
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Before: '*'
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After:
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- '#rootroutes'
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---
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Director:
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rules:
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'admin': 'AdminRootController'
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---
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The value section above has two rules:
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- It must be merged in before (lower priority than) all other value sections
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- It must be merged in after (higher priority than) any value section with a fragment name of "rootroutes"
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In this case there would appear to be a problem - adminroutes can not be both before all other value sections _and_
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after value sections with a name of `rootroutes`. However because `\*` has three wildcards
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(it is the equivalent of `\*/\*#\*`) but `#rootroutes` only has two (it is the equivalent of `\*/\*#rootroutes`),
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`\*` in this case means "every value section _except_ ones that have a fragment name of rootroutes"
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One important thing to note: it is possible to create chains that are unsolvable. For instance, A must be before B,
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B must be before C, C must be before A. In this case you will get an error when accessing your site.
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#### Exclusionary rules
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Some value sections might only make sense under certain environmental conditions - a class exists, a module is installed,
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an environment variable or constant is set, or SilverStripe is running in a certain environment mode (live, dev, etc)
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To accommodate this, value sections can be filtered to only be used when either a rule matches or doesn't match the
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current environment.
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To achieve this you add a key to the related header section, either "Only" when the value section should be included
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only when the rules contained match, or "Except" when the value section should be included except when the rules
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contained match.
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You then list any of the following rules as sub-keys, with informational values as either a single value or a list.
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- 'classexists', in which case the value(s) should be classes that must exist
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- 'moduleexists', in which case the value(s) should be modules that must exist
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- 'environment', in which case the value(s) should be one of "live", "test" or "dev" to indicate the SilverStripe
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mode the site must be in
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- 'envvarset', in which case the value(s) should be environment variables that must be set
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- 'constantdefined', in which case the value(s) should be constants that must be defined
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For instance, to add a property to "foo" when a module exists, and "bar" otherwise, you could do this:
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:::yml
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---
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Only:
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moduleexists: 'MyFineModule'
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---
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MyClass:
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property: 'foo'
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---
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Except:
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moduleexists: 'MyFineModule'
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---
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MyClass:
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property: 'bar'
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---
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### The values
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The values section of YAML configuration files is quite simple - it is simply a nested key / value pair structure
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where the top level key is the class name to set the property on, and the sub key / value pairs are the properties
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and values themselves (where values of course can themselves be nested hashes).
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A simple example setting a property called "foo" to the scalar "bar" on class "MyClass", and a property called "baz"
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to a nested array on class "MyOtherClass".
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:::yml
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MyClass:
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foo: 'bar'
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MyOtherClass:
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baz:
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a: 1
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b: 2
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Notice that we can leave out the header in this case because there is only a single value section within the file.
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## Setting configuration via statics
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The final location that a property can get it's value from is a static set on the associated class.
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Statics should be considered immutable, and therefore the majority of statics in SilverStripe
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are marked `private`.
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They should primarily be used to set the initial or default value for any given configuration property. It's also
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a handy place to hand a docblock to indicate what a property is for. However, it's worth noting that you
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do not have to define a static for a property to be valid.
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## Configuration as a module marker
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Configuration files also have a secondary sub-role. Modules are identified by the `[api:ManifestBuilder]` by the
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presence of a `_config/` directory (or a `_config.php` file) as a top level item in the module directory.
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Although your module may choose not to set any configuration, it must still have a _config directory to be recognised
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as a module by the `[api:ManifestBuilder]`, which is required for features such as autoloading of classes and template
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detection to work.
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## Complex configuration through _config.php
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In addition to the configuration system described above, each module can provide a file called `_config.php`
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immediately within the module top level directory.
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These `_config.php` files will be included at initialisation, and are a useful way to set legacy configuration
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or set configuration based on rules that are more complex than can be encoded in YAML files.
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However they should generally be avoided when possible, as they slow initialisation.
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Please note that this is the only place where you can put in procedural code - all other functionality is wrapped in
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classes (see [common-problems](/installation/common-problems)).
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## Configuration through the CMS
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SilverStripe framework does not provide a method to set most system-level configuration via a web panel.
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This lack of a configuration GUI is on purpose, as we'd like to keep developer-level options where they belong (into
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code), without cluttering up the interface. See this core forum discussion ["The role of the
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CMS"](http://www.silverstripe.org/archive/show/532) for further reasoning.
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The GUI-based configuation is limited to the following:
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* Author-level configuration like interface language or date/time formats can be performed in the CMS "My Profile" section
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* Group-related configuration like `[api:HTMLEditorField]` settings can be found in the "Security" section
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* Site-wide settings like page titles can be set (and extended) on the root tree element in the CMS "Content" section (through the [siteconfig](/reference/siteconfig) API).
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* Any configuration interfaces added by custom code, for example through `getCMSFields()`
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## Constants and the _ss_environment.php File
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See [environment-management](/topics/environment-management).
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## User preferences in the `Member` class
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All user-related preferences are stored as a property of the `[api:Member]`-class (and as a database-column in the
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*Member*-table). You can "mix in" your custom preferences by using `[api:DataObject]` for details.
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## Permissions
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See [security](/topics/security) and [permission](/reference/permission)
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## Resource Usage (Memory and CPU)
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SilverStripe tries to keep its resource usage within the documented limits (see our [server requirements](../installation/server-requirements)).
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These limits are defined through `memory_limit` and `max_execution_time` in the PHP configuration.
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They can be overwritten through `ini_set()`, unless PHP is running with the [Suhoshin Patches](http://www.hardened-php.net/)
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or in "[safe mode](http://php.net/manual/en/features.safe-mode.php)".
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Most shared hosting providers will have maximum values that can't be altered.
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For certain tasks like synchronizing a large `assets/` folder with all file and folder entries in the database,
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more resources are required temporarily. In general, we recommend running resource intensive tasks
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through the [commandline](../topics/commandline), where configuration defaults for these settings are higher or even unlimited.
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SilverStripe can request more resources through `increase_memory_limit_to()` and `increase_time_limit_to()`.
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If you are concerned about resource usage on a dedicated server (without restrictions imposed through shared hosting providers), you can set a hard limit to these increases through
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`set_increase_memory_limit_max()` and `set_increase_time_limit_max()`.
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These values will just be used for specific scripts (e.g. `[api:Filesystem::sync()]`),
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to raise the limits for all executed scripts please use `ini_set('memory_limit', <value>)`
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and `ini_set('max_execution_time', <value>)` in your own `_config.php`.
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