
#
# If you are using Apache for your web server, Bugzilla can create .htaccess
# files for you that will instruct Apache not to serve files that shouldn't
# be accessed from the web (like your local configuration data and non-cgi
# executable files).  For this to work, the directory your Bugzilla
# installation is in must be within the jurisdiction of a <Directory> block
# in the httpd.conf file that has 'AllowOverride Limit' in it.  If it has
# 'AllowOverride All' or other options with Limit, that's fine.
# (Older Apache installations may use an access.conf file to store these
# <Directory> blocks.)
# If this is set to 1, Bugzilla will create these files if they don't exist.
# If this is set to 0, Bugzilla will not create these files.
$create_htaccess = 0;



#
# This is the group your web server runs on.
# If you have a windows box, ignore this setting.
# If you do not wish for checksetup to adjust the permissions of anything,
# set this to "".
# If you set this to anything besides "", you will need to run checksetup.pl
# as root.
$webservergroup = "www-data";



#
# How to access the SQL database:
#
$db_host = "localhost";         # where is the database?
$db_port = 3306;                # which port to use
$db_name = "bugzilla";              # name of the MySQL database
$db_user = "bugzilla";              # user to attach to the MySQL database



#
# Some people actually use passwords with their MySQL database ...
#
$db_pass = "secret";



#
# Should checksetup.pl try to check if your MySQL setup is correct?
# (with some combinations of MySQL/Msql-mysql/Perl/moonphase this doesn't work)
#
$db_check = 1;



#
# With the introduction of a configurable index page using the
# template toolkit, Bugzilla's main index page is now index.cgi.
# Most web servers will allow you to use index.cgi as a directory
# index and many come preconfigured that way, however if yours
# doesn't you'll need an index.html file that provides redirection
# to index.cgi. Setting $index_html to 1 below will allow
# checksetup.pl to create one for you if it doesn't exist.
# NOTE: checksetup.pl will not replace an existing file, so if you
#       wish to have checksetup.pl create one for you, you must
#       make sure that there isn't already an index.html
$index_html = 0;



#
# The types of content that template files can generate, indexed by file extension.
#
$contenttypes = {
  "html" => "text/html" , 
   "rdf" => "application/xml" , 
   "xml" => "text/xml" , 
    "js" => "application/x-javascript" , 
};


#
# For some optional functions of Bugzilla (such as the pretty-print patch
# viewer), we need the cvs binary to access files and revisions.
# Because it's possible that this program is not in your path, you can specify
# its location here.  Please specify the full path to the executable.
$cvsbin = "/usr/bin/cvs";



#
# For some optional functions of Bugzilla (such as the pretty-print patch
# viewer), we need the interdiff binary to make diffs between two patches.
# Because it's possible that this program is not in your path, you can specify
# its location here.  Please specify the full path to the executable.
$interdiffbin = "";



#
# The interdiff feature needs diff, so we have to have that path.
# Please specify only the directory name, with no trailing slash.
$diffpath = "/usr/bin";



# Enter a path to the unix socket for mysql. If this is blank, then mysql's
# compiled-in default will be used. You probably want that.
$db_sock = '';



#
# What SQL database to use. Default is mysql. List of supported databases
# can be obtained by listing Bugzilla/DB directory - every module corresponds
# to one supported database and the name corresponds to a driver name.
#
$db_driver = "mysql";


