PHP5.2.8 php.ini

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[PHP]

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; About php.ini   ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; This file controls many aspects of PHP's behavior.  In order for PHP to

; read it, it must be named 'php.ini'.  PHP looks for it in the current

; working directory, in the path designated by the environment variable

; PHPRC, and in the path that was defined in compile time (in that order).

; Under Windows, the compile-time path is the Windows directory.  The

; path in which the php.ini file is looked for can be overridden using

; the -c argument in command line mode.

; The syntax of the file is extremely simple.  Whitespace and Lines

; beginning with a semicolon are silently ignored (as you probably guessed).

; Section headers (e.g. [Foo]) are also silently ignored, even though

; they might mean something in the future.

; Directives are specified using the following syntax:

; directive = value

; Directive names are *case sensitive* - foo=bar is different from FOO=bar.

; The value can be a string, a number, a PHP constant (e.g. E_ALL or M_PI), one

; of the INI constants (On, Off, True, False, Yes, No and None) or an expression

; (e.g. E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE), or a quoted string ("foo").

; Expressions in the INI file are limited to bitwise operators and parentheses:

; |        bitwise OR

; &        bitwise AND

; ~        bitwise NOT

; !        boolean NOT

; Boolean flags can be turned on using the values 1, On, True or Yes.

; They can be turned off using the values 0, Off, False or No.

; An empty string can be denoted by simply not writing anything after the equal

; sign, or by using the None keyword:

;  foo =         ; sets foo to an empty string

;  foo = none    ; sets foo to an empty string

;  foo = "none"  ; sets foo to the string 'none'

; If you use constants in your value, and these constants belong to a

; dynamically loaded extension (either a PHP extension or a Zend extension),

; you may only use these constants *after* the line that loads the extension.

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; About this file ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; This is the recommended, PHP 5-style version of the php.ini-dist file.  It

; sets some non standard settings, that make PHP more efficient, more secure,

; and encourage cleaner coding.

; The price is that with these settings, PHP may be incompatible with some

; applications, and sometimes, more difficult to develop with.  Using this

; file is warmly recommended for production sites.  As all of the changes from

; the standard settings are thoroughly documented, you can go over each one,

; and decide whether you want to use it or not.

; For general information about the php.ini file, please consult the php.ini-dist

; file, included in your PHP distribution.

; This file is different from the php.ini-dist file in the fact that it features

; different values for several directives, in order to improve performance, while

; possibly breaking compatibility with the standard out-of-the-box behavior of

; PHP.  Please make sure you read what's different, and modify your scripts

; accordingly, if you decide to use this file instead.

; - register_long_arrays = Off     [Performance]

;     Disables registration of the older (and deprecated) long predefined array

;     variables ($HTTP_*_VARS).  Instead, use the superglobals that were

;     introduced in PHP 4.1.0

; - display_errors = Off           [Security]

;     With this directive set to off, errors that occur during the execution of

;     scripts will no longer be displayed as a part of the script output, and thus,

;     will no longer be exposed to remote users.  With some errors, the error message

;     content may expose information about your script, web server, or database

;     server that may be exploitable for hacking.  Production sites should have this

;     directive set to off.

; - log_errors = On                [Security]

;     This directive complements the above one.  Any errors that occur during the

;     execution of your script will be logged (typically, to your server's error log,

;     but can be configured in several ways).  Along with setting display_errors to off,

;     this setup gives you the ability to fully understand what may have gone wrong,

;     without exposing any sensitive information to remote users.

; - output_buffering = 4096        [Performance]

;     Set a 4KB output buffer.  Enabling output buffering typically results in less

;     writes, and sometimes less packets sent on the wire, which can often lead to

;     better performance.  The gain this directive actually yields greatly depends

;     on which Web server you're working with, and what kind of scripts you're using.

; - register_argc_argv = Off       [Performance]

;     Disables registration of the somewhat redundant $argv and $argc global

;     variables.

; - magic_quotes_gpc = Off         [Performance]

;     Input data is no longer escaped with slashes so that it can be sent into

;     SQL databases without further manipulation.  Instead, you should use the

;     database vendor specific escape string function on each input element you 

;     wish to send to a database.

; - variables_order = "GPCS"       [Performance]

;     The environment variables are not hashed into the $_ENV.  To access

;     environment variables, you can use getenv() instead.

; - error_reporting = E_ALL        [Code Cleanliness, Security(?)]

;     By default, PHP suppresses errors of type E_NOTICE.  These error messages

;     are emitted for non-critical errors, but that could be a symptom of a bigger

;     problem.  Most notably, this will cause error messages about the use

;     of uninitialized variables to be displayed.

; - allow_call_time_pass_reference = Off     [Code cleanliness]

;     It's not possible to decide to force a variable to be passed by reference

;     when calling a function.  The PHP 4 style to do this is by making the

;     function require the relevant argument by reference.

; - short_open_tag = Off           [Portability]

;     Using short tags is discouraged when developing code meant for redistribution

;     since short tags may not be supported on the target server.

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Language Options ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Enable the PHP scripting language engine under Apache.

engine = On

; Enable compatibility mode with Zend Engine 1 (PHP 4.x)

zend.ze1_compatibility_mode = Off

; Allow the tag.  Otherwise, only tags are recognized.

; NOTE: Using short tags should be avoided when developing applications or

; libraries that are meant for redistribution, or deployment on PHP

; servers which are not under your control, because short tags may not

; be supported on the target server. For portable, redistributable code,

; be sure not to use short tags.

short_open_tag = Off

; Allow ASP-style tags.

asp_tags = Off

; The number of significant digits displayed in floating point numbers.

precision    =  14

; Enforce year 2000 compliance (will cause problems with non-compliant browsers)

y2k_compliance = On

; Output buffering allows you to send header lines (including cookies) even

; after you send body content, at the price of slowing PHP's output layer a

; bit.  You can enable output buffering during runtime by calling the output

; buffering functions.  You can also enable output buffering for all files by

; setting this directive to On.  If you wish to limit the size of the buffer

; to a certain size - you can use a maximum number of bytes instead of 'On', as

; a value for this directive (e.g., output_buffering=4096).

output_buffering = 4096

; You can redirect all of the output of your scripts to a function.  For

; example, if you set output_handler to "mb_output_handler", character

; encoding will be transparently converted to the specified encoding.

; Setting any output handler automatically turns on output buffering.

; Note: People who wrote portable scripts should not depend on this ini

;       directive. Instead, explicitly set the output handler using ob_start().

;       Using this ini directive may cause problems unless you know what script

;       is doing.

; Note: You cannot use both "mb_output_handler" with "ob_iconv_handler"

;       and you cannot use both "ob_gzhandler" and "zlib.output_compression".

; Note: output_handler must be empty if this is set 'On' !!!!

;       Instead you must use zlib.output_handler.

;output_handler =

; Transparent output compression using the zlib library

; Valid values for this option are 'off', 'on', or a specific buffer size

; to be used for compression (default is 4KB)

; Note: Resulting chunk size may vary due to nature of compression. PHP

;       outputs chunks that are few hundreds bytes each as a result of

;       compression. If you prefer a larger chunk size for better

;       performance, enable output_buffering in addition.

; Note: You need to use zlib.output_handler instead of the standard

;       output_handler, or otherwise the output will be corrupted.

zlib.output_compression = Off

;zlib.output_compression_level = -1

; You cannot specify additional output handlers if zlib.output_compression

; is activated here. This setting does the same as output_handler but in

; a different order.

;zlib.output_handler =

; Implicit flush tells PHP to tell the output layer to flush itself

; automatically after every output block.  This is equivalent to calling the

; PHP function flush() after each and every call to print() or echo() and each

; and every HTML block.  Turning this option on has serious performance

; implications and is generally recommended for debugging purposes only.

implicit_flush = Off

; The unserialize callback function will be called (with the undefined class'

; name as parameter), if the unserializer finds an undefined class

; which should be instantiated.

; A warning appears if the specified function is not defined, or if the

; function doesn't include/implement the missing class.

; So only set this entry, if you really want to implement such a

; callback-function.

unserialize_callback_func=

; When floats & doubles are serialized store serialize_precision significant

; digits after the floating point. The default value ensures that when floats

; are decoded with unserialize, the data will remain the same.

serialize_precision = 100

; Whether to enable the ability to force arguments to be passed by reference

; at function call time.  This method is deprecated and is likely to be

; unsupported in future versions of PHP/Zend.  The encouraged method of

; specifying which arguments should be passed by reference is in the function

; declaration.  You're encouraged to try and turn this option Off and make

; sure your scripts work properly with it in order to ensure they will work

; with future versions of the language (you will receive a warning each time

; you use this feature, and the argument will be passed by value instead of by

; reference).

allow_call_time_pass_reference = Off

; Safe Mode

safe_mode = Off

; By default, Safe Mode does a UID compare check when

; opening files. If you want to relax this to a GID compare,

; then turn on safe_mode_gid.

safe_mode_gid = Off

; When safe_mode is on, UID/GID checks are bypassed when

; including files from this directory and its subdirectories.

; (directory must also be in include_path or full path must

; be used when including)

safe_mode_include_dir =

; When safe_mode is on, only executables located in the safe_mode_exec_dir

; will be allowed to be executed via the exec family of functions.

safe_mode_exec_dir =

; Setting certain environment variables may be a potential security breach.

; This directive contains a comma-delimited list of prefixes.  In Safe Mode,

; the user may only alter environment variables whose names begin with the

; prefixes supplied here.  By default, users will only be able to set

; environment variables that begin with PHP_ (e.g. PHP_FOO=BAR).

; Note:  If this directive is empty, PHP will let the user modify ANY

; environment variable!

safe_mode_allowed_env_vars = PHP_

; This directive contains a comma-delimited list of environment variables that

; the end user won't be able to change using putenv().  These variables will be

; protected even if safe_mode_allowed_env_vars is set to allow to change them.

safe_mode_protected_env_vars = LD_LIBRARY_PATH

; open_basedir, if set, limits all file operations to the defined directory

; and below.  This directive makes most sense if used in a per-directory

; or per-virtualhost web server configuration file. This directive is

; *NOT* affected by whether Safe Mode is turned On or Off.

;open_basedir =

; This directive allows you to disable certain functions for security reasons.

; It receives a comma-delimited list of function names. This directive is

; *NOT* affected by whether Safe Mode is turned On or Off.

disable_functions =

; This directive allows you to disable certain classes for security reasons.

; It receives a comma-delimited list of class names. This directive is

; *NOT* affected by whether Safe Mode is turned On or Off.

disable_classes =

; Colors for Syntax Highlighting mode.  Anything that's acceptable in

; would work.

;highlight.string  = #DD0000

;highlight.comment = #FF9900

;highlight.keyword = #007700

;highlight.bg      = #FFFFFF

;highlight.default = #0000BB

;highlight.html    = #000000

; If enabled, the request will be allowed to complete even if the user aborts

; the request. Consider enabling it if executing long request, which may end up

; being interrupted by the user or a browser timing out.

; ignore_user_abort = On

; Determines the size of the realpath cache to be used by PHP. This value should

; be increased on systems where PHP opens many files to reflect the quantity of

; the file operations performed.

; realpath_cache_size=16k

; Duration of time, in seconds for which to cache realpath information for a given

; file or directory. For systems with rarely changing files, consider increasing this

; value.

; realpath_cache_ttl=120

; Misc

; Decides whether PHP may expose the fact that it is installed on the server

; (e.g. by adding its signature to the Web server header).  It is no security

; threat in any way, but it makes it possible to determine whether you use PHP

; on your server or not.

expose_php = On

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Resource Limits ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

max_execution_time = 30     ; Maximum execution time of each script, in seconds

max_input_time = 60 ; Maximum amount of time each script may spend parsing request data

;max_input_nesting_level = 64 ; Maximum input variable nesting level

memory_limit = 128M      ; Maximum amount of memory a script may consume (128MB)

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Error handling and logging ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; error_reporting is a bit-field.  Or each number up to get desired error

; reporting level

; E_ALL             - All errors and warnings (doesn't include E_STRICT)

; E_ERROR           - fatal run-time errors

; E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR  - almost fatal run-time errors

; E_WARNING         - run-time warnings (non-fatal errors)

; E_PARSE           - compile-time parse errors

; E_NOTICE          - run-time notices (these are warnings which often result

;                     from a bug in your code, but it's possible that it was

;                     intentional (e.g., using an uninitialized variable and

;                     relying on the fact it's automatically initialized to an

;                     empty string)

; E_STRICT          - run-time notices, enable to have PHP suggest changes

;                     to your code which will ensure the best interoperability

;                     and forward compatibility of your code

; E_CORE_ERROR      - fatal errors that occur during PHP's initial startup

; E_CORE_WARNING    - warnings (non-fatal errors) that occur during PHP's

;                     initial startup

; E_COMPILE_ERROR   - fatal compile-time errors

; E_COMPILE_WARNING - compile-time warnings (non-fatal errors)

; E_USER_ERROR      - user-generated error message

; E_USER_WARNING    - user-generated warning message

; E_USER_NOTICE     - user-generated notice message

; Examples:

;   - Show all errors, except for notices and coding standards warnings

;error_reporting = E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE

;   - Show all errors, except for notices

;error_reporting = E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE | E_STRICT

;   - Show only errors

;error_reporting = E_COMPILE_ERROR|E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR|E_ERROR|E_CORE_ERROR

;   - Show all errors, except coding standards warnings

error_reporting  =  E_ALL

; Print out errors (as a part of the output).  For production web sites,

; you're strongly encouraged to turn this feature off, and use error logging

; instead (see below).  Keeping display_errors enabled on a production web site

; may reveal security information to end users, such as file paths on your Web

; server, your database schema or other information.

; possible values for display_errors:

; Off          - Do not display any errors 

; stderr       - Display errors to STDERR (affects only CGI/CLI binaries!)   

; On or stdout - Display errors to STDOUT (default)

;  

; To output errors to STDERR with CGI/CLI:              

;display_errors = "stderr"

; Default

display_errors = Off

; Even when display_errors is on, errors that occur during PHP's startup

; sequence are not displayed.  It's strongly recommended to keep

; display_startup_errors off, except for when debugging.

display_startup_errors = Off

; Log errors into a log file (server-specific log, stderr, or error_log (below))

; As stated above, you're strongly advised to use error logging in place of

; error displaying on production web sites.

log_errors = On

; Set maximum length of log_errors. In error_log information about the source is

; added. The default is 1024 and 0 allows to not apply any maximum length at all.

log_errors_max_len = 1024

; Do not log repeated messages. Repeated errors must occur in same file on same

; line unless ignore_repeated_source is set true.

ignore_repeated_errors = Off

; Ignore source of message when ignoring repeated messages. When this setting

; is On you will not log errors with repeated messages from different files or

; source lines.

ignore_repeated_source = Off

; If this parameter is set to Off, then memory leaks will not be shown (on

; stdout or in the log). This has only effect in a debug compile, and if

; error reporting includes E_WARNING in the allowed list

report_memleaks = On

;report_zend_debug = 0

; Store the last error/warning message in $php_errormsg (boolean).

track_errors = Off

; Turn off normal error reporting and emit XML-RPC error XML

;xmlrpc_errors = 0

; An XML-RPC faultCode

;xmlrpc_error_number = 0

; Disable the inclusion of HTML tags in error messages.

; Note: Never use this feature for production boxes.

;html_errors = Off

; If html_errors is set On PHP produces clickable error messages that direct

; to a page describing the error or function causing the error in detail.

; You can download a copy of the PHP manual from http://www.php.net/docs.php

; and change docref_root to the base URL of your local copy including the

; leading '/'. You must also specify the file extension being used including

; the dot.

; Note: Never use this feature for production boxes.

;docref_root = "/phpmanual/"

;docref_ext = .html

; String to output before an error message.

;error_prepend_string = ""

; String to output after an error message.

;error_append_string = ""

; Log errors to specified file.

;error_log = filename

; Log errors to syslog (Event Log on NT, not valid in Windows 95).

;error_log = syslog

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Data Handling ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Note - track_vars is ALWAYS enabled as of PHP 4.0.3

; The separator used in PHP generated URLs to separate arguments.

; Default is "&".

;arg_separator.output = "&"

; List of separator(s) used by PHP to parse input URLs into variables.

; Default is "&".

; NOTE: Every character in this directive is considered as separator!

;arg_separator.input = ";&"

; This directive describes the order in which PHP registers GET, POST, Cookie,

; Environment and Built-in variables (G, P, C, E & S respectively, often

; referred to as EGPCS or GPC).  Registration is done from left to right, newer

; values override older values.

variables_order = "GPCS"

; Whether or not to register the EGPCS variables as global variables.  You may

; want to turn this off if you don't want to clutter your scripts' global scope

; with user data.  This makes most sense when coupled with track_vars - in which

; case you can access all of the GPC variables through the $HTTP_*_VARS[],

; variables.

; You should do your best to write your scripts so that they do not require

; register_globals to be on;  Using form variables as globals can easily lead

; to possible security problems, if the code is not very well thought of.

register_globals = Off

; Whether or not to register the old-style input arrays, HTTP_GET_VARS

; and friends.  If you're not using them, it's recommended to turn them off,

; for performance reasons.

register_long_arrays = Off

; This directive tells PHP whether to declare the argv&argc variables (that

; would contain the GET information).  If you don't use these variables, you

; should turn it off for increased performance.

register_argc_argv = Off

; When enabled, the SERVER and ENV variables are created when they're first

; used (Just In Time) instead of when the script starts. If these variables

; are not used within a script, having this directive on will result in a

; performance gain. The PHP directives register_globals, register_long_arrays,

; and register_argc_argv must be disabled for this directive to have any affect.

auto_globals_jit = On

; Maximum size of POST data that PHP will accept.

post_max_size = 8M

; Magic quotes

; Magic quotes for incoming GET/POST/Cookie data.

magic_quotes_gpc = Off

; Magic quotes for runtime-generated data, e.g. data from SQL, from exec(), etc.

magic_quotes_runtime = Off

; Use Sybase-style magic quotes (escape ' with '' instead of \').

magic_quotes_sybase = Off

; Automatically add files before or after any PHP document.

auto_prepend_file =

auto_append_file =

; As of 4.0b4, PHP always outputs a character encoding by default in

; the Content-type: header.  To disable sending of the charset, simply

; set it to be empty.

; PHP's built-in default is text/html

default_mimetype = "text/html"

;default_charset = "iso-8859-1"

; Always populate the $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA variable.

;always_populate_raw_post_data = On

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Paths and Directories ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; UNIX: "/path1:/path2"

;include_path = ".:/php/includes"

; Windows: "\path1;\path2"

;include_path = ".;c:\php\includes"

; The root of the PHP pages, used only if nonempty.

; if PHP was not compiled with FORCE_REDIRECT, you SHOULD set doc_root

; if you are running php as a CGI under any web server (other than IIS)

; see documentation for security issues.  The alternate is to use the

; cgi.force_redirect configuration below

doc_root =

; The directory under which PHP opens the script using /~username used only

; if nonempty.

user_dir =

; Directory in which the loadable extensions (modules) reside.

extension_dir ="C:\PHP\ext"

; Whether or not to enable the dl() function.  The dl() function does NOT work

; properly in multithreaded servers, such as IIS or Zeus, and is automatically

; disabled on them.

enable_dl = On

; cgi.force_redirect is necessary to provide security running PHP as a CGI under

; most web servers.  Left undefined, PHP turns this on by default.  You can

; turn it off here AT YOUR OWN RISK

; **You CAN safely turn this off for IIS, in fact, you MUST.**

; cgi.force_redirect = 1

; if cgi.nph is enabled it will force cgi to always sent Status: 200 with

; every request.

; cgi.nph = 1

; if cgi.force_redirect is turned on, and you are not running under Apache or Netscape

; (iPlanet) web servers, you MAY need to set an environment variable name that PHP

; will look for to know it is OK to continue execution.  Setting this variable MAY

; cause security issues, KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING FIRST.

; cgi.redirect_status_env = ;

; cgi.fix_pathinfo provides *real* PATH_INFO/PATH_TRANSLATED support for CGI.  PHP's

; previous behaviour was to set PATH_TRANSLATED to SCRIPT_FILENAME, and to not grok

; what PATH_INFO is.  For more information on PATH_INFO, see the cgi specs.  Setting

; this to 1 will cause PHP CGI to fix it's paths to conform to the spec.  A setting

; of zero causes PHP to behave as before.  Default is 1.  You should fix your scripts

; to use SCRIPT_FILENAME rather than PATH_TRANSLATED.

; cgi.fix_pathinfo=1

; FastCGI under IIS (on WINNT based OS) supports the ability to impersonate

; security tokens of the calling client.  This allows IIS to define the

; security context that the request runs under.  mod_fastcgi under Apache

; does not currently support this feature (03/17/2002)

; Set to 1 if running under IIS.  Default is zero.

; fastcgi.impersonate = 1;

; Disable logging through FastCGI connection

; fastcgi.logging = 0

; cgi.rfc2616_headers configuration option tells PHP what type of headers to

; use when sending HTTP response code. If it's set 0 PHP sends Status: header that

; is supported by Apache. When this option is set to 1 PHP will send

; RFC2616 compliant header.

; Default is zero.

;cgi.rfc2616_headers = 0

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; File Uploads ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Whether to allow HTTP file uploads.

file_uploads = On

; Temporary directory for HTTP uploaded files (will use system default if not

; specified).

;upload_tmp_dir =

; Maximum allowed size for uploaded files.

upload_max_filesize = 2M

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Fopen wrappers ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Whether to allow the treatment of URLs (like http:// or ftp://) as files.

allow_url_fopen = On

; Whether to allow include/require to open URLs (like http:// or ftp://) as files.

allow_url_include = Off

; Define the anonymous ftp password (your email address)

;from="john@doe.com"

; Define the User-Agent string

; user_agent="PHP"

; Default timeout for socket based streams (seconds)

default_socket_timeout = 60

upload_tmp_dir="C:\WINDOWS\Temp"

session.save_path="C:\WINDOWS\Temp"

; If your scripts have to deal with files from Macintosh systems,

; or you are running on a Mac and need to deal with files from

; unix or win32 systems, setting this flag will cause PHP to

; automatically detect the EOL character in those files so that

; fgets() and file() will work regardless of the source of the file.

; auto_detect_line_endings = Off

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Dynamic Extensions ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; If you wish to have an extension loaded automatically, use the following

; syntax:

;   extension=modulename.extension

; For example, on Windows:

;   extension=msql.dll

; ... or under UNIX:

;   extension=msql.so

; Note that it should be the name of the module only; no directory information

; needs to go here.  Specify the location of the extension with the

; extension_dir directive above.

; Windows Extensions

; Note that ODBC support is built in, so no dll is needed for it.

; Note that many DLL files are located in the extensions/ (PHP 4) ext/ (PHP 5)

; extension folders as well as the separate PECL DLL download (PHP 5).

; Be sure to appropriately set the extension_dir directive.

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

; Module Settings ;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

[Date]

; Defines the default timezone used by the date functions

;date.timezone =

;date.default_latitude = 31.7667

;date.default_longitude = 35.2333

;date.sunrise_zenith = 90.583333

;date.sunset_zenith = 90.583333

[filter]

;filter.default = unsafe_raw

;filter.default_flags =

[iconv]

;iconv.input_encoding = ISO-8859-1

;iconv.internal_encoding = ISO-8859-1

;iconv.output_encoding = ISO-8859-1

[sqlite]

;sqlite.assoc_case = 0

[Pcre]

;PCRE library backtracking limit.

;pcre.backtrack_limit=100000

;PCRE library recursion limit. 

;Please note that if you set this value to a high number you may consume all 

;the available process stack and eventually crash PHP (due to reaching the 

;stack size limit imposed by the Operating System).

;pcre.recursion_limit=100000

[Syslog]

; Whether or not to define the various syslog variables (e.g. $LOG_PID,

; $LOG_CRON, etc.).  Turning it off is a good idea performance-wise.  In

; runtime, you can define these variables by calling define_syslog_variables().

define_syslog_variables  = Off

[mail function]

; For Win32 only.

SMTP = localhost

smtp_port = 25

; For Win32 only.

;sendmail_from = me@example.com

; For Unix only.  You may supply arguments as well (default: "sendmail -t -i").

;sendmail_path =

; Force the addition of the specified parameters to be passed as extra parameters

; to the sendmail binary. These parameters will always replace the value of

; the 5th parameter to mail(), even in safe mode.

;mail.force_extra_parameters =

[SQL]

sql.safe_mode = Off

[ODBC]

;odbc.default_db    =  Not yet implemented

;odbc.default_user  =  Not yet implemented

;odbc.default_pw    =  Not yet implemented

; Allow or prevent persistent links.

odbc.allow_persistent = On

; Check that a connection is still valid before reuse.

odbc.check_persistent = On

; Maximum number of persistent links.  -1 means no limit.

odbc.max_persistent = -1

; Maximum number of links (persistent + non-persistent).  -1 means no limit.

odbc.max_links = -1

; Handling of LONG fields.  Returns number of bytes to variables.  0 means

; passthru.

odbc.defaultlrl = 4096

; Handling of binary data.  0 means passthru, 1 return as is, 2 convert to char.

; See the documentation on odbc_binmode and odbc_longreadlen for an explanation

; of uodbc.defaultlrl and uodbc.defaultbinmode

odbc.defaultbinmode = 1

[MySQL]

; Allow or prevent persistent links.

mysql.allow_persistent = On

; Maximum number of persistent links.  -1 means no limit.

mysql.max_persistent = -1

; Maximum number of links (persistent + non-persistent).  -1 means no limit.

mysql.max_links = -1

; Default port number for mysql_connect().  If unset, mysql_connect() will use

; the $MYSQL_TCP_PORT or the mysql-tcp entry in /etc/services or the

; compile-time value defined MYSQL_PORT (in that order).  Win32 will only look

; at MYSQL_PORT.

mysql.default_port =

; Default socket name for local MySQL connects.  If empty, uses the built-in

; MySQL defaults.

mysql.default_socket =

; Default host for mysql_connect() (doesn't apply in safe mode).

mysql.default_host =

; Default user for mysql_connect() (doesn't apply in safe mode).

mysql.default_user =

; Default password for mysql_connect() (doesn't apply in safe mode).

; Note that this is generally a *bad* idea to store passwords in this file.

; *Any* user with PHP access can run 'echo get_cfg_var("mysql.default_password")

; and reveal this password!  And of course, any users with read access to this

; file will be able to reveal the password as well.

mysql.default_password =

; Maximum time (in seconds) for connect timeout. -1 means no limit

mysql.connect_timeout = 60

; Trace mode. When trace_mode is active (=On), warnings for table/index scans and

; SQL-Errors will be displayed.

mysql.trace_mode = Off

[MySQLi]

; Maximum number of links.  -1 means no limit.

mysqli.max_links = -1

; Default port number for mysqli_connect().  If unset, mysqli_connect() will use

; the $MYSQL_TCP_PORT or the mysql-tcp entry in /etc/services or the

; compile-time value defined MYSQL_PORT (in that order).  Win32 will only look

; at MYSQL_PORT.

mysqli.default_port = 3306

; Default socket name for local MySQL connects.  If empty, uses the built-in

; MySQL defaults.

mysqli.default_socket =

; Default host for mysql_connect() (doesn't apply in safe mode).

mysqli.default_host =

; Default user for mysql_connect() (doesn't apply in safe mode).

mysqli.default_user =

; Default password for mysqli_connect() (doesn't apply in safe mode).

; Note that this is generally a *bad* idea to store passwords in this file.

; *Any* user with PHP access can run 'echo get_cfg_var("mysqli.default_pw")

; and reveal this password!  And of course, any users with read access to this

; file will be able to reveal the password as well.

mysqli.default_pw =

; Allow or prevent reconnect

mysqli.reconnect = Off

[mSQL]

; Allow or prevent persistent links.

msql.allow_persistent = On

; Maximum number of persistent links.  -1 means no limit.

msql.max_persistent = -1

; Maximum number of links (persistent+non persistent).  -1 means no limit.

msql.max_links = -1

[OCI8]

; enables privileged connections using external credentials (OCI_SYSOPER, OCI_SYSDBA)

;oci8.privileged_connect = Off

; Connection: The maximum number of persistent OCI8 connections per

; process. Using -1 means no limit.

;oci8.max_persistent = -1

; Connection: The maximum number of seconds a process is allowed to

; maintain an idle persistent connection. Using -1 means idle

; persistent connections will be maintained forever.

;oci8.persistent_timeout = -1

; Connection: The number of seconds that must pass before issuing a

; ping during oci_pconnect() to check the connection validity. When

; set to 0, each oci_pconnect() will cause a ping. Using -1 disables

; pings completely.

;oci8.ping_interval = 60

; Tuning: This option enables statement caching, and specifies how

; many statements to cache. Using 0 disables statement caching.

;oci8.statement_cache_size = 20

; Tuning: Enables statement prefetching and sets the default number of

; rows that will be fetched automatically after statement execution.

;oci8.default_prefetch = 10

; Compatibility. Using On means oci_close() will not close

; oci_connect() and oci_new_connect() connections.

;oci8.old_oci_close_semantics = Off

[PostgresSQL]

; Allow or prevent persistent links.

pgsql.allow_persistent = On

; Detect broken persistent links always with pg_pconnect().

; Auto reset feature requires a little overheads.

pgsql.auto_reset_persistent = Off

; Maximum number of persistent links.  -1 means no limit.

pgsql.max_persistent = -1

; Maximum number of links (persistent+non persistent).  -1 means no limit.

pgsql.max_links = -1

; Ignore PostgreSQL backends Notice message or not.

; Notice message logging require a little overheads.

pgsql.ignore_notice = 0

; Log PostgreSQL backends Noitce message or not.

; Unless pgsql.ignore_notice=0, module cannot log notice message.

pgsql.log_notice = 0

[Sybase]

; Allow or prevent persistent links.

sybase.allow_persistent = On

; Maximum number of persistent links.  -1 means no limit.

sybase.max_persistent = -1

; Maximum number of links (persistent + non-persistent).  -1 means no limit.

sybase.max_links = -1

;sybase.interface_file = "/usr/sybase/interfaces"

; Minimum error severity to display.

sybase.min_error_severity = 10

; Minimum message severity to display.

sybase.min_message_severity = 10

; Compatibility mode with old versions of PHP 3.0.

; If on, this will cause PHP to automatically assign types to results according

; to their Sybase type, instead of treating them all as strings.  This

; compatibility mode will probably not stay around forever, so try applying

; whatever necessary changes to your code, and turn it off.

sybase.compatability_mode = Off

[Sybase-CT]

; Allow or prevent persistent links.

sybct.allow_persistent = On

; Maximum number of persistent links.  -1 means no limit.

sybct.max_persistent = -1

; Maximum number of links (persistent + non-persistent).  -1 means no limit.

sybct.max_links = -1

; Minimum server message severity to display.

sybct.min_server_severity = 10

; Minimum client message severity to display.

sybct.min_client_severity = 10

[bcmath]

; Number of decimal digits for all bcmath functions.

bcmath.scale = 0

[browscap]

;browscap = extra/browscap.ini

[Informix]

; Default host for ifx_connect() (doesn't apply in safe mode).

ifx.default_host =

; Default user for ifx_connect() (doesn't apply in safe mode).

ifx.default_user =

; Default password for ifx_connect() (doesn't apply in safe mode).

ifx.default_password =

; Allow or prevent persistent links.

ifx.allow_persistent = On

; Maximum number of persistent links.  -1 means no limit.

ifx.max_persistent = -1

; Maximum number of links (persistent + non-persistent).  -1 means no limit.

ifx.max_links = -1

; If on, select statements return the contents of a text blob instead of its id.

ifx.textasvarchar = 0

; If on, select statements return the contents of a byte blob instead of its id.

ifx.byteasvarchar = 0

; Trailing blanks are stripped from fixed-length char columns.  May help the

; life of Informix SE users.

ifx.charasvarchar = 0

; If on, the contents of text and byte blobs are dumped to a file instead of

; keeping them in memory.

ifx.blobinfile = 0

; NULL's are returned as empty strings, unless this is set to 1.  In that case,

; NULL's are returned as string 'NULL'.

ifx.nullformat = 0

[Session]

; Handler used to store/retrieve data.

session.save_handler = files

; Argument passed to save_handler.  In the case of files, this is the path

; where data files are stored. Note: Windows users have to change this

; variable in order to use PHP's session functions.

; As of PHP 4.0.1, you can define the path as:

;     session.save_path = "N;/path"

; where N is an integer.  Instead of storing all the session files in

; /path, what this will do is use subdirectories N-levels deep, and

; store the session data in those directories.  This is useful if you

; or your OS have problems with lots of files in one directory, and is

; a more efficient layout for servers that handle lots of sessions.

; NOTE 1: PHP will not create this directory structure automatically.

;         You can use the script in the ext/session dir for that purpose.

; NOTE 2: See the section on garbage collection below if you choose to

;         use subdirectories for session storage

; The file storage module creates files using mode 600 by default.

; You can change that by using

;     session.save_path = "N;MODE;/path"

; where MODE is the octal representation of the mode. Note that this

; does not overwrite the process's umask.

;session.save_path = "/tmp"

; Whether to use cookies.

session.use_cookies = 1

;session.cookie_secure =

; This option enables administrators to make their users invulnerable to

; attacks which involve passing session ids in URLs; defaults to 0.

; session.use_only_cookies = 1

; Name of the session (used as cookie name).

session.name = PHPSESSID

; Initialize session on request startup.

session.auto_start = 0

; Lifetime in seconds of cookie or, if 0, until browser is restarted.

session.cookie_lifetime = 0

; The path for which the cookie is valid.

session.cookie_path = /

; The domain for which the cookie is valid.

session.cookie_domain =

; Whether or not to add the httpOnly flag to the cookie, which makes it inaccessible to browser scripting languages such as JavaScript.

session.cookie_httponly = 

; Handler used to serialize data.  php is the standard serializer of PHP.

session.serialize_handler = php

; Define the probability that the 'garbage collection' process is started

; on every session initialization.

; The probability is calculated by using gc_probability/gc_divisor,

; e.g. 1/100 means there is a 1% chance that the GC process starts

; on each request.

session.gc_probability = 1

session.gc_divisor     = 1000

; After this number of seconds, stored data will be seen as 'garbage' and

; cleaned up by the garbage collection process.

session.gc_maxlifetime = 1440

; NOTE: If you are using the subdirectory option for storing session files

;       (see session.save_path above), then garbage collection does *not*

;       happen automatically.  You will need to do your own garbage

;       collection through a shell script, cron entry, or some other method.

;       For example, the following script would is the equivalent of

;       setting session.gc_maxlifetime to 1440 (1440 seconds = 24 minutes):

;          cd /path/to/sessions; find -cmin +24 | xargs rm

; PHP 4.2 and less have an undocumented feature/bug that allows you to

; to initialize a session variable in the global scope, albeit register_globals

; is disabled.  PHP 4.3 and later will warn you, if this feature is used.

; You can disable the feature and the warning separately. At this time,

; the warning is only displayed, if bug_compat_42 is enable

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