| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124 | <?phpreturn array(	/*	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	| Database Query Logging	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	|	| By default, the SQL, bindings, and execution time are logged in an array	| for you to review. They can be retrieved via the DB::profile() method.	| However, in some situations, you may want to disable logging for	| ultra high-volume database work. You can do so here.	|	*/	'profile' => true,	/*	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	| PDO Fetch Style	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	|	| By default, database results will be returned as instances of the PHP	| stdClass object; however, you may wish to retrieve records as arrays	| instead of objects. Here you can control the PDO fetch style of the	| database queries run by your application.	|	*/	'fetch' => PDO::FETCH_CLASS,	/*	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	| Default Database Connection	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	|	| The name of your default database connection. This connection will used	| as the default for all database operations unless a different name is	| given when performing said operation. This connection name should be	| listed in the array of connections below.	|	*/	'default' => 'mysql',	/*	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	| Database Connections	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	|	| All of the database connections used by your application. Many of your	| applications will no doubt only use one connection; however, you have	| the freedom to specify as many connections as you can handle.	|	| All database work in Laravel is done through the PHP's PDO facilities,	| so make sure you have the PDO drivers for your particlar database of	| choice installed on your machine.	|	*/	'connections' => array(		'sqlite' => array(			'driver'   => 'sqlite',			'database' => 'application',			'prefix'   => '',		),		'mysql' => array(			'driver'   => 'mysql',			'host'     => 'localhost',			'database' => 'database',			'username' => 'root',			'password' => '',			'charset'  => 'utf8',			'prefix'   => '',		),		'pgsql' => array(			'driver'   => 'pgsql',			'host'     => 'localhost',			'database' => 'database',			'username' => 'root',			'password' => '',			'charset'  => 'utf8',			'prefix'   => '',		),		'sqlsrv' => array(			'driver'   => 'sqlsrv',			'host'     => 'localhost',			'database' => 'database',			'username' => 'root',			'password' => '',			'prefix'   => '',		),	),	/*	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	| Redis Databases	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	|	| Redis is an open source, fast, and advanced key-value store. However, it	| provides a richer set of commands than a typical key-value store such as	| APC or memcached. All the cool kids are using it.	|	| To get the scoop on Redis, check out: http://redis.io	|	*/	'redis' => array(		'default' => array(			'host'     => '127.0.0.1',			'port'     => 6379,			'database' => 0		),	),);
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