aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/guides/source/configuring.textile
blob: d69235a9ab258ad27b8266a5081ecc45a441c943 (plain) (blame)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
h2. Configuring Rails Applications

This guide covers the configuration and initialization features available to Rails applications. By referring to this guide, you will be able to:

* Adjust the behavior of your Rails applications
* Add additional code to be run at application start time

endprologue.

h3. Locations for Initialization Code

Rails offers four standard spots to place initialization code:

* +config/application.rb+
* Environment-specific configuration files
* Initializers
* After-initializers

h3. Running Code Before Rails

In the rare event that your application needs to run some code before Rails itself is loaded, put it above the call to +require 'rails/all'+ in +config/application.rb+.

h3. Configuring Rails Components

In general, the work of configuring Rails means configuring the components of Rails, as well as configuring Rails itself. The configuration file +config/application.rb+ and environment-specific configuration files (such as +config/environments/production.rb+) allow you to specify the various settings that you want to pass down to all of the components.

For example, the default +config/application.rb+ file includes this setting:

<ruby>
config.filter_parameters += [:password]
</ruby>

This is a setting for Rails itself. If you want to pass settings to individual Rails components, you can do so via the same +config+ object in +config/application.rb+:

<ruby>
config.active_record.observers = [:hotel_observer, :review_observer]
</ruby>

Rails will use that particular setting to configure Active Record.

h4. Rails General Configuration

These configuration methods are to be called on a +Rails::Railtie+ object, such as a subclass of +Rails::Engine+ or +Rails::Application+.

* +config.after_initialize+ takes a block which will be run _after_ Rails has finished initializing the application. That includes the initialization of the framework itself, engines, and all the application's initializers in +config/initializers+. Note that this block _will_ be run for rake tasks. Useful for configuring values set up by other initializers:

<ruby>
config.after_initialize do
  ActionView::Base.sanitized_allowed_tags.delete 'div'
end
</ruby>

* +config.allow_concurrency+ should be true to allow concurrent (threadsafe) action processing. False by default. You probably don't want to call this one directly, though, because a series of other adjustments need to be made for threadsafe mode to work properly. Can also be enabled with +threadsafe!+.

* +config.asset_host+ sets the host for the assets. Useful when CDNs are used for hosting assets, or when you want to work around the concurrency constraints builtin in browsers using different domain aliases. Shorter version of +config.action_controller.asset_host+.

* +config.asset_path+ lets you decorate asset paths. This can be a callable, a string, or be +nil+ which is the default. For example, the normal path for +blog.js+ would be +/javascripts/blog.js+, let that absolute path be +path+. If +config.asset_path+ is a callable, Rails calls it when generating asset paths passing +path+ as argument. If +config.asset_path+ is a string, it is expected to be a +sprintf+ format string with a +%s+ where +path+ will get inserted. In either case, Rails outputs the decorated path. Shorter version of +config.action_controller.asset_path+.

<ruby>
config.asset_path = proc { |path| "/blog/public#{path}" }
</ruby>

NOTE. The +config.asset_path+ configuration is ignored if the asset pipeline is enabled, which is the default.

* +config.autoload_once_paths+ accepts an array of paths from which Rails will autoload constants that won't be wiped per request. Relevant if +config.cache_classes+ is false, which is the case in development mode by default. Otherwise, all autoloading happens only once. All elements of this array must also be in +autoload_paths+. Default is an empty array.

* +config.autoload_paths+ accepts an array of paths from which Rails will autoload constants. Default is all directories under +app+.

* +config.cache_classes+ controls whether or not application classes and modules should be reloaded on each request. Defaults to false in development mode, and true in test and production modes. Can also be enabled with +threadsafe!+.

* +config.action_view.cache_template_loading+ controls whether or not templates should be reloaded on each request. Defaults to whatever is set for +config.cache_classes+.

* +config.cache_store+ configures which cache store to use for Rails caching. Options include one of the symbols +:memory_store+, +:file_store+, +:mem_cache_store+, +:null_store+, or an object that implements the cache API. Defaults to +:file_store+ if the directory +tmp/cache+ exists, and to +:memory_store+ otherwise.

* +config.colorize_logging+ specifies whether or not to use ANSI color codes when logging information. Defaults to true.

* +config.consider_all_requests_local+ is a flag. If true then any error will cause detailed debugging information to be dumped in the HTTP response, and the +Rails::Info+ controller will show the application runtime context in +/rails/info/properties+. True by default in development and test environments, and false in production mode. For finer-grained control, set this to false and implement +local_request?+ in controllers to specify which requests should provide debugging information on errors.

* +config.console+ allows you to set class that will be used as console you run +rails console+. It's best to run it in +console+ block:

<ruby>
console do
  # this block is called only when running console,
  # so we can safely require pry here
  require "pry"
  config.console = Pry
end
</ruby>

* +config.dependency_loading+ is a flag that allows you to disable constant autoloading setting it to false. It only has effect if +config.cache_classes+ is true, which it is by default in production mode. This flag is set to false by +config.threadsafe!+.

* +config.eager_load_paths+ accepts an array of paths from which Rails will eager load on boot if cache classes is enabled. Defaults to every folder in the +app+ directory of the application.

* +config.encoding+ sets up the application-wide encoding. Defaults to UTF-8.

* +config.exceptions_app+ sets the exceptions application invoked by the ShowException middleware when an exception happens. Defaults to +ActionDispatch::PublicExceptions.new(Rails.public_path)+.

* +config.file_watcher+ the class used to detect file updates in the filesystem when +config.reload_classes_only_on_change+ is true. Must conform to +ActiveSupport::FileUpdateChecker+ API.

* +config.filter_parameters+ used for filtering out the parameters that you don't want shown in the logs, such as passwords or credit card numbers.

* +config.force_ssl+ forces all requests to be under HTTPS protocol by using +ActionDispatch::SSL+ middleware.

* +config.log_level+ defines the verbosity of the Rails logger. This option defaults to +:debug+ for all modes except production, where it defaults to +:info+.

* +config.log_tags+ accepts a list of methods that respond to +request+ object. This makes it easy to tag log lines with debug information like subdomain and request id -- both very helpful in debugging multi-user production applications.

* +config.logger+ accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby +Logger+ class. Defaults to an instance of +ActiveSupport::BufferedLogger+, with auto flushing off in production mode.

* +config.middleware+ allows you to configure the application's middleware. This is covered in depth in the "Configuring Middleware":#configuring-middleware section below.

* +config.preload_frameworks+ enables or disables preloading all frameworks at startup. Enabled by +config.threadsafe!+. Defaults to +nil+, so is disabled.

* +config.queue+ configures a different queue implementation for the application. Defaults to +Rails::Queueing::Queue+. Note that, if the default queue is changed, the default +queue_consumer+ is not going to be initialized, it is up to the new queue implementation to handle starting and shutting down its own consumer(s).

* +config.queue_consumer+ configures a different consumer implementation for the default queue. Defaults to +Rails::Queueing::ThreadedConsumer+.

* +config.reload_classes_only_on_change+ enables or disables reloading of classes only when tracked files change. By default tracks everything on autoload paths and is set to true. If +config.cache_classes+ is true, this option is ignored.

* +config.secret_token+ used for specifying a key which allows sessions for the application to be verified against a known secure key to prevent tampering. Applications get +config.secret_token+ initialized to a random key in +config/initializers/secret_token.rb+.

* +config.serve_static_assets+ configures Rails itself to serve static assets. Defaults to true, but in the production environment is turned off as the server software (e.g. Nginx or Apache) used to run the application should serve static assets instead. Unlike the default setting set this to true when running (absolutely not recommended!) or testing your app in production mode using WEBrick. Otherwise you won´t be able use page caching and requests for files that exist regularly under the public directory will anyway hit your Rails app.

* +config.session_store+ is usually set up in +config/initializers/session_store.rb+ and specifies what class to use to store the session. Possible values are +:cookie_store+ which is the default, +:mem_cache_store+, and +:disabled+. The last one tells Rails not to deal with sessions. Custom session stores can also be specified:

<ruby>
config.session_store :my_custom_store
</ruby>

This custom store must be defined as +ActionDispatch::Session::MyCustomStore+. In addition to symbols, they can also be objects implementing a certain API, like +ActiveRecord::SessionStore+, in which case no special namespace is required.

* +config.threadsafe!+ enables +allow_concurrency+, +cache_classes+, +dependency_loading+ and +preload_frameworks+ to make the application threadsafe.

WARNING: Threadsafe operation is incompatible with the normal workings of development mode Rails. In particular, automatic dependency loading and class reloading are automatically disabled when you call +config.threadsafe!+.

* +config.time_zone+ sets the default time zone for the application and enables time zone awareness for Active Record.

* +config.whiny_nils+ enables or disables warnings when a certain set of methods are invoked on +nil+ and it does not respond to them. Defaults to true in development and test environments.

h4. Configuring Assets

Rails 3.1, by default, is set up to use the +sprockets+ gem to manage assets within an application. This gem concatenates and compresses assets in order to make serving them much less painful.

* +config.assets.enabled+ a flag that controls whether the asset pipeline is enabled. It is explicitly initialized in +config/application.rb+.

* +config.assets.compress+ a flag that enables the compression of compiled assets. It is explicitly set to true in +config/production.rb+.

* +config.assets.css_compressor+ defines the CSS compressor to use. It is set by default by +sass-rails+. The unique alternative value at the moment is +:yui+, which uses the +yui-compressor+ gem.

* +config.assets.js_compressor+ defines the JavaScript compressor to use. Possible values are +:closure+, +:uglifier+ and +:yui+ which require the use of the +closure-compiler+, +uglifier+ or +yui-compressor+ gems respectively.

* +config.assets.paths+ contains the paths which are used to look for assets. Appending paths to this configuration option will cause those paths to be used in the search for assets.

* +config.assets.precompile+ allows you to specify additional assets (other than +application.css+ and +application.js+) which are to be precompiled when +rake assets:precompile+ is run.

* +config.assets.prefix+ defines the prefix where assets are served from. Defaults to +/assets+.

* +config.assets.digest+ enables the use of MD5 fingerprints in asset names. Set to +true+ by default in +production.rb+.

* +config.assets.debug+ disables the concatenation and compression of assets. Set to +false+ by default in +development.rb+.

* +config.assets.manifest+ defines the full path to be used for the asset precompiler's manifest file. Defaults to using +config.assets.prefix+.

* +config.assets.cache_store+ defines the cache store that Sprockets will use. The default is the Rails file store.

* +config.assets.version+ is an option string that is used in MD5 hash generation. This can be changed to force all files to be recompiled.

* +config.assets.compile+ is a boolean that can be used to turn on live Sprockets compilation in production.

* +config.assets.logger+ accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby +Logger+ class. Defaults to the same configured at +config.logger+. Setting +config.assets.logger+ to false will turn off served assets logging.

h4. Configuring Generators

Rails 3 allows you to alter what generators are used with the +config.generators+ method. This method takes a block:

<ruby>
config.generators do |g|
  g.orm :active_record
  g.test_framework :test_unit
end
</ruby>

The full set of methods that can be used in this block are as follows:

* +assets+ allows to create assets on generating a scaffold. Defaults to +true+.
* +force_plural+ allows pluralized model names. Defaults to +false+.
* +helper+ defines whether or not to generate helpers. Defaults to +true+.
* +integration_tool+ defines which integration tool to use. Defaults to +nil+.
* +javascripts+ turns on the hook for javascripts in generators. Used in Rails for when the +scaffold+ generator is run. Defaults to +true+.
* +javascript_engine+ configures the engine to be used (for eg. coffee) when generating assets. Defaults to +nil+.
* +orm+ defines which orm to use. Defaults to +false+ and will use Active Record by default.
* +performance_tool+ defines which performance tool to use. Defaults to +nil+.
* +resource_controller+ defines which generator to use for generating a controller when using +rails generate resource+. Defaults to +:controller+.
* +scaffold_controller+ different from +resource_controller+, defines which generator to use for generating a _scaffolded_ controller when using +rails generate scaffold+. Defaults to +:scaffold_controller+.
* +stylesheets+ turns on the hook for stylesheets in generators. Used in Rails for when the +scaffold+ generator is run, but this hook can be used in other generates as well. Defaults to +true+.
* +stylesheet_engine+ configures the stylesheet engine (for eg. sass) to be used when generating assets. Defaults to +:css+.
* +test_framework+ defines which test framework to use. Defaults to +false+ and will use Test::Unit by default.
* +template_engine+ defines which template engine to use, such as ERB or Haml. Defaults to +:erb+.

h4. Configuring Middleware

Every Rails application comes with a standard set of middleware which it uses in this order in the development environment:

* +ActionDispatch::SSL+ forces every request to be under HTTPS protocol. Will be available if +config.force_ssl+ is set to +true+. Options passed to this can be configured by using +config.ssl_options+.
* +ActionDispatch::Static+ is used to serve static assets. Disabled if +config.serve_static_assets+ is +true+.
* +Rack::Lock+ wraps the app in mutex so it can only be called by a single thread at a time. Only enabled if +config.action_controller.allow_concurrency+ is set to +false+, which it is by default.
* +ActiveSupport::Cache::Strategy::LocalCache+ serves as a basic memory backed cache. This cache is not thread safe and is intended only for serving as a temporary memory cache for a single thread.
* +Rack::Runtime+ sets an +X-Runtime+ header, containing the time (in seconds) taken to execute the request.
* +Rails::Rack::Logger+ notifies the logs that the request has began. After request is complete, flushes all the logs.
* +ActionDispatch::ShowExceptions+ rescues any exception returned by the application and renders nice exception pages if the request is local or if +config.consider_all_requests_local+ is set to +true+. If +config.action_dispatch.show_exceptions+ is set to +false+, exceptions will be raised regardless.
* +ActionDispatch::RequestId+ makes a unique X-Request-Id header available to the response and enables the +ActionDispatch::Request#uuid+ method.
* +ActionDispatch::RemoteIp+ checks for IP spoofing attacks. Configurable with the +config.action_dispatch.ip_spoofing_check+ and +config.action_dispatch.trusted_proxies+ settings.
* +Rack::Sendfile+ intercepts responses whose body is being served from a file and replaces it with a server specific X-Sendfile header. Configurable with +config.action_dispatch.x_sendfile_header+.
* +ActionDispatch::Callbacks+ runs the prepare callbacks before serving the request.
* +ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::ConnectionManagement+ cleans active connections after each request, unless the +rack.test+ key in the request environment is set to +true+.
* +ActiveRecord::QueryCache+ caches all SELECT queries generated in a request. If any INSERT or UPDATE takes place then the cache is cleaned.
* +ActionDispatch::Cookies+ sets cookies for the request.
* +ActionDispatch::Session::CookieStore+ is responsible for storing the session in cookies. An alternate middleware can be used for this by changing the +config.action_controller.session_store+ to an alternate value. Additionally, options passed to this can be configured by using +config.action_controller.session_options+.
* +ActionDispatch::Flash+ sets up the +flash+ keys. Only available if +config.action_controller.session_store+ is set to a value.
* +ActionDispatch::ParamsParser+ parses out parameters from the request into +params+.
* +Rack::MethodOverride+ allows the method to be overridden if +params[:_method]+ is set. This is the middleware which supports the PATCH, PUT, and DELETE HTTP method types.
* +ActionDispatch::Head+ converts HEAD requests to GET requests and serves them as so.
* +ActionDispatch::BestStandardsSupport+ enables "best standards support" so that IE8 renders some elements correctly.

Besides these usual middleware, you can add your own by using the +config.middleware.use+ method:

<ruby>
config.middleware.use Magical::Unicorns
</ruby>

This will put the +Magical::Unicorns+ middleware on the end of the stack. You can use +insert_before+ if you wish to add a middleware before another.

<ruby>
config.middleware.insert_before ActionDispatch::Head, Magical::Unicorns
</ruby>

There's also +insert_after+ which will insert a middleware after another:

<ruby>
config.middleware.insert_after ActionDispatch::Head, Magical::Unicorns
</ruby>

Middlewares can also be completely swapped out and replaced with others:

<ruby>
config.middleware.swap ActionDispatch::BestStandardsSupport, Magical::Unicorns
</ruby>

They can also be removed from the stack completely:

<ruby>
config.middleware.delete ActionDispatch::BestStandardsSupport
</ruby>

h4. Configuring i18n

* +config.i18n.default_locale+ sets the default locale of an application used for i18n. Defaults to +:en+.

* +config.i18n.load_path+ sets the path Rails uses to look for locale files. Defaults to +config/locales/*.{yml,rb}+.

h4. Configuring Active Record

<tt>config.active_record</tt> includes a variety of configuration options:

* +config.active_record.logger+ accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class, which is then passed on to any new database connections made. You can retrieve this logger by calling +logger+ on either an Active Record model class or an Active Record model instance. Set to +nil+ to disable logging.

* +config.active_record.primary_key_prefix_type+ lets you adjust the naming for primary key columns. By default, Rails assumes that primary key columns are named +id+ (and this configuration option doesn't need to be set.) There are two other choices:
** +:table_name+ would make the primary key for the Customer class +customerid+
** +:table_name_with_underscore+ would make the primary key for the Customer class +customer_id+

* +config.active_record.table_name_prefix+ lets you set a global string to be prepended to table names. If you set this to +northwest_+, then the Customer class will look for +northwest_customers+ as its table. The default is an empty string.

* +config.active_record.table_name_suffix+ lets you set a global string to be appended to table names. If you set this to +_northwest+, then the Customer class will look for +customers_northwest+ as its table. The default is an empty string.

* +config.active_record.pluralize_table_names+ specifies whether Rails will look for singular or plural table names in the database. If set to true (the default), then the Customer class will use the +customers+ table. If set to false, then the Customer class will use the +customer+ table.

* +config.active_record.default_timezone+ determines whether to use +Time.local+ (if set to +:local+) or +Time.utc+ (if set to +:utc+) when pulling dates and times from the database. The default is +:utc+ for Rails, although Active Record defaults to +:local+ when used outside of Rails.

* +config.active_record.schema_format+ controls the format for dumping the database schema to a file. The options are +:ruby+ (the default) for a database-independent version that depends on migrations, or +:sql+ for a set of (potentially database-dependent) SQL statements.

* +config.active_record.timestamped_migrations+ controls whether migrations are numbered with serial integers or with timestamps. The default is true, to use timestamps, which are preferred if there are multiple developers working on the same application.

* +config.active_record.lock_optimistically+ controls whether Active Record will use optimistic locking and is true by default.

* +config.active_record.whitelist_attributes+ will create an empty whitelist of attributes available for mass-assignment security for all models in your app.

* +config.active_record.auto_explain_threshold_in_seconds+ configures the threshold for automatic EXPLAINs (+nil+ disables this feature). Queries exceeding the threshold get their query plan logged. Default is 0.5 in development mode.

* +config.active_record.dependent_restrict_raises+ will control the behavior when an object with a <tt>:dependent => :restrict</tt> association is deleted. Setting this to false will prevent +DeleteRestrictionError+ from being raised and instead will add an error on the model object. Defaults to false in the development mode.

* +config.active_record.mass_assignment_sanitizer+ will determine the strictness of the mass assignment sanitization within Rails. Defaults to +:strict+. In this mode, mass assigning any non-+attr_accessible+ attribute in a +create+ or +update_attributes+ call will raise an exception. Setting this option to +:logger+ will only print to the log file when an attribute is being assigned and will not raise an exception.

The MySQL adapter adds one additional configuration option:

* +ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::MysqlAdapter.emulate_booleans+ controls whether Active Record will consider all +tinyint(1)+ columns in a MySQL database to be booleans and is true by default.

The schema dumper adds one additional configuration option:

* +ActiveRecord::SchemaDumper.ignore_tables+ accepts an array of tables that should _not_ be included in any generated schema file. This setting is ignored unless +config.active_record.schema_format == :ruby+.

h4. Configuring Action Controller

<tt>config.action_controller</tt> includes a number of configuration settings:

* +config.action_controller.asset_host+ sets the host for the assets. Useful when CDNs are used for hosting assets rather than the application server itself.

* +config.action_controller.asset_path+ takes a block which configures where assets can be found. Shorter version of +config.action_controller.asset_path+.

* +config.action_controller.page_cache_directory+ should be the document root for the web server and is set using <tt>Base.page_cache_directory = "/document/root"</tt>. For Rails, this directory has already been set to +Rails.public_path+ (which is usually set to <tt>Rails.root + "/public"</tt>). Changing this setting can be useful to avoid naming conflicts with files in <tt>public/</tt>, but doing so will likely require configuring your web server to look in the new location for cached files.

* +config.action_controller.page_cache_extension+ configures the extension used for cached pages saved to +page_cache_directory+. Defaults to +.html+.

* +config.action_controller.perform_caching+ configures whether the application should perform caching or not. Set to false in development mode, true in production.

* +config.action_controller.default_charset+ specifies the default character set for all renders. The default is "utf-8".

* +config.action_controller.logger+ accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class, which is then used to log information from Action Controller. Set to +nil+ to disable logging.

* +config.action_controller.request_forgery_protection_token+ sets the token parameter name for RequestForgery. Calling +protect_from_forgery+ sets it to +:authenticity_token+ by default.

* +config.action_controller.allow_forgery_protection+ enables or disables CSRF protection. By default this is false in test mode and true in all other modes.

* +config.action_controller.relative_url_root+ can be used to tell Rails that you are deploying to a subdirectory. The default is +ENV['RAILS_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT']+.

The caching code adds two additional settings:

* +ActionController::Base.page_cache_directory+ sets the directory where Rails will create cached pages for your web server. The default is +Rails.public_path+ (which is usually set to <tt>Rails.root + "/public"</tt>).

* +ActionController::Base.page_cache_extension+ sets the extension to be used when generating pages for the cache (this is ignored if the incoming request already has an extension). The default is +.html+.

The Active Record session store can also be configured:

* +ActiveRecord::SessionStore::Session.table_name+ sets the name of the table used to store sessions. Defaults to +sessions+.

* +ActiveRecord::SessionStore::Session.primary_key+ sets the name of the ID column used in the sessions table. Defaults to +session_id+.

* +ActiveRecord::SessionStore::Session.data_column_name+ sets the name of the column which stores marshaled session data. Defaults to +data+.

h4. Configuring Action Dispatch

* +config.action_dispatch.session_store+ sets the name of the store for session data. The default is +:cookie_store+; other valid options include +:active_record_store+, +:mem_cache_store+ or the name of your own custom class.

* +config.action_dispatch.tld_length+ sets the TLD (top-level domain) length for the application. Defaults to +1+.

* +ActionDispatch::Callbacks.before+ takes a block of code to run before the request.

* +ActionDispatch::Callbacks.to_prepare+ takes a block to run after +ActionDispatch::Callbacks.before+, but before the request. Runs for every request in +development+ mode, but only once for +production+ or environments with +cache_classes+ set to +true+.

* +ActionDispatch::Callbacks.after+ takes a block of code to run after the request.

h4. Configuring Action View

<tt>config.action_view</tt> includes a small number of configuration settings:

* +config.action_view.field_error_proc+ provides an HTML generator for displaying errors that come from Active Record. The default is

<ruby>
Proc.new { |html_tag, instance| %Q(<div class="field_with_errors">#{html_tag}</div>).html_safe }
</ruby>

* +config.action_view.default_form_builder+ tells Rails which form builder to use by default. The default is +ActionView::Helpers::FormBuilder+. If you want your form builder class to be loaded after initialization (so it's reloaded on each request in development), you can pass it as a +String+

* +config.action_view.logger+ accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class, which is then used to log information from Action View. Set to +nil+ to disable logging.

* +config.action_view.erb_trim_mode+ gives the trim mode to be used by ERB. It defaults to +'-'+. See the "ERB documentation":http://www.ruby-doc.org/stdlib/libdoc/erb/rdoc/ for more information.

* +config.action_view.javascript_expansions+ is a hash containing expansions that can be used for the JavaScript include tag. By default, this is defined as:

<ruby>
config.action_view.javascript_expansions = { :defaults => %w(jquery jquery_ujs) }
</ruby>

However, you may add to this by defining others:

<ruby>
config.action_view.javascript_expansions[:prototype] = ['prototype', 'effects', 'dragdrop', 'controls']
</ruby>

And can reference in the view with the following code:

<ruby>
<%= javascript_include_tag :prototype %>
</ruby>

* +config.action_view.stylesheet_expansions+ works in much the same way as +javascript_expansions+, but has no default key. Keys defined for this hash can be referenced in the view like such:

<ruby>
<%= stylesheet_link_tag :special %>
</ruby>

* +config.action_view.cache_asset_ids+ With the cache enabled, the asset tag helper methods will make fewer expensive file system calls (the default implementation checks the file system timestamp). However this prevents you from modifying any asset files while the server is running.

* +config.action_view.embed_authenticity_token_in_remote_forms+ allows you to set the default behavior for +authenticity_token+ in forms with +:remote => true+. By default it's set to false, which means that remote forms will not include +authenticity_token+, which is helpful when you're fragment-caching the form. Remote forms get the authenticity from the +meta+ tag, so embedding is unnecessary unless you support browsers without JavaScript. In such case you can either pass +:authenticity_token => true+ as a form option or set this config setting to +true+

* +config.action_view.prefix_partial_path_with_controller_namespace+ determines whether or not partials are looked up from a subdirectory in templates rendered from namespaced controllers. For example, consider a controller named +Admin::PostsController+ which renders this template:

<erb>
<%= render @post %>
<erb>

The default setting is +true+, which uses the partial at +/admin/posts/_post.erb+. Setting the value to +false+ would render +/posts/_post.erb+, which is the same behavior as rendering from a non-namespaced controller such as +PostsController+.

h4. Configuring Action Mailer

There are a number of settings available on +config.action_mailer+:

* +config.action_mailer.logger+ accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class, which is then used to log information from Action Mailer. Set to +nil+ to disable logging.

* +config.action_mailer.smtp_settings+ allows detailed configuration for the +:smtp+ delivery method. It accepts a hash of options, which can include any of these options:
** +:address+ - Allows you to use a remote mail server. Just change it from its default "localhost" setting.
** +:port+ - On the off chance that your mail server doesn't run on port 25, you can change it.
** +:domain+ - If you need to specify a HELO domain, you can do it here.
** +:user_name+ - If your mail server requires authentication, set the username in this setting.
** +:password+ - If your mail server requires authentication, set the password in this setting.
** +:authentication+ - If your mail server requires authentication, you need to specify the authentication type here. This is a symbol and one of +:plain+, +:login+, +:cram_md5+.

* +config.action_mailer.sendmail_settings+ allows detailed configuration for the +sendmail+ delivery method. It accepts a hash of options, which can include any of these options:
** +:location+ - The location of the sendmail executable. Defaults to +/usr/sbin/sendmail+.
** +:arguments+ - The command line arguments. Defaults to +-i -t+.

* +config.action_mailer.raise_delivery_errors+ specifies whether to raise an error if email delivery cannot be completed. It defaults to true.

* +config.action_mailer.delivery_method+ defines the delivery method. The allowed values are +:smtp+ (default), +:sendmail+, and +:test+.

* +config.action_mailer.perform_deliveries+ specifies whether mail will actually be delivered and is true by default. It can be convenient to set it to false for testing.

* +config.action_mailer.default_options+ configures Action Mailer defaults. Use to set options like `from` or `replay_to` for every mailer. These default to:
<ruby>
:mime_version => "1.0",
:charset      => "UTF-8",
:content_type => "text/plain",
:parts_order  => [ "text/plain", "text/enriched", "text/html" ],
</ruby>

* +config.action_mailer.observers+ registers observers which will be notified when mail is delivered.
<ruby>
config.action_mailer.observers = ["MailObserver"]
</ruby>

* +config.action_mailer.interceptors+ registers interceptors which will be called before mail is sent.
<ruby>
config.action_mailer.interceptors = ["MailInterceptor"]
</ruby>

h4. Configuring Active Support

There are a few configuration options available in Active Support:

* +config.active_support.bare+ enables or disables the loading of +active_support/all+ when booting Rails. Defaults to +nil+, which means +active_support/all+ is loaded.

* +config.active_support.escape_html_entities_in_json+ enables or disables the escaping of HTML entities in JSON serialization. Defaults to +false+.

* +config.active_support.use_standard_json_time_format+ enables or disables serializing dates to ISO 8601 format. Defaults to +true+.

* +ActiveSupport::BufferedLogger.silencer+ is set to +false+ to disable the ability to silence logging in a block. The default is +true+.

* +ActiveSupport::Cache::Store.logger+ specifies the logger to use within cache store operations.

* +ActiveSupport::Deprecation.behavior+ alternative setter to +config.active_support.deprecation+ which configures the behavior of deprecation warnings for Rails.

* +ActiveSupport::Deprecation.silence+ takes a block in which all deprecation warnings are silenced.

* +ActiveSupport::Deprecation.silenced+ sets whether or not to display deprecation warnings.

* +ActiveSupport::Logger.silencer+ is set to +false+ to disable the ability to silence logging in a block. The default is +true+.

h4. Configuring a Database

Just about every Rails application will interact with a database. The database to use is specified in a configuration file called +config/database.yml+.  If you open this file in a new Rails application, you'll see a default database configured to use SQLite3. The file contains sections for three different environments in which Rails can run by default:

* The +development+ environment is used on your development/local computer as you interact manually with the application.
* The +test+ environment is used when running automated tests.
* The +production+ environment is used when you deploy your application for the world to use.

TIP: You don't have to update the database configurations manually. If you look at the options of the application generator, you will see that one of the options is named <tt>--database</tt>. This option allows you to choose an adapter from a list of the most used relational databases. You can even run the generator repeatedly: <tt>cd .. && rails new blog --database=mysql</tt>. When you confirm the overwriting of the +config/database.yml+ file, your application will be configured for MySQL instead of SQLite.  Detailed examples of the common database connections are below.

h5. Configuring an SQLite3 Database

Rails comes with built-in support for "SQLite3":http://www.sqlite.org, which is a lightweight serverless database application. While a busy production environment may overload SQLite, it works well for development and testing. Rails defaults to using an SQLite database when creating a new project, but you can always change it later.

Here's the section of the default configuration file (<tt>config/database.yml</tt>) with connection information for the development environment:

<yaml>
development:
  adapter: sqlite3
  database: db/development.sqlite3
  pool: 5
  timeout: 5000
</yaml>

NOTE: Rails uses an SQLite3 database for data storage by default because it is a zero configuration database that just works. Rails also supports MySQL and PostgreSQL "out of the box", and has plugins for many database systems. If you are using a database in a production environment Rails most likely has an adapter for it.

h5. Configuring a MySQL Database

If you choose to use MySQL instead of the shipped SQLite3 database, your +config/database.yml+ will look a little different. Here's the development section:

<yaml>
development:
  adapter: mysql2
  encoding: utf8
  database: blog_development
  pool: 5
  username: root
  password:
  socket: /tmp/mysql.sock
</yaml>

If your development computer's MySQL installation includes a root user with an empty password, this configuration should work for you. Otherwise, change the username and password in the +development+ section as appropriate.

h5. Configuring a PostgreSQL Database

If you choose to use PostgreSQL, your +config/database.yml+ will be customized to use PostgreSQL databases:

<yaml>
development:
  adapter: postgresql
  encoding: unicode
  database: blog_development
  pool: 5
  username: blog
  password:
</yaml>

Prepared Statements can be disabled thus:

<yaml>
production:
  adapter: postgresql
  prepared_statements: false
</yaml>

h5. Configuring an SQLite3 Database for JRuby Platform

If you choose to use SQLite3 and are using JRuby, your +config/database.yml+ will look a little different. Here's the development section:

<yaml>
development:
  adapter: jdbcsqlite3
  database: db/development.sqlite3
</yaml>

h5. Configuring a MySQL Database for JRuby Platform

If you choose to use MySQL and are using JRuby, your +config/database.yml+ will look a little different. Here's the development section:

<yaml>
development:
  adapter: jdbcmysql
  database: blog_development
  username: root
  password:
</yaml>

h5. Configuring a PostgreSQL Database for JRuby Platform

If you choose to use PostgreSQL and are using JRuby, your +config/database.yml+ will look a little different. Here's the development section:

<yaml>
development:
  adapter: jdbcpostgresql
  encoding: unicode
  database: blog_development
  username: blog
  password:
</yaml>

Change the username and password in the +development+ section as appropriate.

h3. Rails Environment Settings

Some parts of Rails can also be configured externally by supplying environment variables. The following environment variables are recognized by various parts of Rails:

* +ENV["RAILS_ENV"]+ defines the Rails environment (production, development, test, and so on) that Rails will run under.

* +ENV["RAILS_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT"]+ is used by the routing code to recognize URLs when you deploy your application to a subdirectory.

* +ENV["RAILS_ASSET_ID"]+ will override the default cache-busting timestamps that Rails generates for downloadable assets.

* +ENV["RAILS_CACHE_ID"]+ and +ENV["RAILS_APP_VERSION"]+ are used to generate expanded cache keys in Rails' caching code. This allows you to have multiple separate caches from the same application.


h3. Using Initializer Files

After loading the framework and any gems in your application, Rails turns to loading initializers. An initializer is any Ruby file stored under +config/initializers+ in your application. You can use initializers to hold configuration settings that should be made after all of the frameworks and gems are loaded, such as options to configure settings for these parts.

NOTE: You can use subfolders to organize your initializers if you like, because Rails will look into the whole file hierarchy from the initializers folder on down.

TIP: If you have any ordering dependency in your initializers, you can control the load order through naming. Initializer files are loaded in alphabetical order by their path. For example, +01_critical.rb+ will be loaded before +02_normal.rb+.

h3. Initialization events

Rails has 5 initialization events which can be hooked into (listed in the order that they are run):

* +before_configuration+: This is run as soon as the application constant inherits from +Rails::Application+. The +config+ calls are evaluated before this happens.

* +before_initialize+: This is run directly before the initialization process of the application occurs with the +:bootstrap_hook+ initializer near the beginning of the Rails initialization process.

* +to_prepare+: Run after the initializers are run for all Railties (including the application itself), but before eager loading and the middleware stack is built. More importantly, will run upon every request in +development+, but only once (during boot-up) in +production+ and +test+.

* +before_eager_load+: This is run directly before eager loading occurs, which is the default behaviour for the +production+ environment and not for the +development+ environment.

* +after_initialize+: Run directly after the initialization of the application, but before the application initializers are run.

To define an event for these hooks, use the block syntax within a +Rails::Application+, +Rails::Railtie+ or +Rails::Engine+ subclass:

<ruby>
module YourApp
  class Application < Rails::Application
    config.before_initialize do
      # initialization code goes here
    end
  end
end
</ruby>

Alternatively, you can also do it through the +config+ method on the +Rails.application+ object:

<ruby>
Rails.application.config.before_initialize do
  # initialization code goes here
end
</ruby>

WARNING: Some parts of your application, notably observers and routing, are not yet set up at the point where the +after_initialize+ block is called.

h4. +Rails::Railtie#initializer+

Rails has several initializers that run on startup that are all defined by using the +initializer+ method from +Rails::Railtie+. Here's an example of the +initialize_whiny_nils+ initializer from Active Support:

<ruby>
initializer "active_support.initialize_whiny_nils" do |app|
  require 'active_support/whiny_nil' if app.config.whiny_nils
end
</ruby>

The +initializer+ method takes three arguments with the first being the name for the initializer and the second being an options hash (not shown here) and the third being a block. The +:before+ key in the options hash can be specified to specify which initializer this new initializer must run before, and the +:after+ key will specify which initializer to run this initializer _after_.

Initializers defined using the +initializer+ method will be ran in the order they are defined in, with the exception of ones that use the +:before+ or +:after+ methods.

WARNING: You may put your initializer before or after any other initializer in the chain, as long as it is logical. Say you have 4 initializers called "one" through "four" (defined in that order) and you define "four" to go _before_ "four" but _after_ "three", that just isn't logical and Rails will not be able to determine your initializer order.

The block argument of the +initializer+ method is the instance of the application itself, and so we can access the configuration on it by using the +config+ method as done in the example.

Because +Rails::Application+ inherits from +Rails::Railtie+ (indirectly), you can use the +initializer+ method in +config/application.rb+ to define initializers for the application.

h4. Initializers

Below is a comprehensive list of all the initializers found in Rails in the order that they are defined (and therefore run in, unless otherwise stated).

*+load_environment_hook+*
Serves as a placeholder so that +:load_environment_config+ can be defined to run before it.

*+load_active_support+* Requires +active_support/dependencies+ which sets up the basis for Active Support. Optionally requires +active_support/all+ if +config.active_support.bare+ is un-truthful, which is the default.

*+preload_frameworks+* Loads all autoload dependencies of Rails automatically if +config.preload_frameworks+ is +true+ or "truthful". By default this configuration option is disabled. In Rails, when internal classes are referenced for the first time they are autoloaded. +:preload_frameworks+ loads all of this at once on initialization.

*+initialize_logger+* Initializes the logger (an +ActiveSupport::BufferedLogger+ object) for the application and makes it accessible at +Rails.logger+, provided that no initializer inserted before this point has defined +Rails.logger+.

*+initialize_cache+* If +Rails.cache+ isn't set yet, initializes the cache by referencing the value in +config.cache_store+ and stores the outcome as +Rails.cache+. If this object responds to the +middleware+ method, its middleware is inserted before +Rack::Runtime+ in the middleware stack.

*+set_clear_dependencies_hook+* Provides a hook for +active_record.set_dispatch_hooks+ to use, which will run before this initializer. This initializer -- which runs only if +cache_classes+ is set to +false+ -- uses +ActionDispatch::Callbacks.after+ to remove the constants which have been referenced during the request from the object space so that they will be reloaded during the following request.

*+initialize_dependency_mechanism+* If +config.cache_classes+ is true, configures +ActiveSupport::Dependencies.mechanism+ to +require+ dependencies rather than +load+ them.

*+bootstrap_hook+* Runs all configured +before_initialize+ blocks.

*+i18n.callbacks+* In the development environment, sets up a +to_prepare+ callback which will call +I18n.reload!+ if any of the locales have changed since the last request. In production mode this callback will only run on the first request.

*+active_support.initialize_whiny_nils+* Requires +active_support/whiny_nil+ if +config.whiny_nils+ is true. This file will output errors such as:

<plain>
  Called id for nil, which would mistakenly be 4 -- if you really wanted the id of nil, use object_id
</plain>

And:

<plain>
You have a nil object when you didn't expect it!
You might have expected an instance of Array.
The error occurred while evaluating nil.each
</plain>

*+active_support.deprecation_behavior+* Sets up deprecation reporting for environments, defaulting to +:log+ for development, +:notify+ for production and +:stderr+ for test. If a value isn't set for +config.active_support.deprecation+ then this initializer will prompt the user to configure this line in the current environment's +config/environments+ file. Can be set to an array of values.

*+active_support.initialize_time_zone+* Sets the default time zone for the application based on the +config.time_zone+ setting, which defaults to "UTC".

*+action_dispatch.configure+* Configures the +ActionDispatch::Http::URL.tld_length+ to be set to the value of +config.action_dispatch.tld_length+.

*+action_view.cache_asset_ids+* Sets +ActionView::Helpers::AssetTagHelper::AssetPaths.cache_asset_ids+ to +false+ when Active Support loads, but only if +config.cache_classes+ is too.

*+action_view.javascript_expansions+* Registers the expansions set up by +config.action_view.javascript_expansions+ and +config.action_view.stylesheet_expansions+ to be recognized by Action View and therefore usable in the views.

*+action_view.set_configs+* Sets up Action View by using the settings in +config.action_view+ by +send+'ing the method names as setters to +ActionView::Base+ and passing the values through.

*+action_controller.logger+* Sets +ActionController::Base.logger+ -- if it's not already set -- to +Rails.logger+.

*+action_controller.initialize_framework_caches+* Sets +ActionController::Base.cache_store+ -- if it's not already set -- to +Rails.cache+.

*+action_controller.set_configs+* Sets up Action Controller by using the settings in +config.action_controller+ by +send+'ing the method names as setters to +ActionController::Base+ and passing the values through.

*+action_controller.compile_config_methods+* Initializes methods for the config settings specified so that they are quicker to access.

*+active_record.initialize_timezone+* Sets +ActiveRecord::Base.time_zone_aware_attributes+ to true, as well as setting +ActiveRecord::Base.default_timezone+ to UTC. When attributes are read from the database, they will be converted into the time zone specified by +Time.zone+.

*+active_record.logger+* Sets +ActiveRecord::Base.logger+ -- if it's not already set -- to +Rails.logger+.

*+active_record.set_configs+* Sets up Active Record by using the settings in +config.active_record+ by +send+'ing the method names as setters to +ActiveRecord::Base+ and passing the values through.

*+active_record.initialize_database+* Loads the database configuration (by default) from +config/database.yml+ and establishes a connection for the current environment.

*+active_record.log_runtime+* Includes +ActiveRecord::Railties::ControllerRuntime+ which is responsible for reporting the time taken by Active Record calls for the request back to the logger.

*+active_record.set_dispatch_hooks+* Resets all reloadable connections to the database if +config.cache_classes+ is set to +false+.

*+action_mailer.logger+* Sets +ActionMailer::Base.logger+ -- if it's not already set -- to +Rails.logger+.

*+action_mailer.set_configs+* Sets up Action Mailer by using the settings in +config.action_mailer+ by +send+'ing the method names as setters to +ActionMailer::Base+ and passing the values through.

*+action_mailer.compile_config_methods+* Initializes methods for the config settings specified so that they are quicker to access.

*+set_load_path+* This initializer runs before +bootstrap_hook+. Adds the +vendor+, +lib+, all directories of +app+ and any paths specified by +config.load_paths+ to +$LOAD_PATH+.

*+set_autoload_paths+* This initializer runs before +bootstrap_hook+. Adds all sub-directories of +app+ and paths specified by +config.autoload_paths+ to +ActiveSupport::Dependencies.autoload_paths+.

*+add_routing_paths+* Loads (by default) all +config/routes.rb+ files (in the application and railties, including engines) and sets up the routes for the application.

*+add_locales+* Adds the files in +config/locales+ (from the application, railties and engines) to +I18n.load_path+, making available the translations in these files.

*+add_view_paths+* Adds the directory +app/views+ from the application, railties and engines to the lookup path for view files for the application.

*+load_environment_config+* Loads the +config/environments+ file for the current environment.

*+append_asset_paths+* Finds asset paths for the application and all attached railties and keeps a track of the available directories in +config.static_asset_paths+.

*+prepend_helpers_path+* Adds the directory +app/helpers+ from the application, railties and engines to the lookup path for helpers for the application.

*+load_config_initializers+* Loads all Ruby files from +config/initializers+ in the application, railties and engines. The files in this directory can be used to hold configuration settings that should be made after all of the frameworks are loaded.

*+engines_blank_point+* Provides a point-in-initialization to hook into if you wish to do anything before engines are loaded. After this point, all railtie and engine initializers are run.

*+add_generator_templates+* Finds templates for generators at +lib/templates+ for the application, railities and engines and adds these to the +config.generators.templates+ setting, which will make the templates available for all generators to reference.

*+ensure_autoload_once_paths_as_subset+* Ensures that the +config.autoload_once_paths+ only contains paths from +config.autoload_paths+. If it contains extra paths, then an exception will be raised.

*+add_to_prepare_blocks+* The block for every +config.to_prepare+ call in the application, a railtie or engine is added to the +to_prepare+ callbacks for Action Dispatch which will be ran per request in development, or before the first request in production.

*+add_builtin_route+* If the application is running under the development environment then this will append the route for +rails/info/properties+ to the application routes. This route provides the detailed information such as Rails and Ruby version for +public/index.html+ in a default Rails application.

*+build_middleware_stack+* Builds the middleware stack for the application, returning an object which has a +call+ method which takes a Rack environment object for the request.

*+eager_load!+* If +config.cache_classes+ is true, runs the +config.before_eager_load+ hooks and then calls +eager_load!+ which will load all the Ruby files from +config.eager_load_paths+.

*+finisher_hook+* Provides a hook for after the initialization of process of the application is complete, as well as running all the +config.after_initialize+ blocks for the application, railties and engines.

*+set_routes_reloader+* Configures Action Dispatch to reload the routes file using +ActionDispatch::Callbacks.to_prepare+.

*+disable_dependency_loading+* Disables the automatic dependency loading if the +config.cache_classes+ is set to true and +config.dependency_loading+ is set to false.

h3. Database pooling

Active Record database connections are managed by +ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::ConnectionPool+ which ensures that a connection pool synchronizes the amount of thread access to a limited number of database connections. This limit defaults to 5 and can be configured in +database.yml+.

<ruby>
development:
  adapter: sqlite3
  database: db/development.sqlite3
  pool: 5
  timeout: 5000
</ruby>

Since the connection pooling is handled inside of ActiveRecord by default, all application servers (Thin, mongrel, Unicorn etc.) should behave the same. Initially, the database connection pool is empty and it will create additional connections as the demand for them increases, until it reaches the connection pool limit.

Any one request will check out a connection the first time it requires access to the database, after which it will check the connection back in, at the end of the request, meaning that the additional connection slot will be available again for the next request in the queue.

NOTE. If you have enabled +Rails.threadsafe!+ mode then there could be a chance that several threads may be accessing multiple connections simultaneously. So depending on your current request load, you could very well have multiple threads contending for a limited amount of connections.