2FAuth/docker/docker-compose.yml
Quentin McGaw (desktop) c24f5b2708 Remove support for mysql
2021-08-04 09:35:55 -04:00

72 lines
3.1 KiB
YAML

version: "3"
services:
2fauth:
image: 2fauth/2fauth
container_name: 2fauth
volumes:
- ./2fauth:/2fauth
ports:
- 8000:8000/tcp
environment:
# You can change the name of the app
- APP_NAME=2FAuth
# You can leave this on "local". If you change it to production most console commands will ask for extra confirmation.
# Never set it to "testing".
- APP_ENV=local
# Set to true if you want to see debug information in error screens.
- APP_DEBUG=false
# This should be your email address
- SITE_OWNER=mail@example.com
# The encryption key for our database and sessions. Keep this very secure.
# If you generate a new one all existing data must be considered LOST.
# Change it to a string of exactly 32 chars or use command `php artisan key:generate` to generate it
- APP_KEY=SomeRandomStringOf32CharsExactly
# This variable must match your installation's external address but keep in mind that
# it's only used on the command line as a fallback value.
- APP_URL=http://localhost
# Turn this to true if you want your app to react like a demo.
# The Demo mode reset the app content every hours and set a generic demo user.
- IS_DEMO_APP=false
# The log channel defines where your log entries go to.
# 'daily' is the default logging mode giving you 5 daily rotated log files in /storage/logs/.
# Several other options exist. You can use 'single' for one big fat error log (not recommended).
# Also available are 'syslog', 'errorlog' and 'stdout' which will log to the system itself.
- LOG_CHANNEL=daily
# Log level. You can set this from least severe to most severe:
# debug, info, notice, warning, error, critical, alert, emergency
# If you set it to debug your logs will grow large, and fast. If you set it to emergency probably
# nothing will get logged, ever.
- APP_LOG_LEVEL=notice
# Database config (can only be sqlite)
- DB_DATABASE="/srv/database/database.sqlite"
# If you're looking for performance improvements, you could install memcached.
- CACHE_DRIVER=file
- SESSION_DRIVER=file
# Mail settings
# Refer your email provider documentation to configure your mail settings
# Set a value for every available setting to avoid issue
- MAIL_DRIVER=log
- MAIL_HOST=smtp.mailtrap.io
- MAIL_PORT=2525
- MAIL_FROM=changeme@example.com
- MAIL_USERNAME=null
- MAIL_PASSWORD=null
- MAIL_ENCRYPTION=null
- MAIL_FROM_NAME=null
- MAIL_FROM_ADDRESS=null
# Leave the following configuration vars as is.
# Unless you like to tinker and know what you're doing.
- BROADCAST_DRIVER=log
- QUEUE_DRIVER=sync
- SESSION_LIFETIME=12
- REDIS_HOST=127.0.0.1
- REDIS_PASSWORD=null
- REDIS_PORT=6379
- PUSHER_APP_ID=
- PUSHER_APP_KEY=
- PUSHER_APP_SECRET=
- PUSHER_APP_CLUSTER=mt1
- MIX_PUSHER_APP_KEY="${PUSHER_APP_KEY}"
- MIX_PUSHER_APP_CLUSTER="${PUSHER_APP_CLUSTER}"
- MIX_ENV=local