From 550dc6d4ceee40d30347e88dab85fe22a59e3bf1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sebastian Hammer Date: Mon, 9 Apr 2007 03:51:14 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Removed. Text is in the doc.. examples to follow --- etc/example-settings | 104 -------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 104 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 etc/example-settings diff --git a/etc/example-settings b/etc/example-settings deleted file mode 100644 index 97949da..0000000 --- a/etc/example-settings +++ /dev/null @@ -1,104 +0,0 @@ - -Each of the following examples is an example target settings file. On startup, -pazpar2 will read any number of these files recursively from a directory hierarchy. -Explanations for the examples below. - -The following file explicitly sets name=value for a whole bunch of targets for a -bunch of users.. I don't imagine this format will be used much for human -entry, but it might be used to export settings from a relational database.. it is -also there as one extreme form of a generic format. - -If user is omitted, the setting applies to any user. For target, there are two wildcard -forms: * matches any target not otherwise matched, and xx/* matches any database on a given -host. A setting for an explicit host/db always overrides a wildcard setting. - - - - - - - -More useful, you can group a number of settings about a target into one file like this. -This comes closer to the conventional target setting files we're used to. - - - - - - - -This file sets a number of name=value pairs for a list of targets. A typical example might -be to associate all these targets with a specific category or type, or to otherwise make -them part of a set -- like 'all full-text', 'all free-access', etc. - - - - - - - - -Here's the shortest possible file.. it sets one name=value for one target - - - -This sets different values for a given named setting (attribute) for one target. - - - - - - - -This sets different values for one attribute for different targets - - - xx - xx - - - - - -This sets one or more named values for a set of targets. - - - xx - xx - xx - - - - -This is a more concrete example.. it allows specific users access to a given target. - - - - - - - -While this default setting disallows access to anything for everybody not otherwise -permitted... - -// Whitelist default -- disallow all access - - -.. except these 'free' targets which are open to anyone. - -// Except these ones - - - - - - -The setting below sets a default record normalization stylesheet. Yes, values can be simple -strings, or they can be XML trees. - - - - - - - -- 1.7.10.4