From c6ec33d6e612168e14d77007915a4ea423c55a2e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alex Auvolat Date: Sat, 1 Sep 2018 16:06:23 +0200 Subject: Move everything to subdirectory --- config/config.exs | 42 ------------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 42 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 config/config.exs (limited to 'config/config.exs') diff --git a/config/config.exs b/config/config.exs deleted file mode 100644 index f970078..0000000 --- a/config/config.exs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,42 +0,0 @@ -# This file is responsible for configuring your application -# and its dependencies with the aid of the Mix.Config module. -use Mix.Config - -# This configuration is loaded before any dependency and is restricted -# to this project. If another project depends on this project, this -# file won't be loaded nor affect the parent project. For this reason, -# if you want to provide default values for your application for -# 3rd-party users, it should be done in your "mix.exs" file. - -# You can configure your application as: -# -# config :shard, key: :value -# -# and access this configuration in your application as: -# -# Application.get_env(:shard, :key) -# -# You can also configure a 3rd-party app: -# -# config :logger, level: :info -# - - -# Peer id suffix -# ============== -# This Shard instance will only connect to other instances that use -# the same suffix. -# -# On first run, the instance will try to generate a peer id that -# has this suffix. This is done by brute-force testing, therefore -# it is not recommended to use long suffixes. -config :shard, peer_id_suffix: "S" - - -# It is also possible to import configuration files, relative to this -# directory. For example, you can emulate configuration per environment -# by uncommenting the line below and defining dev.exs, test.exs and such. -# Configuration from the imported file will override the ones defined -# here (which is why it is important to import them last). -# -# import_config "#{Mix.env}.exs" -- cgit v1.2.3