This situation is that I have an iphone app in development that uses
the db. I just need to make the admin interface to edit the needed
data. I'm starting to think Ruby was the worst choice for somethign
non-standard like this.
But I'm pretty far in and I finished everything except the part where
the iphone app dev can upload a php file to test his app script
against the db.
Thanks for your response Marnen.
sqlite is just a file so the connection info is the tricky part for
me.
The ROR app is running in a c:\users directory, while the php script
is in the main apache htdoc directory which is like c:\program files
\rubystack\apache2\blah blah blah
How would I write that file as far as the path to the sqlite db?
On Aug 25, 10:49 am, Marnen Laibow-Koser <li...@ruby-forum.com> wrote:
> Xenio wrote:
> > Also I have apache running off port 84 and my ROR app running off port
> > 3000. I can only get PHP to execute using the apache port.
>
> > The issue is that I need to access the ROR db using the PHP file.
>
> > How would I go about doing this so that the PHP script can "see" the
> > ROR db file located in its default directory within my ROR app?
>
> Presumably by giving the PHP application the appropriate SQLite
> connection information. But you shouldn't do that if this is a
> production solution: SQLite is not suitable for production use due to
> its lack of concurrency support. Use a real multiuser DB such as
> PostgreSQL.
>
> Best,
> --
> Marnen Laibow-Koserhttp://www.marnen.org
> mar...@marnen.org
>
> Sent from my iPhone
> --
> Posted viahttp://www.ruby-forum.com/.
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