Store configuration management

The default configurations for your store are stored in a config.xml for the appropriate module. When you change settings in the Commerce Admin or the CLI bin/magento config:set command, the changes are reflected in the core database, specifically the core_config_data table. These settings overwrite the default configurations stored in the config.xml file.

Store settings, which refer to the configurations in the Admin Stores > Settings > Configuration section, are stored in the deployment configuration files based on the type of configuration:

  • app/etc/config.php—configuration settings for stores, websites, modules or extensions, static file optimization, and system values related to static content deployment. See the config.php reference in the Configuration Guide.
  • app/etc/env.php—values for system-specific overrides and sensitive settings that should NOT be stored in source control. See the env.php reference in the Configuration Guide.
NOTE
Because Adobe Commerce on cloud infrastructure supports only the production and maintenance modes, the Advanced > Developer section is not accessible in the Admin. You must have environment Admin privileges to complete configuration management tasks. You can configure additional settings using environment variables.

Configuration management provides a way to deploy consistent store settings across your environments with minimal downtime using Pipeline deployment. Adobe Commerce on cloud infrastructure project includes the build server, build and deploy scripts, and deployment environments designed with the pipeline deployment strategy in mind.

Configuration override scheme

All system configurations are set during build and deploy phases according to the following override scheme:

  1. If an environment variable exists, use the custom configuration and ignore the default configuration.
  2. If an environment variable does not exist, use the configuration from a MAGENTO_CLOUD_RELATIONSHIPS name-value pair in the .magento.app.yaml file. Ignore the default configuration.
  3. If an environment variable does not exist and MAGENTO_CLOUD_RELATIONSHIPS does not contain a name-value pair, remove all customized configuration and use the values from the default configuration.

To summarize, environment variables override all other values.

TIP
See Configuration management in the Configuration guide for more about the override scheme for pipeline deployment.

If the same setting is configured in multiple places, the application relies on the following configuration hierarchy to determine which value to apply to the environment :

Priority
Configuration
Method
Description
1
Cloud Console
environment variables
Values added from the Variables tab of environment configuration in the Cloud Console. Specify values here for sensitive or environment-specific configurations. Settings specified here cannot be edited from the Admin. See Environment configuration variables.
2
.magento.app.yaml
Values added in the variables section of the .magento.app.yaml file. Specify values here to ensure consistent configuration across all environments. Do not specify sensitive values in the .magento.app.yaml file. See Application settings.
3
app/etc/env.php
Environment-specific configuration values stored here are added by using the app:config:dump command. Set the system-specific and sensitive values using environment variables or the CLI. See Sensitive data. The env.php file is not included in source control.
4
app/etc/config.php
Values stored here are added by using the app:config:dump command. Shared configuration values are added to config.php. Set shared configuration from the Admin or using the CLI. The config.php file is included in source control.
5
Database
Values stored here are added by setting configurations in the Admin. Configurations set using any of the preceding methods are locked (grayed out) and cannot be edited from the Admin.
6
config.xml
Many configurations have default values set in the config.xml file for a module. If Adobe Commerce cannot find any value set by any of the preceding methods, it falls back to the default value, if set.

Configuration dump

You can use the following ece-tools command to generate a config.php file that contains all the current store configurations:

./vendor/bin/ece-tools config:dump

The data “dumped” to the app/etc/config.php file becomes locked, which means the corresponding field in the Commerce Admin becomes read-only. The config.php file includes only the settings that you configure. It does not lock the default values. Locking only the values you update also ensures that all extensions used in the Staging and Production environments do not break due to read-only configurations, especially Fastly.

WARNING
The ece-tools config:dump command does not retrieve detailed configurations for modules, such as B2B. If you need a comprehensive configuration dump, use the app:config:dump command, but this command locks configuration values in a read-only state.

Sensitive data

Any sensitive configurations export to the app/etc/env.php file when you use the bin/magento app:config:dump command. You can set sensitive values using the CLI command: bin/magento config:sensitive:set. See Sensitive and environment-specific settings in the Commerce PHP Extensions guide to learn how to designate configuration settings as being sensitive or system-specific.

See a list of Sensitive or system-specific settings in the Configuration Guide.

SCD performance

Depending on the size of your store, you may have a large number of static content files to deploy. Normally, static content deploys during the deploy phase when the application is in Maintenance mode. The most optimal configuration is to generate static content during the build phase. See Choosing a deploy strategy.

If you have enabled Configuration Management after dumping the configurations, you should move the SCD_* variables from the deploy stage to the build stage to properly enable static content generation during the build phase. See Environment variables.

Before Configuration Management:

  deploy:
    CRON_CONSUMERS_RUNNER:
      cron_run: true
      consumers: []
    SCD_STRATEGY: compact
    SCD_MATRIX:
      ...
    REDIS_USE_SLAVE_CONNECTION: 1

After enabling Configuration Management:

Move the SCD_* variables to the build stage:

  deploy:
    CRON_CONSUMERS_RUNNER:
      cron_run: true
      consumers: []
    REDIS_USE_SLAVE_CONNECTION: 1
  build:
    SCD_STRATEGY: compact
    SCD_MATRIX:
      ...
NOTE
Before deploying static files, the build and deploy phases compress static content using GZIP. Compressing static files reduces server loads and increases site performance. See build options to learn about customizing or disabling file compression.

Procedure to manage your settings

The following illustrates a high-level overview of this process:

Overview of Starter configuration management

To configure your store and generate a configuration file:

  1. Complete all configurations for your stores in the Admin for one of the environments:

    • Starter: An active development branch
    • Pro: An active branch in the integration environment

    These configurations do not include the actual products unless you plan on dumping the database from this environment to Staging and Production environments. Typically, development databases do not include your full store data.

  2. On your local workstation, change to your project directory.

  3. Create a local dump of the remote database.

    code language-bash
    magento-cloud db:dump
    
  4. Add, commit, and push code changes to update a remote environment.

    code language-bash
    git add app/etc/config.php
    
    code language-bash
    git commit -m "Add system-specific configuration"
    
    code language-bash
    git push origin <branch-name>
    

After the deployment is complete, log in to the Admin for the updated environment to verify the settings. Continue to merge any additional configurations to the Staging and Production environments, as needed.

Update configurations

When you modify your environment through the Admin and run the command again, new configurations are appended to the code in the config.php file.

WARNING
While you can manually edit the config.php file in the Staging and Production environments, it is not recommended. The file helps to keep all configurations consistent across all environments. Never delete the config.php file for rebuilding it. Deleting the file can remove specific configurations and settings required for build and deploy processes.

Restore configuration files

Copies of the original app/etc/env.php and app/etc/config.php files were created during the deployment process and store in the same folder. The following shows the BAK (backup files) and PHP (original files) in the same app/etc folder:

...
config.php.bak
di.xml
env.php.bak
vendor_path.php
config.php
db_schema.xml
env.php
...

Older configurations used the app/etc/config.local.php file. See Migrate older configurations.

To restore configuration files:

  1. On your local workstation, use SSH to log in to the remote project and environment.

    code language-bash
    magento-cloud ssh
    
  2. Verify the backup files location and availability.

    code language-bash
    ./vendor/bin/ece-tools backup:list
    

    Sample response:

    code language-none
    The list of backup files:
    app/etc/env.php
    app/etc/config.php
    
  3. Restore backup files.

    code language-bash
    ./vendor/bin/ece-tools backup:restore
    

Migrate older configurations

If you upgrade to Adobe Commerce on cloud infrastructure 2.2 or later, you may want to migrate settings from the config.local.php file to your new config.php file. If the configuration settings in your Admin match the contents of the file, follow the instructions to generate and add the config.php file.

If they differ, you can append content from the config.local.php file to your new config.php file:

  1. Follow instructions to generate the config.php file.

  2. Open the config.php file and delete the last line.

  3. Open the config.local.php file and copy the contents.

  4. Paste the contents into the config.php file, save, and complete adding it to Git.

  5. Deploy across your environments.

You only complete this migration once. After migration, use the config.php file.

Change locales

You can change your store locales without following a complex configuration import and export process, if you have SCD_ON_DEMAND enabled. You can update the locales using the Admin.

You can add another locale to the Staging or Production environment by enabling SCD_ON_DEMAND in an integration branch, generate an updated config.php file with the new locale information, and copy the configuration file to the target environment.

WARNING
This process overwrites the store configuration; only do the following if the environments contain the same stores.
  1. In the integration environment, enable the SCD_ON_DEMAND variable using the .magento.env.yaml file.

  2. Add the necessary locales using your Admin.

  3. Use SSH to log in to the remote environment and generate the /app/etc/config.php file containing all locales.

    code language-bash
    ssh <SSH-URL> "./vendor/bin/ece-tools config:dump"
    
  4. Copy the new configuration file from the remote integration environment to your local environment directory.

    code language-bash
    rsync <SSH-URL>:app/etc/config.php ./app/etc/config.php
    
  5. Add, commit, and push code changes to update a remote environment.

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