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I'm writing a rake task that does some DB work outside of Rails/ActiveRecord.

Is there a way to get the DB connection info (host, username, password, DB name) for the current environment as defined in database.yml?

I'd like to get it so I can use it to connect like this...

con = Mysql.real_connect("host", "user", "pw", "current_db")
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3 Answers

up vote 30 down vote accepted

From within rails you can create a configuration object and obtain the necessary information from it:

config   = Rails.configuration.database_configuration
host     = config[Rails.env]["host"]
database = config[Rails.env]["database"]
username = config[Rails.env]["username"]
password = config[Rails.env]["password"]

See the documentation for Rails::Configuration for details.

This just uses YAML::load to load the configuration from the database configuration file (database.yml) which you can use yourself to get the information from outside the rails environment:

require 'YAML'
info = YAML::load(IO.read("database.yml"))
print info["production"]["host"]
print info["production"]["database"]
...
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In more recent Rails, you don't need to create the configuration, you can get it via Rails.configuration – Bryan Larsen Aug 18 '10 at 17:37
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Bryan's answer in the comment above deserves a little more exposure:

>> Rails.configuration.database_configuration[Rails.env]
=> {"encoding"=>"unicode", "username"=>"postgres", "adapter"=>"postgresql", "port"=>5432, "host"=>"localhost", "password"=>"postgres", "database"=>"mydb", "pool"=>5}
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This is the best answer. – pedrorolo Nov 23 '10 at 15:03
Thank you for this additional information, voted up :) – Jason Martin Sep 19 '11 at 12:43
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Old question but this was one of my first stops in looking up how to do this so I figure this may help someone else. I normally have .my.cnf files in the home directory. So using the 'parseconfig' gem and some ERB syntax in my database.yml config file means I've got dynamic file that I can feel good about checking into source control and also simplify deployments (in my case). Also note the list of common sockets, this makes it easier to move my app to different operating systems that might have a different Unix socket path.

<% 
    require 'parseconfig'
    c=ParseConfig.new('../../.my.cnf') %>

mysqlevn: &mysql
  adapter: mysql 
  username: <%= c.params['client']['user'] %>
  password: <%= c.params['client']['password'] %>
  host: localhost 
  socket: <%= [ 
  '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock',
  '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock',
  '/tmp/mysqld.sock',
  '/tmp/mysql.sock'].detect { |socket| File.exist?(socket) } %>

production:
  database: app_production
  <<: *mysql


development:
  database: app_development 
  <<: *mysql

# Do not set this db to the same as development or production.
test:
  database: app_test
  <<: *mysql

ref: http://effectif.com/articles/database-yml-should-be-checked-in

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