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# frozen_string_literal: true
# Puma can serve each request in a thread from an internal thread pool.
# The `threads` method setting takes two numbers: a minimum and maximum.
# Any libraries that use thread pools should be configured to match
# the maximum value specified for Puma. Default is set to 5 threads for minimum
# and maximum; this matches the default thread size of Active Record.
#
max_threads_count = ENV.fetch('RAILS_MAX_THREADS', 5)
min_threads_count = ENV.fetch('RAILS_MIN_THREADS') { max_threads_count }
threads min_threads_count, max_threads_count
# Specifies the `worker_timeout` threshold that Puma will use to wait before
# terminating a worker in development environments.
#
worker_timeout 3600 if ENV.fetch('RAILS_ENV', 'development') == 'development'
# Specifies the `port` that Puma will listen on to receive requests; default is 3000.
#
port ENV.fetch('PORT', 3000)
# Specifies the `environment` that Puma will run in.
#
environment ENV.fetch('RAILS_ENV', 'development')
# Specifies the `pidfile` that Puma will use.
pidfile ENV.fetch('PIDFILE', 'tmp/pids/server.pid')
# Specifies the number of `workers` to boot in clustered mode.
# Workers are forked web server processes. If using threads and workers together
# the concurrency of the application would be max `threads` * `workers`.
# Workers do not work on JRuby or Windows (both of which do not support
# processes).
#
# workers ENV.fetch("WEB_CONCURRENCY") { 2 }
# Use the `preload_app!` method when specifying a `workers` number.
# This directive tells Puma to first boot the application and load code
# before forking the application. This takes advantage of Copy On Write
# process behavior so workers use less memory.
#
# preload_app!
# Allow puma to be restarted by `bin/rails restart` command.
plugin :tmp_restart
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