env('QUEUE_DRIVER', 'sync'), /** * If you're using the queue worker, then disable running queued tasks via cron */ 'worker' => env('QUEUE_WORKER', false), /* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Queue Connections |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | Here you may configure the connection information for each server that | is used by your application. A default configuration has been added | for each back-end shipped with Laravel. You are free to add more. | */ 'connections' => [ 'sync' => [ 'driver' => 'sync', ], 'database' => [ 'driver' => 'database', 'table' => 'jobs', 'queue' => 'default', 'retry_after' => 90, ], 'beanstalkd' => [ 'driver' => 'beanstalkd', 'host' => 'localhost', 'queue' => 'default', 'retry_after' => 90, ], 'sqs' => [ 'driver' => 'sqs', 'key' => 'your-public-key', 'secret' => 'your-secret-key', 'prefix' => 'https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/your-account-id', 'queue' => 'your-queue-name', 'region' => 'us-east-1', ], 'redis' => [ 'driver' => 'redis', 'connection' => 'default', 'queue' => 'default', 'retry_after' => 90, ], ], /* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Failed Queue Jobs |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | These options configure the behavior of failed queue job logging so you | can control which database and table are used to store the jobs that | have failed. You may change them to any database / table you wish. | */ 'failed' => [ 'database' => env('DB_CONNECTION', 'mysql'), 'table' => 'failed_jobs', ], ];