{config_load}
{config_load} is used for loading config
#variables# from a configuration file into the template.
Attributes
| Attribute Name | Required | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| file | Yes | The name of the config file to include | 
| section | No | The name of the section to load | 
Examples
The example.conf file.
#this is config file comment
# global variables
pageTitle = "Main Menu"
bodyBgColor = #000000
tableBgColor = #000000
rowBgColor = #00ff00
#customer variables section
[Customer]
pageTitle = "Customer Info"
and the template
{config_load file="example.conf"}
{config_load "example.conf"}  {* short-hand *}
<html>
    <title>{#pageTitle#|default:"No title"}</title>
    <body bgcolor="{#bodyBgColor#}">
        <table border="{#tableBorderSize#}" bgcolor="{#tableBgColor#}">
           <tr bgcolor="{#rowBgColor#}">
              <td>First</td>
              <td>Last</td>
              <td>Address</td>
           </tr>
        </table>
    </body>
</html>
Config Files may also contain sections. You can load
variables from within a section with the added attribute section. Note
that global config variables are always loaded along with section
variables, and same-named section variables overwrite the globals.
Note
Config file sections and the built-in template function called
{section}have nothing to do with each other, they just happen to share a common naming convention.
{config_load file='example.conf' section='Customer'}
{config_load 'example.conf' 'Customer'} {* short-hand *}
<html>
    <title>{#pageTitle#}</title>
    <body bgcolor="{#bodyBgColor#}">
        <table border="{#tableBorderSize#}" bgcolor="{#tableBgColor#}">
           <tr bgcolor="{#rowBgColor#}">
              <td>First</td>
              <td>Last</td>
              <td>Address</td>
           </tr>
        </table>
    </body>
</html>
See $config_overwrite to create arrays
of config file variables.
See also the config files page, config variables page,
$config_dir,
getConfigVars() and
configLoad().