I have seen alot of information on migrating from wordpress Single User to Multi user but don't see any on migrating from MU to SU. I would be grateful if someone could point me in the right direction. I don't want to have to rebuild the sites manually.
Thanks
Do you mean automatically translate the WPMU sites into individual WP installations? I doubt anything exists. It would involve copying WP files, making necessary directories and creating configuration files, all the DB tables, dealing with the differences in DB and files from WP vs WPMU (image storage, plugins, etc)...
One solution, provided you have a handful of sites and not hundreds, can be to export the blog content via wp-admin > tools > export and importing back via wp-admin > tools > import once you have the new blog running. You will probably have to adjust the path for the images on the exporting XML files to agree with WP directory structure.
Yep, you just use the Export function. It's the easiest way, really.
No scripts exists that I know of, no posts either, because it's just like moving a blog off wordpress.com.
Except you can access the database if you need it.
Related
I am currently working on an implementation reading data from a csv file from within a WordPress plugin. It was suggested the file be added within the plugin in an assets directory. I have concerns in doing this. In particular, I'm worried about security and whether this makes the site vulnerable to attacks.
That being said, I looked at the assets folder in the frontend on my local environment and was not able to see the csv file.
Does anyone know if adding a csv file directly to a plugin introduce security risks?
Alternatively, I was thinking about uploading this csv to AWS and reading the data from there.
Good day, Lara.
I am wordpress developer and try to help you now.
We know that every plugin we install should be correct but there are can be some risks.
The wordpress Core do not allow to call CSV and other files directly from folders. For example like assets folder.
But the plugin is third hands software so if a developer do not protect it, anybody can have access to the file.
My advice to check the Stars and Reviews of plugin on
https://wordpress.org/plugins/
Or find reviews of plugin here
https://codecanyon.net/category/all
If it has 4 and more Stars, I think you dont need to worry about security.
Tell please if it helps you...
I am changing my Wordpress theme. I've set it up on a development server. I now want to import the posts, pages and media to populate the database.
I have been using the built-in Wordpress import/export function which is erratic when it comes to media. Sometimes all the imports fail, sometimes some of them fail. It's problematic and I am giving up on that.
Is there a reliable plugin that I can use? I've been searching without success.
The best way to create a dev environment for wordpress is to create a mirror copy of it and then changing its url.
You would need to copy over all the files and restore the database on the dev environment and then hard coding your dev url in wp-config.php. At that point, you can upload the new theme and activate it.
I've tried all types of plugins as well as WP built-in export/import functions. The solution that worked well for me was All-in-One Migration plus All-in-One Migration Extension so allow the transfer of 16GB of data. I've had one or two hiccups along the way but the technical support folks at ServMask are very responsive and solved the issues expeditiously.
I have never used wordpress before, My boss has given me access to a site which was created using wordpress. then He asked me how I am going to make sure I don't break the site accidentally, I told him I would create a backup on my local computer so that all my changes can be restored if I mess up.
I have the wordpress dashboard up. How do I back up EVERYTHING, I hear there are two separate things I need to back up? someone please help me.
PS: I don't think he would like me to do this with out the use of additional plugins.
There are two separate things:
Your website database. Simply export all the MySQL tables from the database, which is dedicated to your site.
The site files, everything you've got under WordPress folder, /wp-includes, /wp-content, /wp-admin directories and all files.
This should do it all. You can test on your localhost to make sure it's everything that's necessary.
You can backup your WordPress either from your hosting account (preferable) or from your WP dashboard.
You need to backup two things - all the files (the root of your Wordpress installation) and the database for your WP installation.
Since you only have access to the dashboard, you have to use plugin for this.
Two of my favorite free backup plugins are:
BackupWordpress - https://wordpress.org/plugins/backupwordpress/
BackWPup - https://wordpress.org/plugins/backwpup/
They are intuitive and easy to work with, so you shouldn't have issues.
If you go to the dashboard go to "tools" in the left toolbar. Select "export". On the export page you can report that you want to export "all content". This will get you the items that you need from the server.
Then you need to install wordpress to your machine. You can download that from: https://wordpress.org/download/
Once you have that on your machine you also need a local server to run it and test it. I like WAMP, but it partially depends on your operating system. I suggest the following video to get you up to speed on how to get the localhost set up and running: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snFzbPm_RUE
Hope this helps!
I have wordpress site i need to export posts , pages with media and attachments engaged with them.
and need to use it in another wordpress site.
Also i have installed the woocommerce in it , i need to export the store settings, products, categories , tags with images used for it...
There are many custom post types used in my site. i need to also export theme with medias used...
I tried using Tools -> Import / Export but that does not exports the data with media or images.
Need an immediate help..
Thanks
I just found out how to do this today, and answered this question with a great guide with photos on how to use the export and import tools in WordPress to transfer photos to a new site to be used in posts and pages. This is done by editing the xml files to show the correctly transferred image URLs.
Since I can't post photos because of my reputation, here is the link.
https://wordpress.stackexchange.com/questions/117344/failed-to-import-media/372304#372304
I have wordpress site i need to export posts , pages with media and attachments engaged with them. and need to use it in another wordpress site.
Also i have installed the woocommerce in it , i need to export the store settings, products, categories , tags with images used for it...
There are many custom post types used in my site. i need to also export theme with medias used...
I don't think so you had left something un-neccessary, So Download the database and import it wherever your new database you want to store.
Then download the wp-content/themes, wp-content/uploads, wp-content/plugins Directories. OR Simply Download your wp-content directory. Now you have everything.
I have Everything Now?
Now download the wordpress from wordpress.org and install it to your server. After complete the Installation, Replace the wp-content directory with your new installed wordpress. We assigned our old stuff to New Wordpress.
Now its time to replace Database. There are several online tutorials to replace your old database to new one.
There are multiple ways you can do this:
Manual
Using plugin
For manual, it's a little more lengthy process, you need to download complete files from one server and upload it to another. Do some changes to the backup DB i.e replacing urls and then uploading the DB file as well.
Other way, which is far more better is to use the plugin called as "All in one Migration". Here is the link which can guide you on the complete process:
https://makersbyte.com/easily-export-import-wordpress-sites/
Exporting your WordPress site can be used for site moves or simple backups. In this guide, I’ll provide some simple and easy options to export your WordPress sites for both non-technical and technical people.
Exporting your site creates a backup of your site, usually in the form of a .tar.gz or .zip file, which you can then use to restore or migrate your site to another domain or host. Once you have the backup it’s an easy matter loading a blank WordPress site, loading the plugin, and then restoring the site from your backup file.
When you export your WordPress sites you have the choice to export all your posts, pages, comments, custom fields, terms, navigation menus, and custom posts but the downside to this approach and it’s that WordPress doesn’t export plugins, theme, and settings of your site.
Export Site
1. Log into WordPress
2. Go to Tools > Export
3. Choose what you want to export:
-All
-Posts
-Pages
-Media
4. Click Download Export File. This will download a .xml file to your computer.
Import Site
1. Log in to the WordPress site you want to import it to.
2. Go to Tools > Import.
3. Find the option called WordPress at the bottom and click Install
Now.
4. When it’s finished installing, click Run Importer.
5. Upload the .xml file you exported.
Once you’ve completed exporting your site, you will want to test everything on the site. Make sure that you look for dead links, check menus, and any functionality or post that you consider important to your website.
It doesn’t have to be hard to export your WordPress sites. There are options for everyone, no matter what level of technical skill you have. And should you ever encounter a conflict, hack, or choose to move your site, having an export of your site is invaluable.
Openshift's default app generator sets Wordpress creation of sites to be a non-scalable version of their gears. I'd like to know if there is a way to set a scalable instance and install wordpress on it.
thanks!
I am working on this today actually and got a scalable wordpress site up and running on OpenShift. (www.runcloudrun.com)
I disabled the symlinks in the action_hooks and manually added my theme and plugins to the php/wp-content/themes and plugins directory. I also used a S3 plugin to store all of my media files on amazon s3 so my images and media would scale once OpenShift adds addiontal gears.
I am writing a blog post on how to do all of this and it should be posted later this week.
Edit to add the blog post: http://www.runcloudrun.com/?p=22
--
gs
You can checkout this AppFog solution. And if you visit his Github you'd find an OpenShift wrapper as well. These two might give you all the sparks it needs to think out a scalable solution on Openshift.
Just use the git source URL and create a new app with PHP. Once the app is created, add MySQL to it.
Once you've created the app, the important next step is to check in your modules directly to the Git repo.
By default, we wanted folks to be able to download plugins directly from Wordpress, but when you scale, those files aren't copied over. Also, the filesystem for each gear in a scaled app isn't shared, so modules uploaded after you scale aren't magically copied to all gears. Given that limitation, we decided to mark the QuickStart not scalable, so as to prevent unfamiliar users from getting into trouble.
If you're familiar with Wordpress just check those modules in directly to your source, and everything will scale.