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WordPlate

WordPlate

WordPlate is a boilerplate for WordPress, built with Composer and designed with sensible defaults.

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Features

Installation

Before using WordPlate, make sure you have PHP 8.2 and MySQL 8.0 installed on your computer. You'll also need to have Composer, a package manager for PHP, installed on your computer.

To install WordPlate, open your terminal and enter the following command:

composer create-project --prefer-dist vinkla/wordplate example-app

After installing WordPlate, you'll need to update the database credentials in the .env file. This file is located in the root directory of your project. Open the file and update the following lines with your database credentials:

DB_NAME=database
DB_USER=username
DB_PASSWORD=password

To run your WordPlate application, you may serve it using PHP's built-in web server. Open your terminal and navigate to the public directory of your project. Then, enter the following command:

php -S 127.0.0.1:8000 -t public/

Finally, open your web browser and visit the following URLs to view your WordPlate application:

Configuration

Public Directory

After installing WordPlate, you'll need to configure your web server's document or web root to be the public directory. This is where the main entry point for your application, index.php, is located.

By setting the public directory as your web server's document root, you ensure that all HTTP requests are routed through the front controller, which handles the requests and returns the appropriate responses.

This configuration helps to improve the security and performance of your application by preventing direct access to files outside of the public directory.

Environment Configuration

WordPlate makes it easy to manage different configuration values based on the environment where your application is running. For example, you may need to use a different database locally than you do on your production server.

To accomplish this, WordPlate uses the vlucas/phpdotenv PHP package. When you install WordPlate, a .env.example file is included in the root directory of your application. If you installed WordPlate via Composer, this file will automatically be renamed to .env. Otherwise, you should rename the file manually.

It's important to note that your .env file should not be committed to your application's source control. This is because each developer or server using your application may require a different environment configuration. Additionally, committing your .env file to source control would be a security risk in the event that an intruder gains access to your repository, as any sensitive credentials would be exposed.

To learn more about managing environment variables in WordPlate, you can refer to Laravel's documentation on the topic:

Salt Keys

It's important to add salt keys to your environment file. These keys are used to encrypt sensitive data, such as user sessions, and help to ensure the security of your application.

If you don't set the salt keys, your user sessions and other encrypted data may be vulnerable to attacks. To make it easier to generate secure salt keys, we've created a salt key generator that you can use. If you haven't already done so, copy the .env.example file to a new file named .env. Then visit the generator and copy the randomly generated keys to your .env file.

Plugins

WordPress Packagist

WordPlate includes integration with WordPress Packagist, a Composer repository that mirrors the WordPress plugin and theme directories. With this integration, you can install and manage plugins using Composer.

To install a plugin, use wpackagist-plugin as the vendor name and the plugin slug as the package name. For example, to install the clean-image-filenames plugin, you would use the following command:

composer require wpackagist-plugin/clean-image-filenames

The installed packages will be located in the public/plugins directory.

Here's an example of what your composer.json file might look like:

"require": {
    "wpackagist-plugin/clean-image-filenames": "^1.5"
}

For more information and examples, please visit the WordPress Packagist website.

Must Use Plugins

Must-use plugins (also known as mu-plugins) are a type of WordPress plugin that is installed in a special directory inside the content folder. These plugins are automatically enabled on all sites in the WordPress installation.

To install plugins into the mu-plugins directory, add the plugin name to the installer-paths of your composer.json file:

"installer-paths": {
    "public/mu-plugins/{$name}": [
        "type:wordpress-muplugin",
        "wpackagist-plugin/clean-image-filenames",
    ]
}

To install the plugin, use wpackagist-plugin as the vendor name and the plugin slug as the package name:

composer require wpackagist-plugin/clean-image-filenames

The plugin will be installed in the public/mu-plugins directory.

For more information on the must-use plugin autoloader, please refer to the Bedrock documentation.

Included Plugins

Headache

An easy-to-swallow painkiller plugin for WordPress. It removes a lot of default WordPress stuff you just can't wait to get rid of. It removes meta tags such as feeds, version numbers and emojis.

Clean Image Filenames

The plugin automatically converts language accent characters in filenames when uploading to the media library. Characters are converted into browser and server friendly, non-accent characters.

Vite.js

Vite is a build tool that provides a faster and leaner development experience for modern web projects. It comes with sensible defaults and is highly extensible via its Plugin and JavaScript APIs with full typing support.

# Start the dev server...
npm run dev

# Build for production...
npm run build

Learn more about Vite's backend integration.

Mail

To set up custom SMTP credentials for sending emails in your WordPlate application, you need to configure the required environment variables in your .env file.

MAIL_HOST=127.0.0.1
MAIL_PORT=2525
MAIL_USERNAME=null
MAIL_PASSWORD=null
MAIL_ENCRYPTION=null
MAIL_FROM_ADDRESS="hello@example.com"
MAIL_FROM_NAME="Example"

If you're using a local email service like Mailhog or Mailpit, you need to disable encryption by setting the MAIL_ENCRYPTION environment variable to null.

FAQ

<details> <summary><strong>Can I add WordPress constants to the environment file?</strong></summary>

This is possible by updating the public/wp-config.php file after the WordPlate application have been created.

define('WP_DISABLE_FATAL_ERROR_HANDLER', env('WP_DISABLE_FATAL_ERROR_HANDLER', false));

+define('WP_ALLOW_MULTISITE', env('WP_ALLOW_MULTISITE', true));

Then you may add the constant to the .env file.

WP_DEFAULT_THEME=wordplate
+WP_ALLOW_MULTISITE=true
</details> <details> <summary><strong>Can I disable WP-Cron and set up a manual cron job?</strong></summary>

WordPlate allows you to disable the internal WordPress cron system via the DISABLE_WP_CRON environment variable:

DISABLE_WP_CRON=true

It is recommended to manually set a cron job if you enable this setting and disable the WordPress cron. You'll need to add the following in your crontab file:

*/5 * * * * curl https://example.com/wp/wp-cron.php
</details> <details> <summary><strong>Can I install languages with Composer?</strong></summary>

If you want to install language packs using Composer, we recommend looking at the WP Languages project. Below is an example of a composer.json file that installs the Swedish language pack for WordPress.

{
    "require": {
        "koodimonni-language/core-sv_se": "*",
    },
    "repositories": [
        {
            "type": "composer",
            "url": "https://wp-languages.github.io",
            "only": [
                "koodimonni-language/*"
            ]
        }
    ],
    "config": {
        "allow-plugins": {
            "koodimonni/composer-dropin-installer": true
        },
    },
    "extra": {
        "dropin-paths": {
            "public/languages/": [
                "vendor:koodimonni-language"
            ]
        }
    }
}
</details> <details> <summary><strong>Can I rename the public directory?</strong></summary>

Update your .gitignore, composer.json, .vite.config.js, and wp-cli.yml files with the new path to the public directory. Then, run composer update in the root of your project.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Can I rename the WordPress directory?</strong></summary>

By default WordPlate will put the WordPress in public/wordpress. If you want to change this there are a couple of steps you need to go through. Let's say you want to change the default WordPress location to public/wp:

  1. Update the wordpress-install-dir path in your composer.json file.

  2. Update wordpress to wp in wordplate/public/.gitignore.

  3. Update the last line in the public/index.php file to:

    require __DIR__.'/wp/wp-blog-header.php';
    
  4. Update the WP_DIR environment variable in the .env file to wp.

  5. If you're using WP-CLI, update the path in the wp-cli.yml file to public/wp.

  6. Remove the public/wordpress directory if it exist and then run composer update.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Can I rename the theme directory?</strong></summary>

For most applications you may leave the theme directory as it is. If you want to rename the wordplate theme to something else you'll also need to update the WP_DEFAULT_THEME environment variable in the .env file.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Can I use WordPlate with Laravel Herd or Valet?</strong></summary>

If you're using Laravel Herd or Valet together with WordPlate, you may use our custom driver:

<?php

namespace Valet\Drivers\Custom;

use Valet\Drivers\BasicValetDriver;

class WordPlateValetDriver extends BasicValetDriver
{
    public function serves(string $sitePath, string $siteName, string $uri): bool
    {
        return is_dir($sitePath . '/public/wordpress');
    }

    public function isStaticFile(string $sitePath, string $siteName, string $url)
    {
        $staticFilePath = $sitePath . '/public' . $url;

        if ($this->isActualFile($staticFilePath)) {
            return $staticFilePath;
        }

        return false;
    }

    public function frontControllerPath(string $sitePath, string $siteName, string $uri): ?string
    {
        return parent::frontControllerPath(
            $sitePath . '/public',
            $siteName,
            $this->forceTrailingSlash($uri)
        );
    }

    private function forceTrailingSlash(string $uri)
    {
        if (substr($uri, -1 * strlen('/wordpress/wp-admin')) === '/wordpress/wp-admin') {
            header('Location: ' . $uri . '/');
            exit;
        }

        return $uri;
    }
}
</details> <details> <summary><strong>Can I use WordPlate with Tinkerwell?</strong></summary>

If you're using Tinkerwell together with WordPlate, you may use our custom driver:

<?php

final class WordPlateTinkerwellDriver extends WordpressTinkerwellDriver
{
    public function canBootstrap($projectPath)
    {
        return file_exists($projectPath . '/public/wordpress/wp-load.php');
    }

    public function bootstrap($projectPath)
    {
        require $projectPath . '/public/wordpress/wp-load.php';
    }

    public function appVersion()
    {
        return 'WordPlate ' . get_bloginfo('version');
    }
}
</details>

Upgrade Guide

<details> <summary><strong>Upgrading from 11 to 12</strong></summary>
  1. The wordplate/framework package has been archived. Update the composer.json file:

    "require": {
    -   "wordplate/framework": "^11.1",
    +   "composer/installers": "^2.1",
    +   "johnpbloch/wordpress-core-installer": "^2.0",
    +   "johnpbloch/wordpress-core": "^6.0",
    +   "roots/bedrock-autoloader": "^1.0",
    +   "roots/wp-password-bcrypt": "^1.1",
    +   "symfony/http-foundation": "^6.0",
    +   "symfony/var-dumper": "^6.0",
    +   "vlucas/phpdotenv": "^5.4"
    }
    
  2. Replace your public/wp-config.php file with the one in this repository. Remember to save any custom constants defined in your wp-config.php file.

  3. Add the src/helpers.php file from this repository and autoload it in the composer.json file:

    +"autoload": {
    +    "files": [
    +        "src/helpers.php"
    +    ]
    +}
    
  4. Run composer update in the root of your project.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Upgrading from 10 to 11</strong></summary>
  1. WordPlate now requires PHP 8.0 or later.

  2. Bump the version number in the composer.json file to ^11.0.

  3. Run composer update in the root of your project.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Upgrading from 9 to 10</strong></summary>
  1. WordPlate now requires PHP 7.4 or later.

  2. Bump the version number in the composer.json file to ^10.0.

  3. Rename WP_ENV to WP_ENVIRONMENT_TYPE in the environment file.

  4. Rename WP_THEME to WP_DEFAULT_THEME in the environment file.

  5. Rename WP_URL to WP_HOME in the environment file (if it exists).

  6. If you're using the WP_CACHE environment variable you'll need to define it in the public/wp-config.php file:

    $application->run();
    
    +define('WP_CACHE', env('WP_CACHE', false));
    
    $table_prefix = env('DB_TABLE_PREFIX', 'wp_');
    
  7. Optional: Rename WP_PREFIX to DB_TABLE_PREFIX in the following files:

    • .env
    • .env.example
    • public/wp-config.php
  8. Run composer update in the root of your project.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Upgrading from 8 to 9</strong></summary>
  1. Bump the version number in the composer.json file to ^9.0.

  2. Copy the public/mu-plugins/mu-plugins.php file into your project.

  3. Update the public/.gitignore file to allow the new mu-plugins.php file:

    -mu-plugins/
    +mu-plugins/*
    +!mu-plugins/mu-plugins.php
    
  4. Run composer update in the root of your project.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Upgrading from 7 to 8</strong></summary>
  1. WordPlate now requires PHP 7.2 or later.

  2. Bump the version number in the composer.json file to ^8.0.

    [!Note]
    WordPlate 8.0 requires WordPress 5.3 or later.

  3. Laravel's helper functions is now optional in WordPlate. If you want to use the functions, install the laravel/helpers package, with Composer, in the root of your project:

    composer require laravel/helpers
    
  4. Laravel's collections are now optional in WordPlate. If you want to use collections, install the tightenco/collect package, with Composer, in the root of your project:

    composer require tightenco/collect
    
  5. The mix helper function is now optional in WordPlate. If you want to use the function, install the ibox/mix-function package, with Composer, in the root of your project:

    composer require ibox/mix-function
    
  6. Replace any usage of asset, stylesheet_url and template_url functions with WordPress's get_theme_file_uri function.

  7. Replace any usage of stylesheet_path and template_path functions with WordPress's get_theme_file_path function .

  8. The base_path and template_slug functions have been removed.

  9. Run composer update in the root of your project.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Upgrading from 6 to 7</strong></summary>
  1. Bump the version number in the composer.json file to ^7.0.

    [!Note]
    WordPlate 7.0 requires WordPress 5.0 or later.

  2. Update the realpath(__DIR__) to realpath(__DIR__.'/../') in the wp-config.php file.

  3. If your public directory isn't named public, add the following line to the wp-config.php file:

    $application->setPublicPath(realpath(__DIR__));
    
  4. Run composer update in the root of your project.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Upgrading from 5 to 6</strong></summary>
  1. Bump the version number in the composer.json file to ^6.0.

  2. Update the realpath(__DIR__.'/../') to realpath(__DIR__) in the wp-config.php file.

  3. Run composer update in the root of your project.

</details> <details> <summary><strong>Upgrading from 4 to 5</strong></summary>
  1. Bump the version number in the composer.json file to ^5.0.

  2. Copy and paste the contents of the wp-config.php file into your application.

    [!Note]
    Make sure you don't overwrite any of your custom constants.

  3. Run composer update in the root of your project.

</details>

Acknowledgements

WordPlate wouldn't be possible without these amazing open-source projects.

License

The WordPlate package is open-sourced software licensed under the MIT license.