Você leu um tutorial que pede para editar o arquivo wp-config e não tem ideia do que seja? Bem, nós o ajudamos. Neste artigo, mostraremos a você como editar corretamente o arquivo wp-config.php no WordPress.
O que é o arquivo wp-config.php?
Como o nome sugere, é um arquivo de configuração que faz parte de todos os sites WordPress auto-hospedados.
Diferentemente de outros arquivos, o arquivo wp-config.php não vem incorporado ao WordPress, mas é gerado especificamente para o seu site durante o processo de instalação.
O WordPress armazena as informações do seu banco de dados no arquivo wp-config.php. Sem essas informações, seu site WordPress não funcionará e você receberá o erro“error establishing database connection” (erro ao estabelecer conexão com o banco de dados).
Além das informações do banco de dados, o arquivo wp-config.php também contém várias outras configurações de alto nível. Nós as explicaremos mais adiante neste artigo.
Como esse arquivo contém muitas informações confidenciais, é recomendável que você não mexa nele, a menos que não tenha outra opção.
Mas como você está lendo este artigo, isso significa que precisa editar o arquivo wp-config.php. Abaixo estão as etapas para fazer isso sem bagunçar as coisas.
Tutorial em vídeo
Se você não gostar do vídeo ou precisar de mais instruções, continue lendo.
Primeiros passos
A primeira coisa que você precisa fazer é criar um backup completo do WordPress. O arquivo wp-config.php é tão importante para um site WordPress que um pequeno erro tornará seu site inacessível.
Você precisará de um cliente FTP para se conectar ao seu site. Os usuários do Windows podem instalar o WinSCP ou o SmartFTP e os usuários do Mac podem experimentar o Transmit ou o CyberDuck. Um cliente FTP permite a transferência de arquivos entre um servidor e seu computador.
Conecte-se ao seu site usando o cliente FTP. Você precisará das informações de login do FTP, que podem ser obtidas no seu host da Web. Se não souber as informações de login do FTP, peça suporte ao seu host da Web.
O arquivo wp-config.php geralmente está localizado na pasta raiz de seu site com outras pastas, como /wp-content/.
Basta clicar com o botão direito do mouse no arquivo e selecionar download no menu. Seu cliente FTP fará o download do arquivo wp-config.php para seu computador. Você pode abri-lo e editá-lo usando um programa editor de texto simples, como o Notepad ou o Text Edit.
Entendendo o arquivo wp-config.php
Antes de começar, vamos dar uma olhada no código completo do arquivo wp-config.php padrão. Você também pode ver um exemplo desse arquivo aqui.
<?php /** * The base configuration for WordPress * * The wp-config.php creation script uses this file during the * installation. You don't have to use the web site, you can * copy this file to "wp-config.php" and fill in the values. * * This file contains the following configurations: * * * MySQL settings * * Secret keys * * Database table prefix * * ABSPATH * * @link https://codex.wordpress.org/Editing_wp-config.php * * @package WordPress */ // ** MySQL settings - You can get this info from your web host ** // /** The name of the database for WordPress */ define('DB_NAME', 'database_name_here'); /** MySQL database username */ define('DB_USER', 'username_here'); /** MySQL database password */ define('DB_PASSWORD', 'password_here'); /** MySQL hostname */ define('DB_HOST', 'localhost'); /** Database Charset to use in creating database tables. */ define('DB_CHARSET', 'utf8'); /** The Database Collate type. Don't change this if in doubt. */ define('DB_COLLATE', ''); /**#@+ * Authentication Unique Keys and Salts. * * Change these to different unique phrases! * You can generate these using the {@link https://api.wordpress.org/secret-key/1.1/salt/ WordPress.org secret-key service} * You can change these at any point in time to invalidate all existing cookies. This will force all users to have to log in again. * * @since 2.6.0 */ define('AUTH_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('SECURE_AUTH_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('LOGGED_IN_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('NONCE_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('AUTH_SALT', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('SECURE_AUTH_SALT', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('LOGGED_IN_SALT', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('NONCE_SALT', 'put your unique phrase here'); /**#@-*/ /** * WordPress Database Table prefix. * * You can have multiple installations in one database if you give each * a unique prefix. Only numbers, letters, and underscores please! */ $table_prefix = 'wp_'; /** * For developers: WordPress debugging mode. * * Change this to true to enable the display of notices during development. * It is strongly recommended that plugin and theme developers use WP_DEBUG * in their development environments. * * For information on other constants that can be used for debugging, * visit the Codex. * * @link https://codex.wordpress.org/Debugging_in_WordPress */ define('WP_DEBUG', false); /* That's all, stop editing! Happy blogging. */ /** Absolute path to the WordPress directory. */ if ( !defined('ABSPATH') ) define('ABSPATH', dirname(__FILE__) . '/'); /** Sets up WordPress vars and included files. */ require_once(ABSPATH . 'wp-settings.php');
Cada seção do arquivo wp-config.php está bem documentada no próprio arquivo. Quase todas as configurações aqui são definidas usando constantes PHP.
define( 'constant_name' , 'value');
Vamos dar uma olhada mais de perto em cada seção do arquivo wp-config.php.
Configurações do MySQL no arquivo wp-config.php
Suas configurações de conexão com o banco de dados do WordPress aparecem na seção “MySQL Settings” (Configurações do MySQL) do arquivo wp-config.php. Você precisará do host do MySQL, do nome do banco de dados, do nome de usuário e da senha do banco de dados para preencher essa seção.
// ** MySQL settings - You can get this info from your web host ** // /** The name of the database for WordPress */ define('DB_NAME', 'database_name_here'); /** MySQL database username */ define('DB_USER', 'username_here'); /** MySQL database password */ define('DB_PASSWORD', 'password_here'); /** MySQL hostname */ define('DB_HOST', 'localhost'); /** Database Charset to use in creating database tables. */ define('DB_CHARSET', 'utf8'); /** The Database Collate type. Don't change this if in doubt. */ define('DB_COLLATE', '');
É possível obter as informações do banco de dados no cPanel da sua conta de hospedagem na Web, na seção denominada bancos de dados.
Se não conseguir encontrar o banco de dados do WordPress ou o nome de usuário e a senha do MySQL, entre em contato com o host da Web.
Chaves e sais de autenticação
Chaves e sais exclusivos de autenticação são chaves de segurança que ajudam a melhorar a segurança de seu site WordPress. Essas chaves fornecem uma criptografia forte para sessões de usuário e cookies gerados pelo WordPress. Consulte nosso guia sobre chaves de segurança do WordPress para obter mais informações.
/**#@+ * Authentication Unique Keys and Salts. * * Change these to different unique phrases! * You can generate these using the {@link https://api.wordpress.org/secret-key/1.1/salt/ WordPress.org secret-key service} * You can change these at any point in time to invalidate all existing cookies. This will force all users to have to log in again. * * @since 2.6.0 */ define('AUTH_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('SECURE_AUTH_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('LOGGED_IN_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('NONCE_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('AUTH_SALT', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('SECURE_AUTH_SALT', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('LOGGED_IN_SALT', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('NONCE_SALT', 'put your unique phrase here'); /**#@-*/
Você pode gerar chaves de segurança do WordPress e colá-las aqui. Isso é particularmente útil se você suspeitar que seu site WordPress pode ter sido comprometido. A alteração das chaves de segurança fará o logout de todos os usuários atualmente conectados no seu site WordPress, forçando-os a fazer login novamente.
Prefixo da tabela do banco de dados do WordPress
Por padrão, o WordPress adiciona o prefixo wp_ a todas as tabelas criadas pelo WordPress. É recomendável que você altere o prefixo da tabela do banco de dados do WordPress para algo aleatório. Isso dificultará que os hackers adivinhem suas tabelas do WordPress e o salvará de alguns ataques comuns de injeção de SQL.
/** * WordPress Database Table prefix. * * You can have multiple installations in one database if you give each * a unique prefix. Only numbers, letters, and underscores please! */ $table_prefix = 'wp_';
Observe que você não pode alterar esse valor em um site existente do WordPress. Siga as instruções em nosso artigo sobre como alterar o prefixo do banco de dados do WordPress para alterar essas configurações em um site existente do WordPress.
Modo de depuração do WordPress
Essa configuração é particularmente útil para usuários que estão tentando aprender a desenvolver o WordPress e para usuários que estão testando recursos experimentais. Por padrão, o WordPress oculta os avisos gerados pelo PHP durante a execução do código. Basta definir o modo de depuração como verdadeiro para mostrar esses avisos. Isso fornece informações cruciais para que os desenvolvedores encontrem bugs.
define('WP_DEBUG', false);
Configurações de caminho absoluto
A última parte do arquivo wp-config define o caminho absoluto que é usado para configurar as variáveis do WordPress e os arquivos incluídos. Você não precisa alterar nada aqui.
/** Absolute path to the WordPress directory. */ if ( !defined('ABSPATH') ) define('ABSPATH', dirname(__FILE__) . '/'); /** Sets up WordPress vars and included files. */ require_once(ABSPATH . 'wp-settings.php');
Hacks e configurações úteis do wp-config.php
Há algumas outras configurações do wp-config.php que podem ajudá-lo a solucionar erros e resolver muitos erros comuns do WordPress.
Como alterar a porta e os soquetes do MySQL no WordPress
Se o seu provedor de hospedagem do WordPress usar portas alternativas para o host do MySQL, será necessário alterar o valor DB_HOST para incluir o número da porta. Observe que essa não é uma nova linha, mas você precisa editar o valor DB_HOST existente.
define( 'DB_HOST', 'localhost:5067' );
Não se esqueça de alterar o número da porta 5067 para qualquer número de porta fornecido por seu host da Web.
Se o seu host usar sockets e pipes para o MySQL, você precisará adicioná-lo assim:
define( 'DB_HOST', 'localhost:/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' );
Alteração de URLs do WordPress usando o arquivo wp-config.php
Talvez seja necessário alterar os URLs do WordPress ao mover um site do WordPress para um novo nome de domínio ou um novo host da Web. Você pode alterar esses URLs visitando a página Configurações ” Geral.
Você também pode alterar esses URLs usando o arquivo wp-config.php. Isso é útil se você não conseguir acessar a área de administração do WordPress devido a um problema de erro de muitos direcionamentos. Basta adicionar essas duas linhas ao seu arquivo wp-config.php:
define('WP_HOME','http://example.com'); define('WP_SITEURL','http://example.com');
Não se esqueça de substituir example.com por seu próprio nome de domínio. Você também precisa ter em mente que os mecanismos de pesquisa tratam www.example.com e example.com como dois locais diferentes (consulte www vs non-www – Qual é o melhor para SEO?). Se o seu site for indexado com o prefixo www, você precisará adicionar seu nome de domínio adequadamente.
Alterar o diretório de uploads usando wp-config.php
Por padrão, o WordPress armazena todos os seus uploads de mídia no diretório /wp-content/uploads/. Se quiser armazenar seus arquivos de mídia em outro local, poderá fazê-lo adicionando esta linha de código no arquivo wp-config.php.
define( 'UPLOADS', 'wp-content/media' );
Observe que o caminho do diretório de uploads é relativo ao ABSPATH definido automaticamente no WordPress. A adição de um caminho absoluto aqui não funcionará. Consulte nosso guia detalhado sobre como alterar o local padrão de upload de mídia no WordPress para obter mais informações.
Desativar atualizações automáticas no WordPress
O WordPress introduziu as atualizações automáticas no WordPress 3.7. Isso permitiu que os sites do WordPress fossem atualizados automaticamente quando houvesse uma pequena atualização disponível. Embora as atualizações automáticas sejam ótimas para a segurança, em alguns casos elas podem quebrar um site WordPress, tornando-o inacessível.
Adicionar essa única linha de código ao seu arquivo wp-config.php desativará todas as atualizações automáticas em seu site WordPress.
define( 'WP_AUTO_UPDATE_CORE', false );
Consulte nosso tutorial sobre como desativar as atualizações automáticas no WordPress para obter mais informações.
Limitar revisões de postagens no WordPress
O WordPress vem com salvamento automático e revisões incorporadas. Consulte nosso tutorial sobre como desfazer alterações no WordPress com revisões de postagens. No entanto, se você tiver um site grande, as revisões podem aumentar o tamanho do backup do banco de dados do WordPress.
Adicione esta linha de código ao seu arquivo wp-config.php para limitar o número de revisões armazenadas para uma postagem.
define( 'WP_POST_REVISIONS', 3 );
Substitua 3 pelo número de revisões que você deseja armazenar. O WordPress agora descartará automaticamente as revisões mais antigas. No entanto, as revisões de postagens mais antigas ainda estão armazenadas em seu banco de dados. Consulte nosso tutorial sobre como excluir revisões de postagens antigas no WordPress.
Esperamos que este artigo tenha ajudado você a aprender como editar o arquivo wp-config.php no WordPress e todas as coisas legais que você pode fazer com ele. Talvez você também queira ver nosso artigo sobre 25+ truques extremamente úteis para o arquivo de funções do WordPress.
Se você gostou deste artigo, inscreva-se em nosso canal do YouTube para receber tutoriais em vídeo sobre o WordPress. Você também pode nos encontrar no Twitter e no Facebook.
Syed Balkhi says
Hey WPBeginner readers,
Did you know you can win exciting prizes by commenting on WPBeginner?
Every month, our top blog commenters will win HUGE rewards, including premium WordPress plugin licenses and cash prizes.
You can get more details about the contest from here.
Start sharing your thoughts below to stand a chance to win!
Sean Hodge says
I believe you should not put any custom rules below the ABSPATH / vars bit down at the bottom, but can you put stuff in any order above those lines?
I’ve got some time on my hands, so I’ve been doing just that, moving stuff around the wp-config file, and removing all the extra fluff between comments. I now know what it all does, and have just left a simple title above each group of rules, such as
/**
* Authentication Unique Keys and Salts.
*/
All the rest of the info about Salts, and debugging etc, is now gone, the stuff that usually appears in green.
What I also did was move the $table_prefix above the Salts, right under the rest of the database info.
I’ve done this all because when I do go in there to modify actual rules, I have to wade my way through what is now useless info, to me.
So far, nothing has exploded, but I thought to ask anyway.
WPBeginner Support says
You can change the order of the other content in that file if you wanted, we would warn to be careful when moving that you don’t remove part of the code and normally you should not need to edit your wp-config file.
Administrador
Priyanshu Nandi says
Which code lines l have to type to increase
Max_input_vars value in this file
WPBeginner Support says
That would require changes to your htaccess or a different file, we would recommend reaching out to your host for assistance with what you’re wanting to do.
Administrador
WPBeginner Support says
Thank you, glad you liked our article
Administrador
S.s. Brar says
Great article. A must have information for WP admins.
Thanks to Syed and His Team.
WPBeginner Support says
Glad our article could be helpful
Administrador
Mister No says
Hi there, great article. I’m having a problem with my website mobile version. When I try to open it on the mobile phone it says “This site is experiencing technical difficulties”.
What should I do to make my site work again properly?
Thanks in advance
WPBeginner Support says
There are a few possible reasons you could be receiving that error, for a starting point you would want to take a look at our guide here: https://www.wpbeginner.com/beginners-guide/beginners-guide-to-troubleshooting-wordpress-errors-step-by-step/
Administrador
Paul says
Syed, all of a sudden, I can’t upload images (message: missing a temporary folder). Tried to log into WordPress to check support blogs and my username is not recognised.
WPBeginner Support says
For that error, you would want to take a look at our guide here: https://www.wpbeginner.com/wp-tutorials/how-to-fix-missing-a-temporary-folder-error-in-wordpress/
Administrador
Gale says
I am a newbie at wordpress. I uploaded the files via Filezilla and got everything configured. Now how exactly do I actually access my new wp-blog site?
Wp is in the root (public_html) of my website. There were several other file folders that came with Wp. Do I upload them into the public_html folder as well?
WPBeginner Support says
If you’re installing WordPress using FTP then you would want to take a look at our guide here:
https://www.wpbeginner.com/how-to-install-wordpress/#installftp
Once the site is set up you would want to go to your login page and log in with the user you created in the installation process:
https://www.wpbeginner.com/beginners-guide/how-to-find-your-wordpress-login-url/
Administrador
Esther says
Hi, I found out when I was installing WordPress, it was installed in subdirectory Wp and has a result my website can’t go live, my web host said I have to uninstall and install again and I should leave the Wp in the Installation panel blank, my problem is that I have designed the website only to go live and once I uninstall everything will be wiped off, what do I about it, Is there a way to avoid that?
WPBeginner Support says
If your host requires the site to be in the main directory, you would want to follow the steps in the WordPress coded to move directories on your existing server
Administrador
Mina says
Hi,
Thank you for the useful article.
I’m new to this file and I have a basic question. I changed the cache plugin of my site and I need to change the line about it at the beginning of the file to override details of the previous plugin.
Once my file is updated, can I upload it while the cache plugin is activated, and deactivate/reactivate it just after, or do I have to deactivate the plugin before uploading the new wp-config file ?
Thanks for your help.
WPBeginner Support says
If your plugin is requiring you to edit your wp-config file you would normally want to edit the wp-config file before activating your new plugin.
Administrador
Tiar says
hi, i have a wordpress site, i want edit my wordpress site in local, but when i already backup and run my wordpress in local. the page is full of white. can you help me ? im beginner in wordpress
WPBeginner Support says
For moving your live site to a local installation, you would want to use the guide here: https://www.wpbeginner.com/wp-tutorials/how-to-move-live-wordpress-site-to-local-server/
Administrador
Arthur says
I have updated my website (lostkatanning.com) o WP 5.1 (the Gutenberg update) but now, when working on pages or posts it has slowed right down to a crawl and takes forever to respond to even a single key touch. I have tried numerous things from various websites but nothing seems to work. It is starting to do my head in! Any ideas on how to get my speed back?
WPBeginner Support says
Hi Arthur,
You can disable the Gutenberg by installing the classic editor plugin to temporarily solve the problem.
Administrador
mostafa says
Hi
I have a wordpress site. Today I realized my wp-config.php file has been removed for no reason (The reason is not important for me right now).
I want to know what happens if I create another wp-config.php file in the root directory of my website by renaming the wp-config-sample.php file again and set the database name blah blah blah
does it affect my pages and posts? How about the users who have signed up to my website? does it remove them? If the answer is yes, isn’t it better for me to restore backup? The only problem for restoring backup is that it is for two days ago and I posted a new content yesterday and I will miss it.
Thank you very much in advance
WPBeginner Support says
Your user and post information is in the database so that information shouldn’t be affected, as long as you connect it to your correct database then there shouldn’t be any change.
Administrador
Deepak says
Hello,
How do I edit wp-config for setting other smtp using WP smtp plugin ?
Plugin says, “The password is stored in plain text. We highly recommend you setup your password in your WordPress configuration file for improved security; to do this add the lines below to your wp-config.phpfile.
define( ‘WPMS_ON’, true ); define( ‘WPMS_SMTP_PASS’, ‘your_password’ ); ”
Where do I exactly add the code ? It don’t shown in tutorial video or article of Wpbeginner.
WPBeginner Support says
Hi Deepak,
You can add this code just before the line that says ‘That’s all, stop editing! Happy blogging’ in your wp-config.php file.
Administrador
Riyaz says
Thank you for sharing this article, it was simple and easy to understand.
Gaurav Bhatnagar says
Hi, I just updated my WordPress to new version manually using FileZilla. My website was working. But then, I did some update inside wp-config.php file. Now the size of that file on server has become ‘0’. Even if I update it from local PC, it still remains ‘0’. What should I do? Now website is not working. I am getting – HTTP Error 500
WPBeginner Support says
Hi Gaurav,
You can download a fresh copy of WordPress and extract it on your computer. Inside it you will find a wp-config-sample.php file. You can upload this file to your server and rename it to wp-config.php. You will now need to edit wp-config.php file and enter your WordPress database information.
Administrador
Gaurav Bhatnagar says
It worked. Thank you.
Greg Bryant says
I have an intranet-based wordpress site that I’m setting up. I’m having issues with the proxy configuration in wp-config.php. I’ve tried about everything I know and I still keep getting ‘Proxy Authentication Required” errors.
define(‘WP_PROXY_HOST’, ‘https://proxy.domain.com’);
define(‘WP_PROXY_PORT’, ‘3128’);
define(‘WP_PROXY_USERNAME’, ‘domain\\username’);
define(‘WP_PROXY_PASSWORD’, ‘xxxxxx’);
define(‘WP_PROXY_BYPASS_HOSTS’, ‘localhost’);
Our internal wordpress site can detect that there are new versions of plug-ins but when I try to update I get the proxy authentication error. I’ve tried the variables above with https, http, just proxy.domain.com, the username escaping the \, not escaping the backslash, etc. I looked at the code in class-wp-http-proxy.php and it appears the authentication connects the username with a : and then the password like the http(s)_proxy environment variable. I’ve tried local host for the bypass and an empty string. Our Windows domain uses an file; is there a place to specify this?
I get the same proxy authentication errors trying to download anything from the internal wordpress site.
Error occurred. Something may be wrong with WordPress.org or this server’s configuration. If you continue to have problems, please try the support forums. (WordPress could not establish a secure connection to WordPress.org. Please contact your server administrator.) in /var/www/epkb.mw-process-ctrl.com/public_html/wp-admin/includes/plugin-install.php on line 168
I’m also having an issue with php’s file_get_contents if that’s something wordpress uses. cURL works fine.
Any ideas?
Thanks
WPBeginner Support says
Hi Greg,
Please make sure that your localhost environment has curl extension installed and enabled for PHP. Please see our guide on how to fix secure connection error in WordPress for more details.
Administrador
Greg Bryant says
I have curl installed.
It lists ipV6 as yes but I have ipV6 disabled since our network doesn’t support it.
I think the problem is authenticating with our proxy. On the server I use:
(the \ is escaped when setting the env variables). Above is my wp-content proxy settings.
I’m using ufw for my firewall and have tried with it enabled & disabled with the same results.
Any other ideas?
Thanks
WPBeginner Support says
Hi Greg,
We are not sure. You can post on WordPress.org forums may be someone who has faced similar situation can help out.
Jon M says
Do the changes take effect immediately after saving the new wp-config file?
WPBeginner Support says
Hey Jon,
Yes, they are effectively immediately. However, if you are editing wp-config file in a text editor on your computer, then simply saving your changes may not change the wp-config.php file on your server. You will need to upload the changed wp-config.php file back to your server for changes to take effect.
Administrador
Andy says
What’s the best way to upload the changed wp-config.php file back to the server?
Can the tutorial be updated with how to upload the adjusted config file? The tutorial seems to be incomplete for the (relative) novice
WPBeginner Support says
Hi Andy,
We have linked to our article on how to use FTP to upload WordPress files. It also applies to editing your wp-config.php file. You can simply download your wp-config.php file to your computer using FTP. Edit it to make your desired changes and then upload it back using the same FTP client.
Hope this helps.
ayush says
I did something silly , i removed the www part from wp site url under Setting-General . Now admin panel is getting redirected to wordpress one. i used your steps to copy both lines with modification and uploaded via ftp . No luck .Plz help
Boris says
Excellent post. I am a newbie and learned a lot.
I have an issue with my site. It looks like I have been hacked. I ran WordFence scan and it caught a line of code in my wp-config.php file that it flagged as not belonging there. Following is the code:
My question is this. Can I remove the "@include…" from the file without screwing up the .php file.
Any guidance will be appreciated.
WPBeginner Support says
Hi Boris,
Is the file part of the core WordPress software, a plugin, or a theme? If yes, then download a fresh copy of WordPress core, plugins, or theme the file belongs to and then upload the new file.
You can also download the file to your computer before editing the code as a backup. If anything goes wrong you can then upload it back.
Administrador
Saud Razzak says
Great post, glad I read.
Steph says
I’m having problems accessing site. I debugged and am getting a list of problems but most seem to come back to this one:
“Notice: get_settings is deprecated since version 2.1.0!
Use get_option() instead. in /usr/local/pem/vhosts/xxxxxx/webspace/siteapps/WordPress-xxxxx/htdocs/wp-includes/functions.php on line 3752″
But line 3752 reads:
” trigger_error( sprintf( __(‘%1$s is deprecated since version %2$s! Use %3$s instead.’), $function, $version, $replacement ) ); ”
So i’ve no idea what to replace. I’m sure this is 101 stuff to you, but I’m really confused!! I would really appreciate your advice, thank you.
Steph says
Found your section on disabling plugins – which was a great help as the the site is now viewable whilst I try to resolve. This is the message I see now when logged in WP Admin
” Catchable fatal error: Argument 1 passed to Genesis_Admin_CPT_Archive_Settings::__construct() must be an instance of stdClass, instance of WP_Post_Type given, called in /usr/local/pem/vhosts/xxxxxx/webspace/siteapps/WordPress-xxxxxx/htdocs/wp-content/themes/genesis/lib/admin/menu.php on line 122 and defined in /usr/local/pem/vhosts/xxxxxx/webspace/siteapps/WordPress-xxxxxx/htdocs/wp-content/themes/genesis/lib/admin/cpt-archive-settings.php on line 38 ”
Am in a spot of bother and could really use your help – thank you!
WPBeginner Support says
Hey Steph,
Try updating your Genesis child theme. Connect to your website using FTP and download your child theme as a backup. After that delete child theme folder from your website.
Next, download a fresh copy of the theme and install it. If this doesn’t work, then try updating Genesis core itself.
Administrador
Hell Men says
If i delete salt key can i decrypt wordpress password ?
Sean says
Hi,
I did something silly and now can’t get my site to work. Basically I kept my site live at said URL example.com and created a folder where I built the WordPress site example.com/Wordpress. However when I went to put the wordpress site into the root folder after backing everything up I forgot to change the site URL in the dashboard. i basically then removed my entire site and copied everything from the wordpress site into the root URL. It didn’t work – so I thought I would remove everything and restore my site as it was with both the wordpress and the normal site working.
However once I restored all the files the wordpress site now errors with 404 Page not found and I can’t login into the dashboard either.
Any idea how I can restore this? I think it is looking in the root directory and WordPress folder for the site or something similar and it’s causing the error – but how do I fix it?
Thanks
Sean
WPBeginner Support says
Hi Sean,
You can update WordPress URLs by adding this code to your wp-config.php file:
define('WP_HOME','http://example.com');
define('WP_SITEURL','http://example.com');
Administrador
Dan says
Hello i would like to have it when i upload an image it gets uploaded to my cloud from wordpress.
i got a url & api key.
Any suggestions would be cool. thanks.
Eeswar Reddy says
Best site for WordPress Beginners. Solved my blog problem simply. Thank u so much Sir…
WPBeginner Support says
You are welcome Don’t forget to join us on Twitter for more WordPress tips and tutorials.
Administrador
Karl says
Nice instructions, as far as they go. However, I know it is ALSO possible to edit wp-config.php directly through WordPress’ Admin area but it seems to be a closely guarded secret as to HOW to actually do this. I do not have FTP access to my site so I have to use some other method and I’d rather not go chasing down the rabbit hole of trying out various flaky plugins until I find one that actually works. Your assistance as to what menu drill-down to explore in WordPress Admin would be greatly appreciated.
WPBeginner Support says
It is not a good idea to edit wp-config.php file inside WordPress admin area. One tiny mistake and you will be locked out of your WordPress site. If you do not have FTP access, you can try editing it via cPanel’s file manager.
Administrador
Angela says
I don’t want to sound stupid, but please help me understand… are the wp-config.php changes supposed to be made on my Mac or on the host for my website. They are two different machines.
Please help! I keep making changes to my web site and all of a sudden they just do not ‘take’.
Best regards,
Angela
WPBeginner Support says
You can make changes to wp-config.php file using an FTP client. It allows you to edit files on your web server. After connecting to your website using an FTP client, you need to locate wp-config.php file and download it to your computer. Make changes it to it using a text editor like TextEdit. Save your changes and then upload the file back to your web server using the FTP client.
Administrador
Sharron says
Ok, so I added define(‘WP_ALLOW_REPAIR’, true); to my downloaded wp config file with notepad. Now what?
Ray says
Once you have done that, you can see the settings by visiting this URL on your blog:
yoursite.com/wp-admin/maint/repair.php
You have 2 buttons
1st – Repair Database
2nd – Repair and Optimize Database
I suggest u click the 1st one and wait for the process to finish.
John Johnson says
CODA is an FTP Client as well. Correct?
PiNo says
Hi,
For security I add to my .htaccess
<files wp-config.php>
order allow,deny
deny from all
</files>
Kind regards