Rating: 1 star
I have a clean WordPress install using the Twenty Twenty-Two Version: 1.2 theme.
The only plugin installed is yours, ‘Make Paths Relative’.
In settings I checked the box for ‘Image Paths’.
Then changed the WordPress > Settings > General > Timezone from ‘London’ to ‘Los Angeles’
Then BOOM! the following error appears:
One or more database tables are unavailable. The database may need to be repaired.
Upon investigation in myPHPAdmin we discovered that the _options table field ‘option_name’ > ‘siteurl’ and ‘home’ were blank where the websites url should be.
Once, we manually put in the URL into these fields, went back to the site, and refreshed; it worked again until we changed the timezone back again.
We also tested this on different web hosts, servers, and with different themes and were able to reproduce the behaviour.
]]>Rating: 1 star
Not working with WP 5.8, broke site completely while links are still absolute.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Lightweight, easy to use, and it works. One of my must-have plugins.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
It has no effect whatsoever on paths in links.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
This is just the perfect plugin: I installed it, easily set it the way I want it, then refreshed my site and immediately saw the results. If only all plugins were this straightforward, quick, and effective!
]]>Rating: 1 star
I didn’t like the plugin. While enabled, it broke internal site links. Both http and https gave “too many redirects” error. Also, the tools to share on Twitter, Facebook, etc. gave error because the URL appeared relative (without the site domain). Just disable the plugin for both problems to end. I do not recommend.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
This plug-in has been very useful for me, as I am using Pantheon hosting and their Dev, Test, Live workflow. Making all paths relative helped to simplify everything and avoided an environment referring to links or assets from another as deployments go upstream. I ever had a small conflict with Yoast that would make the paths in sitemaps relative when MPR was activated, but a simple issue report to the plugin author, who has been reactive, helped fix this issue. Thanks again for providing this plug-in
]]>Rating: 3 stars
This plugin is pretty good. For some installations it does not work. For example, a sub directory multisite environment will not work correctly. And many dynamic URLs output from get_template_directory_uri()
still have absolute URLS.
Rating: 5 stars
I’ve just bought a SSL certificate for our site and of course was getting mixed content errors because of those blasted absolute paths. I used a couple of search and replace plugins that caught some but by no means all of the absolute paths, I also wrangled with phpMyAdmin’s laborious search and replace functions and finally I happened on this plugin and, frankly…
YOU GUYS ROCK!
I tested three images that had steadfastly refused to change their paths (mostly WooCommerce category images and images placed in widgets) and your plugin caught them all.
THANK YOU!!!
??
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Works great and very rapid and professional support when we had to track down a bug. I would recommend this plugin to anyone.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
No wonder everybody vote 5 star.
It works perfectly.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Although not solved all the problems, but saved a lot of time. Is it possible to make relative menu links using this plugin? (I did this via an additional filter).
]]>Rating: 5 stars
I’ve tried other plugins, but this one is frequently updated to work with newer versions of wordpress. Great for localhost network testing.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Dear Sami Ahmed Siddiqui,
Thanks for making this Plugin. This plugin works fine as expected.
I wanted to create my WordPress website on another domain and link it to my main site under a subdirectory
I could easily create the relative URL, solving my worries.
The only thing is it doesn’t change the logo URL. Could you please help to solve that issue as well?
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Reliable and fast plugin to make absolute/relative of posts/pages/custom posts/scripts… thanks
]]>