• Resolved michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)


    will I be able to reinstall 3.0 from scratch and recover my blog? Or will that get rid of my posts?

    I am thinking that the posts are in the database I set up with my hosting provider, but haven’t seen any confirmation of that.

    I recently tried to auto update to 3.0 and it failed, I guess. Actually, I thought I would be clever and update a couple plug ins first, as I had read not doing that could cause issues. That process appeared to fail, and like a bull in a digital china shop, I forged ahead and tried to update the app automatically, which also seized up partway through. Now my wp-admin page is completely blank, no source code to view, no error message, nothing.

    So, before I redo the whole install, I hope to get some sort of concrete assurance that the past few years of writings won’t vanish completely when I do that.

    Anyone?

Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 15 total)
  • Deleting all files will not delete your blog’s post & page content. That is stored in your database.

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    esmi,

    thank you. I hope to have this fixed soon now.

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    So, when I have finished deleting, then replacing, all the WP files, successfully logged in to the wp-admin panel, and then clicked on the link to “attempt the update again now” link at the top of page where it said “An automated WordPress update has failed to complete – please attempt the update again” …

    How much time to I give it before I presume that it has broken again?

    Did it just hang?

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    It is hanging each time I try to install or update a theme or plug in.

    The two themes that I had from the previous version are gone, but the admin area seems to at least be available, so this is a great improvement.

    Still, I am having some difficulty making this over in a way that makes me happy.

    Try adding AddType x-mapp-php5 .phpto the top of your WordPress .htaccess file.

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    ok. I installed wp in a subdirectory. Having looked for a file like that, I find none.

    No such file as .htaccess in my home or web folders, or in my /blog/ folder.

    I looked with Filezilla and using pair.com’s web based file manager.

    Could this be part of my problem?

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    ok, so I created the file in my /blog/ directory and the only info in it is “AddType x-mapp-php5 .php”

    I will now try again.

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    I clicked on the “please attempt the update again now” link at the top of the page where it said “An automated WordPress update has failed to complete – please attempt the update again now
    ” in the admin area.

    The page changed to say that my WP is up to date, that I have the latest version of wordpress, that if I need to reinstall version 3.0 I can do so automatically, that my plug ins and themes are up to date, but that sentence with the embedded link at the top of the page is still there, the one that says “An automated WordPress update has failed to complete – please attempt the update again now

    Thinking I probably needed to log out and in again due to years of conditioning applied by various IT departments and cs reps during lengthy phone calls, I tried logging out and back in again. After logging out my screen filled with lots of what I presume is code, starting with:

    element. * @param string $message Optional. Message to display in header. * @param WP_Error $wp_error Optional. WordPress Error Object */ function login_header($title = ‘Log In’, $message = ”, $wp_error = ”) { global $error, $is_iphone, $interim_login, $current_site; // Don’t index any of these forms add_filter( ‘pre_option_blog_public’, ‘__return_zero’ ); add_action( ‘login_head’, ‘noin…”

    and continuing. This made no sense to me, and so I typed in the path to my web pages’ admin area, which came up immediately with no authentication required or requested.

    My old friend “An automated WordPress update has failed to complete – please attempt the update again now” remains present at the pages top, just under the page title bar.

    This is frustrating.

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    given that my /blog/ directory is in the middle of my web site, accessible to anyone, should my .htaccess file permissions be “-rw-r–r– (644)” or something else?

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    text like this

    ‘ . __(‘Aside from the default theme included with your WordPress installation, themes are designed and developed by third parties.’) . ‘

    ‘; $help .= ‘

    ‘ . __(‘You can see your active theme at the top of the screen. Below are the other themes you have installed that are not currently in use. You can see what your site would look like with one of these themes by clicking the Preview link. To change themes, click the Activate link.’) . ‘

    is showing up more and more now.

    Does anyone here know what the meaning or significance might be?

    Moderator James Huff

    (@macmanx)

    Your .htaccess file should be 644. It may need to be 666 if WordPress can’t write to it when changing permalinks, but that’s not really important right now.

    If you’re having trouble with the automated upgrader, try upgrading manually:

    https://codex.www.ads-software.com/Upgrading_WordPress_Extended

    If you’re seeing all of that text, it means that either the files were uploaded in Binary mode instead of ASCII mode, or that PHP is not running on your server.

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    It’s very unlikely that PHP is suddenly not running on my server at pair.com. According to the online documentation, the version currently running on new servers is PHP 5.2.13 and phpMyAdmin is running and saying that my database is available.

    I have been changing the permissions on this .htaccess file and testing this half the day now. I finally deleted the .htaccess file, and it did not improve or degrade performance at all. After reading you message, I recreated the .htaccess file (/mysite/blog/.htaccess) and set permissions to 644. Now I am not able to log out.

    I get:

    You don’t have permission to access /blog/wp-login.php on this server.

    My brain hurts.

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    I am also unable to log in again.

    Thread Starter michaelvsprague

    (@michaelvsprague)

    I called my hosting provider, who reset the permissions on the .htaccess file, which allowed me acccess. I deleted all the files and the directory, recreated the directory, and uploaded all the files again.

    The update me message is now gone.

    Now I am back in. I wish I knew more about this stuff.

Viewing 15 replies - 1 through 15 (of 15 total)
  • The topic ‘If I delete all the files in my WP directory’ is closed to new replies.