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Viewing 15 replies - 16 through 30 (of 34 total)
  • Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    The database is in my admin. How do I get to my old posts? Or should I just get the copies I have on my computer?

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    Better ‘dumb’ question — can I restore it from the dashboard? How?

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    Alright…may be a dumb question. Where in the heck is my database?

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    How do you see all that?

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    I have lots of luv for technology, but I know when I’ve spent too much time on a thing…it’s 2am here and I’ve been at it since 9:30, not counting the hours prior just reading up and testing that automatic upload plugin. Gotta get on with the rest of my life.

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    LOL. I copied everything. Nothing’s lost.

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    Sorry, we must have been typing at the same time. I went into filezilla, where I’ve always gone to upload files. I don’t recall seeing www or http in there. But by now you’ve seen my previous message.

    I’m not a programmer, and maybe .org requires some programming skills, maybe not. But this didn’t go smoothly at all.

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    Since my blog was so new, I just went ahead and deleted the installation and installed a new one at my host’s site.

    Thank you for your help.

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    I have an idea what you’re talking about, but I don’t speak the lingo as well, so bear with me.

    I unzipped the WP update files to my computer and then uploaded them to the server, to my old WP files. My domain is the root. I used Filezilla and it showed the directory called mustbeaponyinthere. I loaded files into that directory into the folders that the instructions indicated. I manually updated the php file and loaded that too.

    Are you able to see the files on my site?

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    Thank you for your offer, but I must do this myself. If you have any idea what I missed, I’d appreciate your input.

    Thanks again!

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    These are the instructions I followed from this link:
    https://codex.www.ads-software.com/Upgrading_WordPress

    Step 1: Replace WordPress files
    Get the latest WordPress. Either download and extract it to your computer or download it directly to the server.
    As a reminder, to extract a tar.gz to a folder use this command, replacing (folder name) with the name of your folder: tar -xvzf latest.tar.gz -C ./(folder name)
    Delete your old wp-includes and wp-admin directories.
    Copy the new WordPress files to your server, overwriting old files in the root, except perhaps the wp-content folder (see “NOTE” below). You may use FTP or shell commands to do so. Note that this means *all* the files, including all the files in the root directory as well. If you use the default or classic theme and have customized it, then you can skip that theme.
    NOTE The wp-content folder requires special handling, as do the plugins and themes folders. You should copy over the contents of these folders, not the entire folder. In some cases, copying the entire folder may overwrite all your customizations and added content.

    Also take care to preserve the content of the wp-config.php file in the root directory. This file contains current settings for your existing installation, e.g. database sign-in information. Occasionally new versions of WordPress add statements to this file. (E.g. in version 2.5 the SECRET_KEY variable was added, see Extended upgrade instructions). Compare your existing file with the new installation file which is named wp-config-sample.php. Either transfer your settings to the sample-file and rename it to wp-config.php or copy the new statements from the sample file into your current file.

    Step 2: Upgrade your installation
    Visit your main WordPress admin page at /wp-admin. You may be asked to login again. If a database upgrade is necessary at this point, WordPress will detect it and give you a link to a URL like https://example.com/wordpress/wp-admin/upgrade.php. Follow that link and follow the instructions. This will update your database to be compatible with the latest code. If you fail to do this step, your blog might look funny.

    Step 3: Do something nice for yourself
    If you have caching enabled, your changes will appear to users more immediately if you clear the cache at this point (and if you don’t, you may get confused when you see the old version number in page footers when you check to see if the upgrade worked).

    Your WordPress installation is successfully upgraded. That’s as simple as we can make it without Updating WordPress Using Subversion.

    Consider rewarding yourself with a blog post about the upgrade, reading that book or article you’ve been putting off, or simply sitting back for a few moments and let the world pass you by.

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    I apologize. That is in the instructions. (it’s late, I’m going blind.)
    When I finished uploading everything, I got a screen that led me to my admin on the dashboard, but no further instructions. Did I miss something?

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    No. I didn’t see that in the instructions. (I printed them out). I updated the wp-config.php sample file. How do I run the one you’re talking about?

    Thread Starter delocurr

    (@delocurr)

    Thank you for your quick response. I had already deactivated my plug-ins. I will change themes as you suggest.

Viewing 15 replies - 16 through 30 (of 34 total)