Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
47 lines (34 loc) · 2.16 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

47 lines (34 loc) · 2.16 KB

Vayne

Vayne is a folder structure for Wordpress implement Bedrock.

Features

  • Better folder structure
  • Dependency management with Composer
  • Easy WordPress configuration with environment specific files
  • Environment variables with Dotenv
  • Autoloader for mu-plugins (use regular plugins as mu-plugins)
  • Enhanced security (separated web root and secure passwords with wp-password-bcrypt)

Requirements

Installation

  1. Create a new project
$ composer create-project rafadiot/vayne
  1. Update environment variables in .env file:
  • DB_NAME - Database name
    • DB_USER - Database user
    • DB_PASSWORD - Database password
    • DB_HOST - Database host
    • Optionally, you can define DATABASE_URL for using a DSN instead of using the variables above (e.g. mysql://user:password@127.0.0.1:3306/db_name)
  • WP_ENV - Set to environment (development, staging, production)
  • WP_HOME - Full URL to WordPress home (https://example.com)
  • WP_SITEURL - Full URL to WordPress including subdirectory (https://example.com/back_office)
  • AUTH_KEY, SECURE_AUTH_KEY, LOGGED_IN_KEY, NONCE_KEY, AUTH_SALT, SECURE_AUTH_SALT, LOGGED_IN_SALT, NONCE_SALT

If you want to automatically generate the security keys (assuming you have wp-cli installed locally) you can use the very handy wp-cli-dotenv-command:

  wp package install aaemnnosttv/wp-cli-dotenv-command

  wp dotenv salts regenerate

Or, you can cut and paste from the Roots WordPress Salt Generator.

  1. Add theme(s) in public/app/themes as you would for a normal WordPress site. You can use Rafadiot theme.
  2. Set your site vhost document root to /path/to/site/public/ (/path/to/site/current/public/ if using deploys)
  3. Access WP admin at https://example.com/back_office/wp-admin