This will set up one or more installations of Wordpress 3.8 on Debian and Redhat style distributions.
- Configuration of WordPress DB connection parameters
- Generate secure keys and salts for
wp-config.php
. - Optional creation of MySQL database/user/permissions.
- Configuration of php-enabled webserver
- Configuration MySQL server
- PHP 5.3 or greater
- User specified by
wp_owner
must exist
-
install_dir
Specifies the directory into which wordpress should be installed. Default:/opt/wordpress
-
install_url
Specifies the url from which the wordpress tarball should be downloaded. Default:https://wordpress.org
-
version
Specifies the version of wordpress to install. Default:3.8
-
create_db
Specifies whether to create the db or not. Default:true
-
create_db_user
Specifies whether to create the db user or not. Default:true
-
db_name
Specifies the database name which the wordpress module should be configured to use. Default:wordpress
-
db_host
Specifies the database host to connect to. Default:localhost
-
db_user
Specifies the database user. Default:wordpress
-
db_password
Specifies the database user's password in plaintext. Default:password
-
wp_owner
Specifies the owner of the wordpress files. You must ensure this user exists as this module does not attempt to create it if missing. Default:root
-
wp_group
Specifies the group of the wordpress files. Default:0
(*BSD/Darwin compatible GID) -
wp_lang
WordPress Localized Language. Default: '' -
wp_plugin_dir
WordPress Plugin Directory. Full path, no trailing slash. Default: WordPress Default -
wp_additional_config
Specifies a template to include near the end of the wp-config.php file to add additional options. Default: '' -
wp_config_content
Specifies the entire content for wp-config.php. This causes many of the other parameters to be ignored and allows an entirely custom config to be passed. It is recommended to usewp_additional_config
instead of this parameter when possible. -
wp_table_prefix
Specifies the database table prefix. Default: wp_ -
wp_proxy_host
Specifies a Hostname or IP of a proxy server for Wordpress to use to install updates, plugins, etc. Default: '' -
wp_proxy_port
Specifies the port to use with the proxy host. Default: '' -
wp_multisite
Specifies whether to enable the multisite feature. Requireswp_site_domain
to also be passed. Default:false
-
wp_site_domain
Specifies theDOMAIN_CURRENT_SITE
value that will be used when configuring multisite. Typically this is the address of the main wordpress instance. Default: '' -
wp_debug
Specifies theWP_DEBUG
value that will control debugging. This must be true if you use the next two debug extensions. Default: 'false' -
wp_debug_log
Specifies theWP_DEBUG_LOG
value that extends debugging to cause all errors to also be saved to a debug.log logfile insdie the /wp-content/ directory. Default: 'false' -
wp_debug_display
Specifies theWP_DEBUG_DISPLAY
value that extends debugging to cause debug messages to be shown inline, in HTML pages. Default: 'false'
- The parameters for
wordpress::instance
is exactly the same as the classwordpress
except as noted below. - The title will be used as the default value for
install_dir
unless otherwise specified. - The
db_name
anddb_user
parameters are required.
The classes wordpress::app
and wordpress::db
and defines wordpress::instance::app
and wordpress::instance::db
are technically private, but any PRs which add documentation and tests so that they may be made public for multi-node deployments are welcome!
Default single deployment (insecure; default passwords and installed as root):
class { 'wordpress': }
Basic deployment (secure database password, installed as wordpress
user/group. NOTE: in this example you must ensure the wordpress
user already exists):
class { 'wordpress':
wp_owner => 'wordpress',
wp_group => 'wordpress',
db_user => 'wordpress',
db_password => 'hvyH(S%t(\"0\"16',
}
Basic deployment of multiple instances (secure database password, installed as wordpress
user/group):
wordpress::instance { '/opt/wordpress1':
wp_owner => 'wordpress1',
wp_group => 'wordpress1',
db_user => 'wordpress1',
db_name => 'wordpress1',
db_password => 'hvyH(S%t(\"0\"16',
}
wordpress::instance { '/opt/wordpress2':
wp_owner => 'wordpress2',
wp_group => 'wordpress2',
db_user => 'wordpress2',
db_name => 'wordpress2',
db_password => 'bb69381b4b9de3a232',
}
Externally hosted MySQL DB:
class { 'wordpress':
db_user => 'wordpress',
db_password => 'hvyH(S%t(\"0\"16',
db_host => 'db.example.com',
}
Disable module's database/user creation (the database and db user must still exist with correct permissions):
class { 'wordpress':
db_user => 'wordpress',
db_password => 'hvyH(S%t(\"0\"16',
create_db => false,
create_db_user => false,
}
Install specific version of WordPress:
class { 'wordpress':
version => '3.4',
}
Install WordPress to a specific directory:
class { 'wordpress':
install_dir => '/var/www/wordpress',
}
Download wordpress-${version}.tar.gz
from an internal server:
class { 'wordpress':
install_url => 'http://internal.example.com/software',
}
Configure wordpress to download updates and plugins through a proxy:
class { 'wordpress':
proxy_host => 'http://my.proxy.corp.com',
proxy_port => '8080',
}
Enable the multisite wordpress feature:
class { 'wordpress':
wp_multisite => true,
wp_site_domain => 'blog.domain.com',
}
Add custom configuration to wp-config.php:
class { 'wordpress':
wp_additional_config => 'foo/wp-config-extra.php.erb',
}