mysql missing from my home-page WordPress....
Gary Kline
kline at thought.org
Fri Mar 4 19:30:08 UTC 2011
[Just a top post to say that recent troubles of unknown cause on
my server --7.3-- have drained time from my thought of joining
the "Blogger World."]
On Fri, Mar 04, 2011 at 09:09:20AM -0800, Chip Camden wrote:
> Quoth Chad Perrin on Friday, 04 March 2011:
> > On Fri, Mar 04, 2011 at 07:27:44AM -0800, Chip Camden wrote:
> > >
> > > I have not had a lot of luck with upgrading from within the admin panel,
> > > but it is still easy to upgrade by downloading the latest tarball and
> > > simply extracting it over the installation. Then go into the admin panel
> > > to see if it requires that you press a button to update the database.
> > > Done!
> > >
> > > Of course, make a backup first.
I make bups of bups; the thing is that when I _thought_ i had
"upgraded" by push-button nothing had actually happened. My
version had not been uprev'd to 3.1; it was still a 3.0.4.
Etc. I'mall but certain this would have been the same if I
were running Linux. ...So yes, I will d/load stuff, move or scp
it into my www/data/blog/* and extract. My proposed site is
titled "...And miles to go before I sleep"; the blog directory
is, literally "blog". (I posted a question on the forum about
where to change the author info and someone said it was
"www.home/blog/author/authorID" --IIRC. I didn't understand the
answer.)
> >
> > . . . and Heaven help you if you had to make any nontrivial changes to
> > your local install of WordPress to make up for some of its many
> > deficiencies, and don't have a detailed record of exactly what changes
> > you made, since I know of no upgrade methodology for WordPress that don't
> > destroy such changes in a way that makes it effectively impossible to
> > just apply a patch to reintroduce them. WordPress developers apparently
> > like to substantially change the way things look in all the core files
> > (thus breaking patches made from earlier versions) without substantively
> > changing the way things work or the readability of the code.
> >
I just found the WP-3.1.zip file in my ~/Downloads directory. I
had not looked. On the WP.org forum I claimed to be running 3.1
rather than 3.0.4. Could have have nosed me somehow? How
tightly integrated are the clients integrated with WordPress?
Another thin I don't quite get is whether this group in a
non-profit [.org] or a for-profit [.com].
I've seen some instructive videos for this effort; I'm assuming
that these are for the ".com/commercial" side. Is there a place
on the WP .org side that has a series of tutorials-- 001 to NNN
that I should read? This one isn't going to be plug-in-an-use;
it looks like it demands at least a moderate learning curve.
> > --
> > Chad Perrin [ original content licensed OWL: http://owl.apotheon.org ]
>
> Yes, I've been bitten by that. Nowadays I confine all of my
> customizations to plugins or theme files, os I can always drop in their
> latest version and then check to see if they broke the plugins somehow
> (which has happened on occasion).
>
Yipes. Thanks for the clue.
gary
> --
> Sterling (Chip) Camden | sterling at camdensoftware.com | 2048D/3A978E4F
> http://chipsquips.com | http://camdensoftware.com | http://chipstips.com
--
Gary Kline kline at thought.org http://www.thought.org Public Service Unix
Journey Toward the Dawn, E-Book: http://www.thought.org
The 7.98a release of Jottings: http://jottings.thought.org
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