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Informations about the package bedrock

Bedrock

Bedrock is a modern WordPress stack that helps you get started with the best development tools and project structure.

ToC

Quick Start

Use bedrock-ansible to get started with a development VM customized for Bedrock.

Or run composer create-project roots/bedrock <path> (see Installation/Usage for more details) to just get a new copy of Bedrock locally.

Features

Bedrock is meant as a base for you to fork and modify to fit your needs. It is delete-key friendly and you can strip out or modify any part of it. You'll also want to customize Bedrock with settings specific to your sites/company.

Much of the philosphy behind Bedrock is inspired by the Twelve-Factor App methodology including the WordPress specific version.

Note: While this is a project from the guys behind the Roots starter theme, Bedrock isn't tied to Roots in any way and works with any theme.

Requirements

If you aren't interested in using a part, then you don't need its requirements either. Not deploying with Capistrano? Then don't worry about Ruby for example.

Installation/Usage

See Documentation for more details on the steps below.

Using create-project

Composer's create-project command will automatically install the Bedrock project to a directory and run composer install.

The post-install script will automatically copy .env.example to .env and you'll be prompted about generating salt keys and appending them to your .env file.

Note: To generate salts without a prompt, run create-project with -n (non-interactive). You can also change the generate-salts setting in composer.json under config in your own fork. The default is true.

To skip the scripts completely, create-project can be run with --no-scripts to disable it.

  1. Run composer create-project roots/bedrock <path> (path being the folder to install to)
  2. Edit .env and update environment variables:
    • DB_NAME - Database name
    • DB_USER - Database user
    • DB_PASSWORD - Database password
    • DB_HOST - Database host (defaults to localhost)
    • WP_ENV - Set to environment (development, staging, production, etc)
    • WP_HOME - Full URL to WordPress home (http://example.com)
    • WP_SITEURL - Full URL to WordPress including subdirectory (http://example.com/wp)
  3. Add theme(s)
  4. Set your Nginx or Apache vhost to /path/to/site/web/ (/path/to/site/current/web/ if using Capistrano)
  5. Access WP Admin at http://example.com/wp/wp-admin

Manually

  1. Clone/Fork repo
  2. Run composer install
  3. Copy .env.example to .env and update environment variables:
    • DB_NAME - Database name
    • DB_USER - Database user
    • DB_PASSWORD - Database password
    • DB_HOST - Database host (defaults to localhost)
    • WP_ENV - Set to environment (development, staging, production, etc)
    • WP_HOME - Full URL to WordPress home (http://example.com)
    • WP_SITEURL - Full URL to WordPress including subdirectory (http://example.com/wp)
  4. Add theme(s)
  5. Set your Nginx or Apache vhost to /path/to/site/web/ (/path/to/site/current/web/ if using Capistrano)
  6. Access WP Admin at http://example.com/wp/wp-admin

Using Capistrano for deploys?

Deploying with Capistrano

Required Gems:

These can be installed manually with gem install <gem name> but it's highly suggested you use Bundler to manage them. Bundler is basically the Ruby equivalent to PHP's Composer. Just as Composer manages your PHP packages/dependencies, Bundler manages your Ruby gems/dependencies. Bundler itself is a Gem and can be installed via gem install bundler (sudo may be required).

The Gemfile in the root of this repo specifies the required Gems (just like composer.json). Once you have Bundler installed, run bundle install to install the Gems in the Gemfile. When using Bundler, you'll need to prefix the cap command with bundle exec as seen below (this ensures you're not using system Gems which can cause conflicts).

See http://capistranorb.com/documentation/getting-started/authentication-and-authorisation/ for the best way to set up SSH key authentication to your servers for password-less (and secure) deploys.

Deployment Steps

  1. Edit your config/deploy/ stage/environment configs to set the roles/servers and connection options.
  2. Before your first deploy, run bundle exec cap <stage> deploy:check to create the necessary folders/symlinks.
  3. Add your .env file to shared/ in your deploy_to path on the remote server for all the stages you use (ex: /srv/www/example.com/shared/.env)
  4. Run the normal deploy command: bundle exec cap <stage> deploy
  5. Enjoy one-command deploys!

Documentation

Folder Structure

The organization of Bedrock is similar to putting WordPress in its own subdirectory but with some improvements.

Configuration Files

The root web/wp-config.php is required by WordPress and is only used to load the other main configs. Nothing else should be added to it.

config/application.php is the main config file that contains what wp-config.php usually would. Base options should be set in there.

For environment specific configuration, use the files under config/environments. By default there's is development, staging, and production but these can be whatever you require.

The environment configs are required before the main application config so anything in an environment config takes precedence over application.

Note: You can't re-define constants in PHP. So if you have a base setting in application.php and want to override it in production.php for example, you have a few options:

Don't want it?

You will lose the ability to define environment specific settings.

Environment Variables

Bedrock tries to separate config from code as much as possible and environment variables are used to achieve this. The benefit is there's a single place (.env) to keep settings like database or other 3rd party credentials that isn't committed to your repository.

PHP dotenv is used to load the .env file. All variables are then available in your app by getenv, $_SERVER, or $_ENV.

Currently, the following env vars are required:

Don't want it?

You will lose the separation between config and code and potentially put secure credentials at risk.

Composer

Composer is used to manage dependencies. Bedrock considers any 3rd party library as a dependency including WordPress itself and any plugins.

See these two blogs for more extensive documentation:

Screencast ($): Using Composer With WordPress

Plugins

WordPress Packagist is already registered in the composer.json file so any plugins from the WordPress Plugin Directory can easily be required.

To add a plugin, add it under the require directive or use composer require <namespace>/<packagename> from the command line. If it's from WordPress Packagist then the namespace is always wpackagist-plugin.

Example: "wpackagist-plugin/akismet": "dev-trunk"

Whenever you add a new plugin or update the WP version, run composer update to install your new packages.

plugins, and mu-plugins are Git ignored by default since Composer manages them. If you want to add something to those folders that isn't managed by Composer, you need to update .gitignore to whitelist them:

!web/app/plugins/plugin-name

Note: Some plugins may create files or folders outside of their given scope, or even make modifications to wp-config.php and other files in the app directory. These files should be added to your .gitignore file as they are managed by the plugins themselves, which are managed via Composer. Any modifications to wp-config.php that are needed should be moved into config/application.php.

Updating WP and plugin versions

Updating your WordPress version (or any plugin) is just a matter of changing the version number in the composer.json file.

Then running composer update will pull down the new version.

Themes

Themes can also be managed by Composer but should only be done so under two conditions:

  1. You're using a parent theme that won't be modified at all
  2. You want to separate out your main theme and use that as a standalone package

Under most circumstances we recommend NOT doing #2 and instead keeping your main theme as part of your app's repository.

Just like plugins, WPackagist maintains a Composer mirror of the WP theme directory. To require a theme, just use the wpackagist-theme namespace.

Don't want it?

Composer integration is the biggest part of Bedrock, so if you were going to remove it there isn't much point in using Bedrock.

Capistrano

Capistrano is a remote server automation and deployment tool. It will let you deploy or rollback your application in one command:

Composer support is built-in so when you run a deploy, composer install is automatically run. Capistrano has a great deploy flow that you can hook into and extend it.

It's written in Ruby so it's needed locally if you want to use it. Capistrano was recently rewritten to be completely language agnostic, so if you previously wrote it off for being too Rails-centric, take another look at it.

Screencast ($): Deploying WordPress with Capistrano

Don't want it?

You will lose the one-command deploys and built-in integration with Composer. Another deploy method will be needed as well.

wp-cron

Bedrock disables the internal WP Cron via define('DISABLE_WP_CRON', true);. If you keep this setting, you'll need to manually set a cron job like the following in your crontab file:

*/5 * * * * curl http://example.com/wp/wp-cron.php

WP-CLI

Bedrock works with WP-CLI just like any other WordPress project would. Previously we required WP-CLI in our composer.json file as a dependency. This has been removed since WP-CLI now recommends installing it globally with a phar file. It also caused conflicts if you tried using a global install.

The wp command will automatically pick up Bedrock's subdirectory install as long as you run commands from within the project's directory (or deeper). Bedrock includes a wp-cli.yml file that sets the path option to web/wp. Use this config file for any further configuration.

Vagrant/Ansible

Vagrant and Ansible integration with Bedrock can now be found in the separate bedrock-ansible project. Basic instructions exist in that project's README, but if you want a Vagrant box tied to a specific Bedrock based WP application, copy the example Vagrantfile into your app's repo and edit the necessary file paths.

Note that using Ansible you no longer need to manually create/edit a .env file (or use composer create-project to generate one). Ansible will generate a .env based on its config and automatically generate salts/keys.

Todo

Contributing

Everyone is welcome to help contribute and improve this project. There are several ways you can contribute:

Support

Use the Roots Discourse forum to ask questions and get support.


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