This repo has the necessary setup for running jquery-wp-content in WordPress locally using Docker.
-
Clone this repo and its submodules
git clone --recursive git@github.com:jquery/jquery-wp-docker.git
-
Copy the wp-config-sample.php file to wp-config.php
cp wp-config-sample.php wp-config.php
-
Edit the wp-config.php file and set unique keys and salts using https://api.wordpress.org/secret-key/1.1/salt/. Do NOT change the
DB_
defines.define('AUTH_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); define('SECURE_AUTH_KEY', 'put your unique phrase here'); // etc.
-
Copy .env.example to .env and edit the file to define database credentials
cp .env.example .env
-
Optionally, add local SSL certs to the
ssl
directory.-
If you don't have any, you can generate them using mkcert. Run the following:
mkcert -install
-
Then, in the
ssl
directory, run:mkcert \ local.jquery.com \ local.api.jquery.com \ local.blog.jquery.com \ local.learn.jquery.com \ local.releases.jquery.com \ local.jqueryui.com \ local.api.jqueryui.com \ local.blog.jqueryui.com \ local.jquerymobile.com \ local.api.jquerymobile.com \ local.blog.jquerymobile.com \ local.jquery.org \ local.brand.jquery.org \ local.contribute.jquery.org \ local.meetings.jquery.org
Wildcards don't work for multi-level subdomains. Add each site to the list of domains.
-
Rename the created certs to
cert.pem
andcert-key.pem
.
-
-
Run
docker compose up --build
to start the containers. -
Construct the database.
You do not need to be on the jQuery Infrastructure Team to test jQuery websites. Each site can be deployed after installing wordpress locally, but the database for that site needs to be created first. The database name for each site is listed below:
Site Database Name jquery.com wordpress_jquery_com api.jquery.com wordpress_api_jquery_com blog.jquery.com wordpress_blog_jquery_com learn.jquery.com wordpress_learn_jquery_com releases.jquery.com wordpress_releases_jquery_com jqueryui.com wordpress_jqueryui_com api.jqueryui.com wordpress_api_jqueryui_com blog.jqueryui.com wordpress_blog_jqueryui_com jquerymobile.com wordpress_jquerymobile_com api.jquerymobile.com wordpress_api_jquerymobile_com blog.jquerymobile.com wordpress_blog_jquerymobile_com jquery.org wordpress_jquery_org brand.jquery.org wordpress_brand_jquery_org contribute.jquery.org wordpress_contribute_jquery_org meetings.jquery.org wordpress_meetings_jquery_org Select the corresponding database name from the table above for the site you wish to test and run the following command to create the database:
echo 'CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS wordpress_api_jquery_com;' | docker exec -i jquerydb mysql -u root -proot
Then, finish installing WordPress by visiting the appropriate install URL for that site, such as http://local.api.jquery.com/wp-admin/install.php. Make sure the address begins with
local.
.Fill in the form with the following information:
- Site Title: Any (e.g., "jQuery")
- Username: Any
- Password: Any
- Your Email: Any email address
- Search Engine Visibility: Uncheck
Click Install WordPress.
You should now be able to run
grunt deploy
from the corresponding jQuery site repo. Make sure the repo has aconfig.json
with the following:{ "url": "http://local.api.jquery.com", "username": "dev", "password": "dev" }
Replace the
url
with the site you are testing. Thedev
user is automatically created by this repo's wp-config.php.After a successful deployment, visit http://local.api.jquery.com to see the site, or https://local.api.jquery.com if you created certs.
# You need SSH admin access to this production server ssh wp-05.ops.jquery.net sudo -u tarsnap mysqldump --databases `sudo -u tarsnap mysql -B -N -e "SHOW DATABASES LIKE 'wordpress_%'"` > wordpress.sql
Then, on your local machine, run:
# Copy the SQL dump from your home directory on the server (as created by the previous command) # NOTE: There must be no space between -p and the password! scp -C wp-05.ops.jquery.net:~/wordpress.sql . docker exec -i jquerydb mysql -u root -proot < wordpress.sql
Optionally, import the blog database as well. This uses a slightly different set of commands because our blogs have a shorter naming convention for their databases than the doc sites. This stems from a time that the blogs were in fact native to the jquery.com site and database, and remain internally named as such.
ssh wpblogs-01.ops.jquery.net # Export wordpress_jquery, and import as wordpress_blog_jquery_com. # Use --no-create-db to omit DB name during export, so we can set expected name during import. sudo -u tarsnap mysqldump -p wordpress_jquery --no-create-db > wordpress_blog_jquery_com.sql; sudo -u tarsnap mysqldump -p wordpress_jqueryui --no-create-db > wordpress_blog_jqueryui_com.sql; sudo -u tarsnap mysqldump -p wordpress_jquerymobile --no-create-db > wordpress_blog_jquerymobile_com.sql;
And then locally:
scp -C wpblogs-01.ops.jquery.net:wordpress_blog_{jquery_com,jqueryui_com,jquerymobile_com}.sql . echo 'CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS wordpress_blog_jquery_com; CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS wordpress_blog_jqueryui_com; CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS wordpress_blog_jquerymobile_com;' | docker exec -i jquerydb mysql -u root -proot docker exec -i jquerydb mysql -u root -proot --database wordpress_blog_jquery_com < wordpress_blog_jquery_com.sql; docker exec -i jquerydb mysql -u root -proot --database wordpress_blog_jqueryui_com < wordpress_blog_jqueryui_com.sql; docker exec -i jquerydb mysql -u root -proot --database wordpress_blog_jquerymobile_com < wordpress_blog_jquerymobile_com.sql;
Then visit http://local.api.jquery.com, or https://local.api.jquery.com if you created certs.
To update your setup after pulling down changes, run:
docker compose down
docker compose up --build -d
To open a REPL to the database, run the mysql
CLI in the jquerydb container. Make sure to include the -i
and -t
opens to connect your own shell to the shell in the container.
docker exec -it jquerydb mysql -u root -proot
jquery-wp-docker is set up to use ports 80
and 443
by default so no extra work is needed to support SSL. However, if either port is in use on your host, you can create a .env
file in this directory and set the following environment variable with a port number of your own choosing:
JQUERY_WP_HTTP_PORT=4000
Then, visit the port directly when visiting sites, e.g. http://local.api.jquery.com:4000.
443 is only spun up by Apache if certs are available in the /ssl folder. However, the docker-compose.yml
does still expose port 443
to the docker images's 443, even if nothing is listening on that port. This shouldn't be an issue in most cases, but the port can be changed in the .env.
file to avoid any conflicts.
JQUERY_WP_HTTPS_PORT=0
You do not need to configure your /etc/hosts
file to define local.jquery.com
, because we have defined these domains in the production DNS for jquery.com as alias for localhost. However, if you plan to work offline, you can add the following rules:
127.0.0.1 local.jquery.com
127.0.0.1 local.api.jquery.com
127.0.0.1 local.blog.jquery.com
127.0.0.1 local.learn.jquery.com
127.0.0.1 local.releases.jquery.com
127.0.0.1 local.jqueryui.com
127.0.0.1 local.api.jqueryui.com
127.0.0.1 local.blog.jqueryui.com
127.0.0.1 local.jquerymobile.com
127.0.0.1 local.api.jquerymobile.com
127.0.0.1 local.blog.jquerymobile.com
127.0.0.1 local.jquery.org
127.0.0.1 local.brand.jquery.org
127.0.0.1 local.contribute.jquery.org
127.0.0.1 local.meetings.jquery.org