Support » Installing WordPress » WP progs v blog data

  • Can anyone point me to a definitive list of what’s common and standard in a WP installation and what’s specific to a given use, please?

    I understand that WP is a collection of scripts and HTML code and I’ve looked through stuff in the codex such as moving WP, giving it its own directory, and so on but w/o finding just what I need.

    Essentially, I would normally keep data completely separate from any relevant program. Right now I’m experimenting with WP on a local W2K machine using Apache 2.2, MySQL 5.0 and PHP and I have these last in their own subdirectories under G:\Program Files\. I’d like to put WP in as G:\Program Files\WordPress (once only) and, entirely separately, set up G:\Data\Blog1, G:\Data\Blog2 etc.

    I don’t have a problem getting to //localhost/blog1, //localhost/blog2 etc. through Apache but I’m unclear just what of WP I can install once only and leave alone and what I need to copy/edit to the individual blog subdirectories.

    Any help, either indicating the files or pointing me to where I can find that information would be much appreciated.

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  • WordPress ‘data’, meaning posts, comments, category, and links, is kept in a MySQL database.

    Pictures and such that you upload are kept in a folder designated by you.

    The WordPress programs, which are PHP scripts, are kept in the folder you install WordPress in. The easiest way to see all those files is to look in a distribution file found at http://wordpress.org/download/

    See:
    http://www.tamba2.org.uk/wordpress/xampp/
    Installing_Multiple_Blogs
    Database Description

    Thread Starter Murdoch

    (@murdoch)

    Thanks for the information and links, which were very helpful. Apologies for being slow in replying but I’ve been absurdly busy and was hoping to complete matters before commenting further. That’s clearly now not going to happen for some time.

    FWIW, WordPress MU seems to me inappropriate and possibly even unsuitable for what I want, namely using the same basic code/installation for a few different blogs. It may well be different for larger installations.

    Secondly, perhaps the most useful link I found from following through and beyond those you posted was from at http://tinyurl.com/32657b (Striderweb) which goes into the process simply and well, properly influenced by Ockham’s approach to complexity. It’s the basis of the approach I’ll use when things calm down and I get time to do it. Thanks again.

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