Hi Roy,
two options:
Create a new admin user with separate username and password. The drawback is that this user would be able to access the backend as well.
Alternatively just disable wp staging on the staging site and the authentication dialog is gone.
Cheers
Thread Starter
Roy
(@clg87)
@renehermi Hello Rene,
I did the following and it seems to work for me. Does it look ok to you?
I needed to create two separate subdomains. Using the plugin twice, these are of course two separate folders nested under public_html.
In each of the subdomain environments, I navigated as follows: Dashboard > Users > All Users > Edit > Generate new password. I kept my username the same. I decided to do this for simplicity rather that adding a new user.
Now, in a browser, https://mydomain/subdomain leads to a login screen, as it should. I will be providing the plugin authors with username (my wordpress username) and password (the password I created on through the subdomain’s dashboard).
Is this a good or bad idea to achieve what I wanted: different login credentials for any given subdomain, and have that testing person’s access limited to that subdomain?
Sorry for long post but I wanted to be sure I was clear.
Thank you!
Hi Roy,
both websites are totally independent of each other. So what you did should be working well. So your client will not be able to access the production website.
have a sucessfull week
René
Thread Starter
Roy
(@clg87)
Thank you for your help! 5 stars coming.
That would be amazing, Roy:-) @clg87