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WordPress helpful tricks

Nov04
by Ike on November 4, 2012 at 9:56 pm
Posted In: CMS, Community, cPanel, MYSQL, Uncategorized, Wordpress

WordPress can be a bit finicky at times. I use quite a few different little tricks that I have picked up to help fix some very common problems with wordpress.  Do you have any cools tricks that might make someones life a little easier when working with word press? Let us know.

Viewing WordPress without the DNS pointed at the server:

A lot of times we want to see our site working before we point the world to it. Because wordpress uses the domain name in a lot of it’s functionality this can be difficult. Without this little tid bit wordpress would show up all funky without any style. All you have to do is add the following to your wp-config.php file and configure to meet what you need.

define(‘WP_HOME’,’http://100.100.100.100/~username’);
define(‘WP_SITEURL’,’http://100.100.100.100/~username’);

Adding the ~ with the user name at the end is the way to check out a site without DNS being point for cPanel.  You can just replace the IP and the user name or just the IP depending on your server setup, to see the site in full functionality. You can also make this change by place the same in the database in the wp-options table. The 2 rows that would need to be change would be the ‘home’ and ‘siteurl’.  This can be done via command line or PHPmyadmin.

All my Page links go to 404 pages:

This is a fairly easy fix normally and usually happens when a wordpress site is moved. Moving the site generally breaks the permalink maps. If you login to you wp-admin panel, go to settings ==> permalinks.

Note what you currently are set to. If this is a custom structure you are going to want to copy the structure to a note pad for later use. Once you know what you are currently using, set the perma links to default and then click save.  Now to rebuild the maps you can put the setting you had in there before and click save. Now clear your cache and check your site. Things should be working properly now.



Issues after moving my wordpress site:

Things can get jumbled when moving your wordpress site as we learned above. This little trick has helped me out in a number of areas. Mostly when moving or upgrading a site. By adding the snip-it below to your wp-config.php it tells wordpress that things are moving.

define('RELOCATE', true);

This has helped with the perma link issue above and other anomalies when moving sites. This even helped after a wordpress upgrade when the password was not being recognized by wordpress.

I lost my wordpress admin password:

If you have lost your password and you have access to the database we can change this.  If you login via PHPmyadmin to the database, you can browse to the user table. Choose the use that you need to change the password for and click the edit tab. You will see the section where the encrypted password is stored.

Go ahead and clear out the password and type in what you want the new password to be. There is a drop down menu to the left of the text box that you are typing in. You will need to set that to MD5, then click Save. Now when you are looking at the user in the table view you can see that phpmyadmin encrypted the password for you.

These are some good tricks I use on a day to day basis. I hope they will help you to get your site back up and running. I will post more as I find useful wordpress tricks.


└ Tags: DNS, password, site, Wordpress
 Comment 

New York Internet rides out the storm

Nov02
by Ike on November 2, 2012 at 1:35 pm
Posted In: Performance

New York Internet looks set to make it through the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy with barely a scratch on its uptime or performance.

NYI’s New York City datacenter is just a third of a mile away from the 75 Broad Street datacenter (in evacuation Zone A), which flooded during Hurricane Sandy. NYI is crucially further uphill, in Zone C, and was out of reach of the storm surge. Despite widespread power failures within the area, NYI has so far managed to continue operating without suffering from any outages:

Demand for fuel is very high in the areas affected by the storm. Phillip Koblence, founder of NYI, said that poor availability of gasoline for staff to get to and from datacenters was his worst problem, followed by sleeping and washing facilities. Queues to get gasoline were reportedly two miles long, and vehicles containing fewer than 3 people were not being allowed into Manhattan between 6am and midnight.

Koblence told Netcraft that he had no power or water at home, and difficulties getting food anywhere near work were also adding to the problems. NYI expected commercial power to be shut off as the storm hit, and its New Jersey and New York City datacenters have been running on diesel generators since Monday.


NYI’s New York City datacenter is only a few blocks
away from the flooded 75 Broad Street datacenter.

NYI estimates that its 21st floor generator tank in Manhattan can last for 36 hours, while its 8th floor generator can run for more than 3 days. The Bridgewater datacenter in New Jersey is believed to be capable of lasting at least 10 days on generators, far longer than the times between each fuel delivery that the company has been sustaining this week.

Commercial power is expected to be restored to the datacenters late on Saturday night, although NYI plans to remain on generator power until the commercial power supply becomes stable.

Queuing for gasoline in Bridgewater.

Live performance graphs for www.nyi.net can be viewed here.

└ Tags: Performance
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Joomla Community Magazine | November 2012

Nov02
by Ike on November 2, 2012 at 3:39 am
Posted In: CMS, Community, General News, Joomla, Releases

JCM November 2012

The November issue of the Joomla Community Magazine is here! Our stories this month:

Editors Introduction

Two Heads are Better Than One!, by Dianne Henning

Feature Stories

A Rose by Any Other Name, by Mark W. Bender
There’s a New JEDi in Town…, by Dianne Henning
Thinking Bigger, by Alice Grevet
2013 Goals Survey Open Through November 10, by Paul Orwig

Events

Danish Joomladay2012 at IBC Innovationsfabrikken Kolding, by Jan von Rühden
JoomlaDay Italy 2012, by AlexRed
First Joomla User Group Meetup in Bangladesh, by Parvez Akther

Sitebuilders

20 New Things: Joomla 2.5 vs. Joomla 3.0, by Hung Dinh

Joomla! in Education

Harvard Extension School offers Joomla this fall, by Sully Sullivan

Business Matters

No Blog? No Way! Effective Blogging for Joomla Businesses, by Luke Summerfield
Internalize a business webmarketing strategy with Joomla, by Jean-Charles GAUTARD

Project News

Leadership Highlights – November 2012, by Alice Grevet

Designers

Tutorial – The Missing Link to Intro Images in Joomla 2.5, by Scott Greenwald

Community Choice Extensions

Community Choice Extensions – November 2012, by Dianne Henning

The Joomla! Haikus

Post your Haikus for November, by Dianne Henning

In our next issue

We want to publish your Joomla! story in the next JCM issue! So take a look at our Author Resources, by content to get a better idea of what we are looking for, and then register to become a JCM author, by and submit your Joomla! story!


└ Tags: General News
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Most Reliable Hosting Company Sites in October 2012

Nov01
by Ike on November 1, 2012 at 1:00 pm
Posted In: Performance
Rank Company site OS Outage
hh:mm:ss
Failed
Req%
DNS Connect First
byte
Total
1 Datapipe FreeBSD 0.000 0.071 0.018 0.038 0.057
2 Qube Managed Services Linux 0:00:00 0.007 0.132 0.071 0.142 0.142
3 XILO Communications Ltd. Linux 0:00:00 0.007 0.331 0.132 0.388 0.668
4 iWeb Linux 0:00:00 0.010 0.137 0.085 0.171 0.171
5 INetU Windows Server 2008 0:00:00 0.013 0.092 0.090 0.266 0.535
6 www.logicworks.net Linux 0:00:00 0.017 0.212 0.089 0.444 0.683
7 Server Intellect Windows Server 2008 0:00:00 0.017 0.058 0.107 0.215 0.537
8 Multacom FreeBSD 0:00:00 0.017 0.143 0.117 0.236 0.600
9 ReliableServers.com Linux 0:00:00 0.020 0.371 0.097 0.200 0.282
10 Swishmail FreeBSD 0:00:00 0.024 0.127 0.071 0.141 0.285

See full table

Datapipe was the most reliable hosting company in October, impressively responding to all requests throughout the month, despite being in the area most affected by Hurricane Sandy.

Datapipe’s corporate offices are based in the heart of Jersey City, very close to areas where analysts had predicted a 100% probability of a storm surge higher than 6 feet. The southern tip of Manhattan eventually experienced a storm surge of

13 feet
. Datapipe founder and CEO Robb Allen told Netcraft that the effects of the storm were also felt as far inland as Somerset, where Datapipe’s
New Jersey datacenters are based.

After the grid became unstable on Monday, Datapipe switched to generators for their datacenter power supply. Even though their diesel reservoir was large enough to last at least four days, Datapipe also stationed additional fuel trucks on site in case roads became impassable.

Allen noted that previous events including grid blackouts, Hurricane Irene and 9/11 have all helped the internet connectivity and hosting industry in the US north east be better prepared for emergencies, though that there is currently a lot of strain on fuel delivery systems.

Datapipe’s performance and uptime remained remarkably calm before, during, and after the storm, in stark contrast to destruction depicted in photos taken during the event.

When there isn’t a storm brewing, Datapipe runs its United States data centers on
entirely renewable energy
and is recognized by the Environmental Protection Agency as a
Green Power Partner. Datapipe’s other US datacenters are located in San Jose and North Virginia.

Datapipe also has datacenters in Iceland, London, Shanghai and Hong Kong. The location of the
Iceland datacenter allows for free cooling and runs on 100% renewable power using only
geothermal and
hydroelectric
energy sources. The physical infrastructure has been built with steel instead of concrete, making much of it recyclable at the end of its life.

Netcraft measures and makes available the response times of around forty leading hosting providers’ sites. The performance measurements are made at fifteen minute intervals from separate points around the internet, and averages are calculated over the immediately preceding 24 hour period.

From a customer’s point of view, the percentage of failed requests is more pertinent than outages on hosting companies’ own sites, as this gives a pointer to reliability of routing, and this is why we choose to rank our table by fewest failed requests, rather than shortest periods of outage. In the event the number of failed requests are equal then sites are ranked by average connection times.

Information on the measurement process and current measurements is available.

└ Tags: Performance
 Comment 

Parallels Plesk Panel 9.5.5 MU#10

Nov01
by Ike on November 1, 2012 at 12:37 pm
Posted In: Plesk, Releases

The following bug has been fixed:
[-] Critical security enhancement. Removal of malware which is possible to exploit without authenticating. Infected nodes might be known to and exploited by hackers.

└ Tags: exploit
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What’s New?

  • Fedora 42: roundcubemail Important XSS Fix with Advisory ID 2025-fec36f9eaf
  • Fedora 42: Fix for Critical 7-Zip Remote Code Execution in RetroArch
  • Fedora 42: mingw-libsoup Critical Out-of-Bounds Read CVE-2025-11021
  • Fedora 42: mingw-python3 Critical Denial Service Fix CVE-2025-12084
  • Fedora 42: Fix for Important Integer Overflow Vulnerability in mingw-glib2
  • Fedora 43: mingw-libsoup Security Update for CVE-2025-11021 Advisory
  • Fedora 42 pgadmin4 Critical Remote Code Exec Fix 2025-b08763f674
  • Fedora: Gobuster Critical Update Released for CVE-2025-58188 Advisory
  • Debian: Rails Severe Command Manipulation DSA-6090-2 CVE-2025-24294
  • Debian Trixie WordPress Security Advisory DSA-6091-1 for CVE-2025-58246
  • Debian: Chromium Important Code Exec and Info Disclosure DSA-6089-1
  • Debian Trixie: php8.4 Important DoS Memory Disclosure DSA-6088-1
  • Fedora 42: uriparser CVE-2025-67899 Fix for Unbounded Recursion Issue
  • Fedora 42: util-linux Critical Buffer Overflow CVE-2025-14104 Advisory
  • Fedora 42: mqttcli Update 0.2.8 Critical Integer Overflow Issues
  • Fedora 42: Chromium High CVE-2025-14765 Out of Bounds Security Risks
  • Debian: Roundcube Important XSS and Information Leak Fix DSA-6087-1
  • Debian: MediaWiki DSA-6085-1 Security Updates for DoS and XSS
  • Debian: Urgent Vulnerability in Dropbear DSA-6086-1 CVE-2025-14282
  • Plesk 2025: A Year in Review
  • Ubuntu 24.04: Linux Xilinx Important Kernel Security Fix USN-7931-4
  • Ubuntu 22.04 LTS: Linux Kernel Critical Fix for Raspberry Pi USN-7928-4
  • Ubuntu 18.04 LTS – Oracle Kernel Critical Security Flaws USN-7922-3
  • Ubuntu 24.04: Advisory USN-7921-2 for Real-time Kernel CVE-2025-39946
  • Debian Trixie: c-ares Critical Denial of Service Advisory DSA-6084-1

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