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Twelve-Factor WordPress

WordPress, the Twelve-Factor way: fully managed using Composer and configured using environment variables.

General Concepts and Considerations

The WordPress installation is fully contained in top-level wordpress and wp-content directories upon composer install. A wp-config.php resides in the root of the project, and uses several different environment variables to control behavior.

Locally bundled custom themes and plugins from top-level themes and plugins directories can be referenced for inclusion via composer.json and will be linked into wp-content.

Automatic updates for WordPress or plugins, and theme editing, are disabled intentionally. What you deploy is what gets executed, which makes setups simple to deploy, and, most importantly, reproducible. See further below for information on how to update WordPress versions.

WP-CLI is used for easier (or automated) handling of tasks such as enabling plugins or storing configuration options. After a deploy, a set of pre-configured Composer scripts can run several administrative functions using WP-CLI, such as initially configuring the blog, and enabling plugins (this happens either automatically when using a Heroku button deploy, or manually). This means that the installation of plugins and their configuration can be part of your version controlled code, so you can easily re-create a blog installation without any manual steps that need separate documentation.

The configuration file is kept as generic as possible; on Heroku, add-ons JawsDB (for MySQL), Bucketeer (for S3 storage), and SendGrid (for E-Mails) are used.

The assumption is that this installation runs behind a load balancer whose X-Forwarded-Proto header value can be trusted; it is used to determine whether the request protocol is HTTPS or not.

HTTPS is forced for Login and Admin functions. WP_DEBUG is on; errors do not get displayed, but should get logged to PHP's default error log, accessible e.g. using heroku logs.

Quick Deploy

If you have a Heroku account, you may simply use the following button to deploy this application:

Deploy

After the deploy, in Heroku's Dashboard under "Settings" for your deployed application, remove the WORDPRESS_ADMIN_* environment variables.

To set up WordPress' Cron Jobs using Heroku Scheduler, see further below.

Manual Deploy

Clone

Clone this repo (we're naming the Git remote "upstream" since you'll likely want to have "origin" be your actual site - you can sync changes from this repository later):

$ git clone -o upstream https://github.com/dzuelke/wordpress-12factor
$ cd wordpress-12factor

If you like, you can locally install dependencies with Composer:

$ composer install

Create Application and Add-Ons

Create a new app and add add-ons for MySQL, S3 and E-Mail:

$ heroku create
$ heroku addons:create jawsdb
$ heroku addons:create bucketeer
$ heroku addons:create sendgrid

Set WordPress Keys and Salts

This will use the WordPress secret keys service, parse out the values, and set them as config vars:

$ heroku config:set $(curl 'https://api.wordpress.org/secret-key/1.1/salt/' | sed -E -e "s/^define\('(.+)', *'(.+)'\);$/WORDPRESS_\1=\2/" -e 's/ //g')

You can also generate your own key and set all required variables yourself (see section further below).

Deploy

$ git push heroku master

Finalize Installation

This will create tables and set up an admin user:

$ heroku run 'composer wordpress-setup-core-install -- --title="WordPress on Heroku" --admin_user=admin --admin_password=admin --admin_email=admin@example.com --url="http://example.herokuapp.com/"'

If you'd like to interactively provide info instead (use a format like "http://example.herokuapp.com" with your app name for the URL), you can run:

$ heroku run 'vendor/bin/wp core install --prompt'

Finally, the following command will configure and enable plugins and set a reasonable structure for Permalinks:

$ heroku run 'composer wordpress-setup-finalize'

Visit Blog

Navigate to the application's URL, or open your browser the lazy way:

$ heroku open

Installing a new Plugin or Theme

  1. Search for your plugin or theme on WordPress Packagist;

  2. Click the latest version and check the version selector string in the text box that appears - it will look like "wpackagist-theme/hueman": "1.5.7" or "wpackagist-plugin/akismet": "3.1.7";

  3. You don't want such an exact version, but instead a more lenient selector like (in the case above) ^1.5.7 or at least ~1.5.7 (see the Composer docs for details);

  4. Run composer require wpackagist-$type/name:^$version, for example:

    composer require wpackagist-plugin/akismet:^3.1.7
    

    or

    composer require wpackagist-plugin/hueman:^1.5.7
    
  5. Run git add composer.json composer.lock and git commit;

  6. git push heroku master

Activating a Plugin or Theme once

Run heroku run 'vendor/bin/wp plugin activate or vendor/bin/wp theme activate and pass the name of the plugin or theme (e.g. wp theme activate hueman).

However, if you're working on an actual project, you will also want to ensure that this step can be run as part of the installation - see the next section for info.

Activating a Plugin or Theme, the repeatable way

See the scripts section in composer.json for inspiration. A Composer script named wordpress-setup-enable-plugins (which gets in turn called by another script) enables three plugins by default using WP-CLI's wp command, and you can just add yours to the list. You'll notice that a separate step before also configures one of the plugins; you can do the same for your customizations.

After you adjusted the scripts section, run composer update --lock, then git add composer.json composer.lock, and git commit the changes.

Bundling a Custom Theme or Plugin

It's likely you'll want to have a custom theme for your project, or use plugin code to customize the behavior of WordPress.

If you repeatedly use these same customizations across multiple projects, you should put them into their own (private or public) GitHub repository and reference them in the same way as explained above.

However, if the customizations you've made are specific to one project, then you should bundle them with the project code and pull them in as if they were an external theme or plugin.

You can put custom themes into the themes/ directory under the project root. Give each theme its own directory and include a custom repository at the top of your composer.json, in the repositories section:

{
	"type": "path",
	"url": "themes/*/"
}

Each folder under themes/ is just a regular WordPress theme, except with a composer.json similar to the following:

{
	"type": "wordpress-theme",
	"name": "yourgithubname/yourthemename",
	"version": "1.0.0",
	"require": {
		"composer/installers": "~1.0"
	}
}

The wordpress-theme type will cause the correct installation of your theme (see extra/installer-paths in composer.json).

The same technique can be used for plugins; simply adjust the directory name and repositories entry, and use wordpress-plugin as the type in each plugin's composer.json.

Whenever you run composer install locally, the theme simply gets symlinked into the correct WordPress directory. That means any changes you make to the theme in the themes/ directory will immediately be applied to your running site.

Updating WordPress and Plugins

To update all dependencies:

$ composer update

Alternatively, run composer update johnpbloch/wordpress to only update WordPress, or e.g. composer update wpackagist-plugin/sendgrid-email-delivery-simplified to only update that plugin.

Afterwards, add, commit and push the changes:

$ git add composer.json composer.lock
$ git commit -m "new WordPress and Plugins"
$ git push heroku master

Web Servers

This project runs Apache by default, using the apache2-wordpress.conf configuration include and with the wordpress/ directory defined as the document root.

To use Nginx instead, change Procfile to the following:

web: vendor/bin/heroku-php-nginx -C nginx-wordpress.conf.php wordpress/

WordPress Cron

Instead of having WordPress check on each page load if Cron Jobs need to be run (thus potentially slowing down the site for some users), you can invoke Cron externally:

  1. Run heroku config:set DISABLE_WP_CRON=true (or set it using the Heroku Dashboard) to disable built-in cron jobs;
  2. Add Heroku Scheduler to your application;
  3. Add a job that, every 30 minutes, runs vendor/bin/wp cron event run --all.

Environment Variables

wp-config.php will use the following environment variables (if multiple are listed, in order of precedence):

Database Connection

DATABASE_URL or JAWSDB_URL or CLEARDB_DATABASE_URL (format mysql://user:pass@host:port/dbname) for database connections.

AWS/S3

  • AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID or BUCKETEER_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID for the AWS Access Key ID;
  • AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY BUCKETEER_AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY for the AWS Secret Access Key;
  • S3_BUCKET or BUCKETEER_BUCKET_NAME for the name of the S3 bucket;
  • S3_REGION for a non-default S3 region name.

SendGrid

SENDGRID_USERNAME and SENDGRID_PASSWORD for SendGrind credentials.

WordPress Secrets

WORDPRESS_AUTH_KEY, WORDPRESS_SECURE_AUTH_KEY, WORDPRESS_LOGGED_IN_KEY, WORDPRESS_NONCE_KEY, WORDPRESS_AUTH_SALT, WORDPRESS_SECURE_AUTH_SALT, WORDPRESS_LOGGED_IN_SALT, WORDPRESS_NONCE_SALT should contain random secret keys for various WordPress functions; values can be obtained from https://api.wordpress.org/secret-key/1.1/salt/ (also see Manual Deploy instructions further above).

Miscellaneous

DISABLE_WP_CRON set to "1" or "true" will disable automatic cron execution through browsers (see further above).

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