WP-CFM: Configuration Management for WordPress

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Deploying database changes in WordPress is hard, especially when working on teams with multiple developers. This project aims at solving this problem by storing database configuration in the filesystem. It's like Drupal's "Features" module for WordPress.

Watch the introduction screencast (4 minutes)

What does this mean for me?

Less need to copy the database. If you make changes, Push your bundle to the filesystem. To load changes, Pull the bundle into your database.

your bundle to the filesystem. To load changes, the bundle into your database. No need to manually apply database settings changes. No more "fire drills" where you're rushing to figure out which settings you forgot to change.

Track and migrate configuration files using git, subversion, etc.

Terminology

Bundle : A group of settings to track. This could be a single setting, or all the site's available settings.

: A group of settings to track. This could be a single setting, or all the site's available settings. Push : Export configuration from your database to the filesystem.

: Export configuration from your database to the filesystem. Pull: Import configuration from the filesystem into your database.

Developer Hooks

The wpcfm_configuration_items hook lets you register custom configuration items.

function my_configuration_items ( $items ) { $items [ ' cfs_field_groups ' ] = array ( ' value ' => ' MY CONFIGURATION DATA ' , ' group ' => ' WP Options ' , // optional ' callback ' => ' my_pull_handler ' , // optional ); return $items ; } add_filter( ' wpcfm_configuration_items ' , ' my_configuration_items ' );

This filter contains an associative array of all configuration options. Each option has a unique key, and supports several parameters:

value : (required) The configuration data to store.

: (required) The configuration data to store. group : (optional) A group name, allowing multiple configuration options to be grouped together. This is only used in the admin UI. Default = "WP Options"

: (optional) A group name, allowing multiple configuration options to be grouped together. This is only used in the admin UI. Default = "WP Options" callback: (optional) If the configuration data is not stored within wp_options , then WP-CFM needs to know how to Pull it into the database. This parameter accepts a (string) function name or (array) method. A $params array is passed into the callback function (see below).

Is that it?

Almost! WP-CFM automatically handles configuration within the wp_options table. If your plugin stores settings elsewhere, then use the above callback parameter to tell WP-CFM how to properly import (Pull) configuration into the database.

/** * $params['name'] The option name * $params['group'] The option group * $params['old_value'] The current DB value that will get overwritten * $params['new_value'] The new DB value */ function my_pull_handler ( $params ) { // Save something }

WP-CFM supports pulling / pushing bundles from the command-line using WP-CLI:

wp config pull < bundle_name > wp config push < bundle_name >