WordPress

How To Manage A WordPress Site From The Terminal

Powering more than 60.8% of websites, WordPress is undoubtedly one of the most popular and powerful Content Management Systems (CMS). Whether for personal blogs to enterprise sites, WordPress is very intuitive and easy to use both in development, design, and maintenance.

However, most WordPress users are only familiar with its graphical workflow; very few people have explored its terminal side.

This tutorial will introduce you to WP-CLI, a command-line tool for managing WordPress sites.

Let us dive into the world of WP-CLI:

How to Install WP-CLI

Installing WP-CLI is relatively easy. The tool is in the form of a PHP archive which you can download and execute.

Start by downloading the archive using wget or cURL as:

wget https://raw.github.com/wp-cli/builds/gh-pages/phar/wp-cli.phar

For cURL users, use the command:

curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wp-cli/builds/gh-pages/phar/wp-cli.phar

Once downloaded, make the file executable and move the archive to a PATH in your system such as /usr/local/bin as:

chmod +x wp-cli.phar sudo mv wp-cli.phar /usr/local/bin/wp

To confirm that you have successfully installed it and it’s working, use the command:

wp --info

This should give you an output similar to the one shown below, indicating that you’ve installed the tool successfully.

NOTE: Ensure you have PHP installed; otherwise, you will get an env error.

OS:     Linux 4.4.0-19041-??? Mon Sep 01 13:43:00 PST 2021 x86_64 Shell:  /bin/bash PHP binary:     /usr/bin/php7.3 PHP version:    7.3.19-1~deb10u1 php.ini used:   /etc/php/7.3/cli/php.ini WP-CLI root dir:        phar://wp-cli.phar/vendor/wp-cli/wp-cli
WP-CLI vendor dir:      phar://wp-cli.phar/vendor
WP_CLI phar path:       /home/root
WP-CLI packages dir:
WP-CLI global config:
WP-CLI project config:
WP-CLI version: 2.4.0

How to Use WP-CLI

WP-CLI is a terminal or command line alternative to the wp-admin dashboard. Hence, there is a WP-CLI command for all the tasks you can perform with the WordPress admin web interface.

Let us learn how to use them, but before that:

How to enable WP-CLI Bash Completion

The WP-CLI tool allows you to enable the Bash Completion Feature to view and autocomplete commands using the TAB key. Let us enable it to make our tasks easier.

We begin by downloading the Bash Completion Script with the command:

wget https://github.com/wp-cli/wp-cli/raw/master/utils/wp-completion.bash

To load the Bash Completion Script on every terminal session, let us edit our bash profile config file. Enter the following entry in the .bashrc file.

source $HOME/wp-completion.bash

Next, reload the bash profile to load all the changes:

source .bashrc

Once completed, you should have Bash Completion enabled. If you are using another shell, perhaps ZSH, check the official documentation for information on how to enable completion.

To test if it is working, enter the command wp + TAB. That should give you all available commands as:

cache              core               eval-file          language
option             rewrite            shell              term cap
cron               export             maintenance-mode   package
role               sidebar            theme cli          db
help               media              plugin             scaffold
site               transient comment  embed              i18n
menu               post               search-replace     super-admin
user config        eval               import             network
post-type          server             taxonomy           widget

Installing WordPress with WP-CLI

Before we get to the WordPress admin, we have to install WordPress first. Let’s discuss how to install it using WP-CLI.

NOTE: Ensure you have a web server and MySQL database installed.

First, log in to MySQL shell and create a database

sudo mysql -u root -p
Enter Password:

Next, we need to create a database:

CREATE DATABASE wp;

Next, we need to create a user and grant all privileges as:

CREATE USER "wpadmin" IDENTIFIED BY "password";
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON wp.* TO wpadmin;
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;

The next step is to download the WordPress installation file. For this, we are going to use the /var/www/html directory.

Change to /var/www/html

cd /var/www/html/

To ensure we have r/w permission to that directory, chown the www-data user created by apache as:

sudo chown -R www-data .
sudo chown www-data:www-data .

Next, download WordPress using WP-CLI. You will need to invoke the wp command as www-data as the user has to write permission to the /var/www/html directory. Avoid using root.

sudo -u www-data wp core download

This will download WordPress and extract it into the current directory. Ignore the error shown below:

Downloading WordPress 5.6.1 (en_US)...
Warning: Failed to create directory '/var/www/.wp-cli/cache/': mkdir(): Permission denied.
md5 hash verified: e9377242a433acbb2df963966f98c31d Success: WordPress downloaded.

Confirm you have WordPress installed by listing the contents of the /var/www/html directory:

$:/var/www/html$ ls -l total 240
-rw-r--r-- 1 www-data www-data   405 Feb  5 22:22 index.php
-rw-r--r-- 1 www-data www-data 19915 Feb  5 22:22 license.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 www-data www-data  7278 Feb  5 22:22 readme.html
-rw-r--r-- 1 www-data www-data  7101 Feb  5 22:22 wp-activate.php drwxr-xr-x 1 www-data www-data  4096 Feb  5 22:23 wp-admin
-rw-r--r-- 1 www-data www-data   351 Feb  5 22:23 wp-blog-header.php
-rw-r--r-- 1 www-data www-data  2328 Feb  5 22:23 wp-comments-post.php
-rw-r--r-- 1 www-data www-data  2913 Feb  5 22:23 wp-config-sample.php drwxr-xr-x 1 www-data www-data  4096 Feb  5 22:23 wp-content
-rw-r--r-- 1 www-data www-data  3939 Feb  5 22:23 wp-cron.php drwxr-xr-x 1 www-data www-data  4096 Feb  5 22:24 wp-includes

Next, we need to generate the WordPress configuration file and add the relevant information. Use the command below and replace the values appropriately.

$:/var/www/html$ sudo -u www-data wp core config --dbname="wp" --dbuser="wpadmin" --dbpass="password" --dbhost="localhost" Success: Generated ‘wp-config.php’ file.

Once we have all the relevant configuration setup, we can finally run the installer setting up the WordPress user as:

sudo -u www-data wp core install --url="http://127.0.0.1" --admin_user="admin" --admin_password="password" --admin_email="[email protected]" --title="WP-CLI Tutorial"

Success: WordPress installed successfully.

With that, you have WordPress installed on the system. You can test the site by navigating to http://localhost, which should display the default WordPress:

How to Manage a WordPress Site with CLI

Now you have an entire WordPress site installed and managed using WP-CLI. How about we try to perform basic tasks such as installing a plugin.

Install a Plugin with WP-CLI

While still in the WordPress site installation directory (/var/www/html), let us search for a plugin to install. Let us use the Elementor Page Builder as an example:

wp plugin search elementor

Running this command should give you all the possible plugins in tabular form—as shown below:

Cool right? Now let us see how we can install the plugin once we find the appropriate name.

To install it, use the plugin slug as:

sudo -u www-data wp plugin install elementor Installing Elementor Website Builder (3.1.1)
Warning: Failed to create directory '/var/www/.wp-cli/cache/': mkdir(): Permission denied.
Downloading installation package from https://downloads.wordpress.org/plugin/elementor.3.1.1.zip...
Unpacking the package...
Installing the plugin...
Plugin installed successfully.
Success: Installed 1 of 1 plugins.

Once we have successfully installed the plugin we need, we can simply activate it using a similar command as:

sudo -u www-data wp plugin activate elementor Plugin ‘elementor’ activated.
Success: Activated 1 of 1 plugins.

Uninstall a Plugin with WP-CLI

If you can install a plugin with WP-CLI, you can uninstall it.

sudo -u www-data wp plugin deactivate elementor Plugin ‘elementor’ deactivated.
Success: Deactivated 1 of 1 plugins.

Once deactivated, you can uninstall it easily as:

sudo -u www-data wp plugin uninstall elementor Uninstalled and deleted ‘elementor’ plugin.
Success: Uninstalled 1 of 1 plugins.

Installing WordPress Themes with WP-CLI

Themes are a common WordPress feature. Let’s discuss how to manage them from the command line.

To search for a theme, use the command:

wp theme search astra Success: Showing 2 of 2 themes.
+--------+--------+--------+
| name   | slug   | rating |
+--------+--------+--------+
| Astra  | astra  | 100    |
| Astral | astral | 100    |
+--------+--------+--------+

Once you have the theme you wish to install, use the command as shown below:

sudo -u www-data wp theme install astra Installing Astra (3.0.2)
Warning: Failed to create directory '/var/www/.wp-cli/cache/': mkdir(): Permission denied.
Downloading installation package from https://downloads.wordpress.org/theme/astra.3.0.2.zip...
Unpacking the package...
Installing the theme...
Theme installed successfully.
Success: Installed 1 of 1 themes.

Once you install the theme, you can activate it with the command:

sudo -u www-data wp theme activate astra Success: Switched to ‘Astra’ theme.

To install it from a zip file, use the command shown below:

sudo -u www-data wp theme install oceanwp.2.0.2.zip Unpacking the package...
Installing the theme...
Theme installed successfully.
Success: Installed 1 of 1 themes.

Uninstalling a WordPress theme with WP-CLI

To remove a theme with CLI, first, activate another theme and then uninstall the one you want to uninstall using the command:

sudo -u www-data wp theme activate oceanwp && sudo -u www-data wp theme uninstall astra Success: Switched to ‘OceanWP’ theme.
Deleted ‘astra’ theme.
Success: Deleted 1 of 1 themes.

View Themes and Plugins

To list all the themes and plugins in the WordPress instance, use the commands shown below:

wp theme list
wp plugin list

This command should list available themes and plugins, respectively, as shown below:

+-----------------+----------+--------+---------+
| name            | status   | update | version |
+-----------------+----------+--------+---------+
| oceanwp         | active   | none   | 2.0.2   |
| twentynineteen  | inactive | none   | 1.9     |
| twentytwenty    | inactive | none   | 1.6     |
| twentytwentyone | inactive | none   | 1.1     |
+-----------------+----------+--------+---------+

 +---------+----------+--------+---------+
| name    | status   | update | version |
+---------+----------+--------+---------+
| akismet | inactive | none   | 4.1.8   |
| hello   | inactive | none   | 1.7.2   |
+---------+----------+--------+---------+

Updating Themes and Plugins with WP-CLI

You can also update plugins and themes using the CLI. For example, to update all themes, use the command;

sudo -u www-data wp theme update --all
Success: Theme already updated.

NOTE: You can specify the specific theme name to update a single theme.

Updating WordPress from CLI

When the WordPress team releases a new version, you can update from the command line with a few single commands:

The first step is to update the site’s files first as:

sudo -u www-data wp core update

Next, we need to update the database as:

sudo -u www-data wp core update-db
Success: WordPress database already at latest db version 49752.

Creating a WordPress post with CLI

To create a post using WP-CLI, use the command below:

sudo -u www-data wp post create --post_type=page --post_title="WP-CLI Tutorial" --post_date="2021-02-04"
Success: Created post 5.

Deleting a Post

To delete a post, specify its numerical identifier as:

sudo -u www-data wp post delete 5
Success: Trashed post 5.

Conclusion

This guide has shown you how you use the powerful WP-CLI to manage a WordPress site from the command line. If you want to learn more about how to work with WordPress CLI, consider the documentation resource provided below:

https://make.wordpress.org/cli/handbook/

About the author

John Otieno

John Otieno

My name is John and am a fellow geek like you. I am passionate about all things computers from Hardware, Operating systems to Programming. My dream is to share my knowledge with the world and help out fellow geeks. Follow my content by subscribing to LinuxHint mailing list