// jQuery
$(document).ready(function() {
// code
})
#301 Redirects for .htaccess | |
#Redirect a single page: | |
Redirect 301 /pagename.php http://www.domain.com/pagename.html | |
#Redirect an entire site: | |
Redirect 301 / http://www.domain.com/ | |
#Redirect an entire site to a sub folder | |
Redirect 301 / http://www.domain.com/subfolder/ |
# | |
# CORS header support | |
# | |
# One way to use this is by placing it into a file called "cors_support" | |
# under your Nginx configuration directory and placing the following | |
# statement inside your **location** block(s): | |
# | |
# include cors_support; | |
# | |
# As of Nginx 1.7.5, add_header supports an "always" parameter which |
# Don't show errors which contain full path diclosure (FPD) | |
# Use that line only if PHP is installed as a module and not per CGI | |
# try using a php.ini in that case. | |
# Change mod_php5.c to mod_php7.c if you are running PHP7 | |
<IfModule mod_php5.c> | |
php_flag display_errors Off | |
</IfModule> | |
# Don't list directories | |
<IfModule mod_autoindex.c> |
Recently WooCommerce has added a lot of improvements to the plugin which we really appriciate but at the same time a lot of bloated features has alos been added to the plugin like Marketing Hub, a completely useless menu taking extra space among the other important menu items. Now if you find Marketing Hub to be useful, you can keep it.
But just in case you are looking for a way to remove these features that you no longer need from your WordPress Admin menus, take a look at the following code snippets. Please note: though I will show you how you can remove the Marketing Hub from your WP Admin menu list completely and make sure WooCommerce doesn't execute codes for that feature you don't need, you can do the same for other WooCommerce features as well like Analytics.
If you are using WooCommerce <= v4.2, you can simple add this one line of code in your theme's functions.php
f
<?php | |
add_filter( 'woocommerce_product_export_delimiter', function ( $delimiter ) { | |
// set your custom delimiter | |
$delimiter = '.'; | |
return $delimiter; | |
} ); |
<?php | |
//* Do NOT include the opening php tag shown above. Copy the code shown below into functions.php | |
/** | |
* Manage WooCommerce styles and scripts. | |
*/ | |
function grd_woocommerce_script_cleaner() { | |
// Remove the generator tag | |
remove_action( 'wp_head', array( $GLOBALS['woocommerce'], 'generator' ) ); |
Adding @k1sul1's suggestion from the comments as it's more concise than what I had before:
I just wanted them all gone, so I ran this in the MySQL shell.
UPDATE wp_posts SET post_content = REGEXP_REPLACE(post_content, "\\[\/?vc(.*?)\]", "");
Note the double backslash. If you forget it, you'll replace all v's and c's with nothing, and the shortcodes will still be there. This works for other shortcode as well, just replace vc.
<?php | |
/** | |
* This is free and unencumbered software released into the public domain. | |
* | |
* Anyone is free to copy, modify, publish, use, compile, sell, or | |
* distribute this software, either in source code form or as a compiled | |
* binary, for any purpose, commercial or non-commercial, and by any | |
* means. | |
* |
When setting these options consider the following:
- How long is your average request?
- What is the maximum number of simultaneous visitors the site(s) get?
- How much memory on average does each child process consume?
sudo grep max_children /var/log/php?.?-fpm.log.1 /var/log/php?.?-fpm.log