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@ericmann
Created May 24, 2012 21:05
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Consolidating my Websites

When WordPress first rolled in multisite features, I was thrilled. I immediately activated them and merged the two sites I already had - my personal portfolio and my business blog. At the time, I also had to have a "parent network" site ... so it really became three sites:

  • eamann.com (my primary domain and network parent)
  • work.eamann.com (my portfolio)
  • mindsharestrategy.com (mapped domain for my business blog)

Over time, my business blog evolved to contain a whole slew of other content - articles on faith, the outdoors, creative writing, etc. I added a couple of new mapped domains to my network and branched the content out to keep things separate:

  • prosepainting.com (creative writing)
  • groundedchristianity.com (faith essays)

For a time, I experimented with a few tools to syndicate content from one site to another. One post I'd write on Mindshare (business) would also apply to Grounded (faith) and I'd want it in both places. Obviously, that was a poorly set up system.

I now want to reign things in a bit and re-merge my sites. My ideal scenario would be:

  • One WordPress installation, accessible at eamann.com
  • Portfolio pieces contained in a CPT, browsable from the main site
  • Separate categories for content - eamann.com/business, eamann.com/tech, eamann.com/faith, etc ...
  • Separate themes or templates for categories - I plan to keep the same layout for everything, but want to vary the color scheme or banner images slightly for different categories

The trick now is to prevent losing legacy content. I have a few articles that bring in tons of traffic, and I don't want that to fall into the abyss.

Hopefully, things like http://mindsharestrategy.com/2011/how-to-publish-a-wordpress-plugin-subversion/ would redirect to http://eamann.com/tech/how-to-publish-a-wordpress-plugin-subversion automatically. I'd also like to display a banner for visitors being forwarded from the old URL to the new URL to explain a little why things are different.

Unfortunately, manually creating 302 redirects for 5 years of content on a mapped domain is ... not going to be fun.

Is there an easier way?

@Rarst
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Rarst commented May 24, 2012

While this probably calls for some web server rewrite wizardry it's just might be easier to handle in WP (since this will only need to work for a while and 301 redirects will make more sense btw).

In template_redirect of "old" site make note of slug, switch to "main" site, check if post with such slug exists, retrieve its permalink and redirect to it. Shouldn't be hard to generate info page at this stage either.

@ericmann
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@Rarst Except ... the new site won't be part of the same multisite network. My plan is to start with a fresh install and import/recategorize my content. So switching from one site to the other within WP won't really work.

@Rarst
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Rarst commented May 24, 2012

@ericmann even if it's not part of network it should be easy enough to fetch info from database if it's nearby... Anyway just pitched one of the ways to do it. There are many approaches to stuff like this and somehow it tends to fall into "htaccess or nothing" line of thought.

@ericmann
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One way would be to leave the Multisite install going, and just have it forward the traffic to the new location ... Saves on server config.

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