Created
June 20, 2012 14:26
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.htaccess Extras for WordPress-Skeleton
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<IfModule mod_rewrite.c> | |
RewriteEngine On | |
RewriteBase / | |
RewriteRule ^(wp-admin/.*)$ /wp/$1 [L] | |
RewriteRule ^(wp-[^/]+\.php)$ /wp/$1 [L] | |
RewriteRule ^xmlrpc\.php$ /wp/xmlrpc.php [L] | |
RewriteRule ^(wp-includes/.*)$ /wp/$1 [L] | |
</IfModule> | |
# BEGIN WordPress | |
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c> | |
RewriteEngine On | |
RewriteBase / | |
RewriteRule ^index\.php$ - [L] | |
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f | |
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d | |
RewriteRule . /index.php [L] | |
</IfModule> | |
# END WordPress |
3.4 should redirect them to wp/wp-admin automatically if it's in the siteurl.
@PeteMall Very cool. So The lines 4 & 5 are unnecessary. Any thoughts on the rest of it?
Basically, using .htaccess to make it look like WP core is in the root directory when the actual files live in the /wp
subdirectory (as a git submodule).
+1 for a pull request. Made a nearly identical .htaccess myself.
(cc @markjaquith)
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This is an addition I made to Mark Jaquith's WordPress Skeleton's .htaccess file. Essentially, it allows you to install WordPress entirely from outside the
/wp
directory (i.e., both WP url and site url would behttp://example.com/
instead of the former beinghttp://example.com/wp
).I made this change for the clients. A lot of the clients I deal with have enough trouble remembering to add
wp-
beforeadmin
as it is. Making them usewp/wp-admin
could be too much for them.