Welcome to the WordPress development repository! Please check out the contributor handbook for information about how to open bug reports, contribute patches, test changes, write documentation, or get involved in any way you can.
To get started, create a codespace for this repository by clicking this 👇
A codespace will open in a web-based version of Visual Studio Code. The dev container is fully configured with software needed for this project.
Note: Dev containers is an open spec which is supported by GitHub Codespaces and other tools.
In some browsers the keyboard shortcut for opening the command palette (Ctrl/Command + Shift + P) may collide with a browser shortcut. The command palette can be opened via the F1
key or via the cog icon in the bottom left of the editor.
When opening your codespace, be sure to wait for the postCreateCommand
to finish running to ensure your WordPress install is successfully set up. This can take a few minutes.
WordPress is a PHP, MySQL, and JavaScript based project, and uses Node for its JavaScript dependencies. A local development environment is available to quickly get up and running.
You will need a basic understanding of how to use the command line on your computer. This will allow you to set up the local development environment, to start it and stop it when necessary, and to run the tests.
You will need Node and npm installed on your computer. Node is a JavaScript runtime used for developer tooling, and npm is the package manager included with Node. If you have a package manager installed for your operating system, setup can be as straightforward as:
- macOS:
brew install node
- Windows:
choco install nodejs
- Ubuntu:
apt install nodejs npm
If you are not using a package manager, see the Node.js download page for installers and binaries.
Note: WordPress currently only officially supports Node.js 20.x
and npm 10.x
.
You will also need Docker installed and running on your computer. Docker is the virtualization software that powers the local development environment. Docker can be installed just like any other regular application.
Ensure Docker is running before using these commands.
Clone the current repository using git clone https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop.git
. Then in your terminal move to the repository folder cd wordpress-develop
and run the following commands:
npm install
npm run build:dev
npm run env:start
npm run env:install
Your WordPress site will be accessible at https://localhost:8889. You can see or change configurations in the .env
file located at the root of the project directory.
If you're making changes to WordPress core files, you should start the file watcher in order to build or copy the files as necessary:
npm run dev
To stop the watcher, press ctrl+c
.
To run a WP-CLI command
npm run env:cli -- <command>
WP-CLI has many useful commands you can use to work on your WordPress site. Where the documentation mentions running wp
, run npm run env:cli --
instead. For example:
npm run env:cli -- help
These commands run the PHP and end-to-end test suites, respectively:
npm run test:php
npm run test:e2e
You can pass extra parameters into the PHP tests by adding --
and then the command-line options:
npm run test:php -- --filter <test name>
npm run test:php -- --group <group name or ticket number>
PHP code coverage reports are generated daily and submitted to Codecov.io.
After the local Docker environment has been installed and started, the following command can be used to generate a code coverage report.
npm run test:coverage
The command will generate three coverage reports in HTML, PHP, and text formats, saving them in the coverage
folder.
Note: xDebug is required to generate a code coverage report, which can slow down PHPUnit significantly. Passing selection-based options such as --group
or --filter
can decrease the overall time required but will result in an incomplete report.
You may want to restart the environment if you've made changes to the configuration in the docker-compose.yml
or .env
files. Restart the environment with:
npm run env:restart
You can stop the environment when you're not using it to preserve your computer's power and resources:
npm run env:stop
Starting the environment again is a single command:
npm run env:start
The development environment can be reset. This will destroy the database and attempt to remove the pulled Docker images.
npm run env:reset
The MySQL Docker images do not support Apple Silicon processors (M1, M2, etc.) for MySQL versions 5.7 and earlier.
When using MySQL <= 5.7 on an Apple Silicon machine, you must create a docker-compose.override.yml
file with the following contents:
services:
mysql:
platform: linux/amd64
Additionally, the "Use Rosetta for x86/AMD64 emulation on Apple Silicon" setting in Docker needs to be disabled for this workaround.
These are the default environment credentials:
- Database Name:
wordpress_develop
- Username:
root
- Password:
password
To login to the site, navigate to https://localhost:8889/wp-admin.
- Username:
admin
- Password:
password
Note: With Codespaces, open the portforwarded URL from the ports tab in the terminal, and append /wp-admin
to login to the site.
To generate a new password (recommended):
- Go to the Dashboard
- Click the Users menu on the left
- Click the Edit link below the admin user
- Scroll down and click 'Generate password'. Either use this password (recommended) or change it, then click 'Update User'. If you use the generated password be sure to save it somewhere (password manager, etc).