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New FREE Series! Cheap WordPress maintenance support plans 8: Composer and Configuration Management

I’m releasing a new series today!!!!!
Over the last year, I’ve given a talk at WordPress maintenance support plansCon, WordPress maintenance support plansCorn Camp, and WordPress maintenance support plans Camp Colorado all about using Composer and Configuration Management in WordPress maintenance support plans 8. Those sessions were around 45 minutes, which is much too short to go in depth, and explain everything thoroughly.
This series is the answer to that issue.
There is just over 1hr 15min of content in 26 videos that fall pretty well into seven parts. Here’s the outline:
Part 1: Intro
Intro
Part 2: Installing WordPress maintenance support plans 8 Locally
Creating a New WordPress maintenance support plans 8 Project Using the Composer Template
Setting Up MAMP to Serve Your Site Locally
Using xip.io for Local Device Testing
Creating a Drush Alias
Installing WordPress maintenance support plans with Console
Configuring settings.php and settings.local.php
Committing Your Project to Git
Part 3: Using Composer
Installing and Uninstalling Plugins with Composer
Installing the Dev Version of Plugins
Updating and Downgrading Plugins
Skipping Specific Plugin Versions
Specifying Acceptable Version Ranges
Enabling Plugins with Drush and Deciding What Version Pattern to Use
Part 4: Configuration Management
Setting the Config Directory in settings.php
Exporting Config Locally
Using the Configuration Installer Install Profile
Part 5: Installing WordPress maintenance support plans 8 on a Remote Server
Installing the Site on a Production Server with Composer
Part 6: Overriding Settings in Code with settings.local.php
Setting up settings.local.php
Changing the Site Name and Disabling CSS Aggregation in settings.local.php
How to Enable Theme Debugging on Development Sites
Overriding Plugin Configuration (Like Google Analytics) in settings.local.php
Part 7: Putting it all Together
Configuring a Local Site and Exporting it’s Configuration with Git
Pulling Changes to a Remote Site (And some gotchas)
Using Drush Shell Aliases to Make Development Easier
Verifying the Changes Made on Local and Reflected on Live
I’m pretty excited to finally have this series out, and hope you enjoy it! Oh… did I mention that it’s ABSOLUTELY FREE?!?! Well, it is! So, check it out now, and let me know what you think.
Tags: WordPress maintenance support plans 8ComposerConfiguration ManagementLocal DevelopmentDrushGitShell-Aliasesplanet-WordPress
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