This script was made to aid the process of migrating PHP and MySQL based websites. It has additional features for WordPress and Drupal but works for most other similar CMSes.
If you find a problem let us know in the issues area and if you can improve the code then please fork the repository and send us a pull request :)
- Three character UTF8 seems to break in certain cases.
- We can't test every possible case, though we do our best. Backups and verifications are important.
- The license for this script is GPL v3 and no longer WTFPL. Please bear this in mind if contributing or branching.
- You use this script at your own risk and we have no responsibility for any problems it may cause.
- Do backups.
- Do backups.
- Migrate all your website files.
- Upload the script folder to your web root or higher.
- Browse to the script folder URL in your web browser.
- Fill in the fields as needed.
- Choose the
Dry run
button to do a dry run without searching/replacing.
If you would like Search Replace DB to detect your WordPress installation, you should install it within a new subfolder within your WordPress installation.
For example, if you have
/website.com/index.php
/website.com/wp-config.php
/website.com/wordpress/
/website.com/wordpress/index.php
/website.com/wordpress/wp-settings.php
etc.
You can copy Search Replace DB into the following location:
/website.com/wordpress/Search-Replace-DB/
/website.com/wordpress/Search-Replace-DB/index.php
/website.com/wordpress/Search-Replace-DB/srdb.class.php
/website.com/wordpress/Search-Replace-DB/srdb.cli.php
etc.
To invoke the script, nagivate in your shell to the directory to where you installed Search Replace DB.
Type php srdb.cli.php
to run the program. Type php srdb.cli.php --help
for usage information:
-h, --host
Required. The hostname of the database server.
-n, --name
Required. Database name.
-u, --user
Required. Database user.
-p, --pass
Required. Database user's password.
--port
Optional. Port on database server to connect to.
The default is 3306. (MySQL default port).
-s, --search
String to search for or `preg_replace()` style regular
expression.
-r, --replace
None empty string to replace search with or
`preg_replace()` style replacement.
-t, --tables
If set only runs the script on the specified table, comma
separate for multiple values.
-i, --include-cols
If set only runs the script on the specified columns, comma
separate for multiple values.
-x, --exclude-cols
If set excludes the specified columns, comma separate for
multiple values.
-g, --regex [no value]
Treats value for -s or --search as a regular expression and
-r or --replace as a regular expression replacement.
-l, --pagesize
How many rows to fetch at a time from a table.
-z, --dry-run [no value]
Prevents any updates happening so you can preview the number
of changes to be made
-e, --alter-engine
Changes the database table to the specified database engine
eg. InnoDB or MyISAM. If specified search/replace arguments
are ignored. They will not be run simultaneously.
-a, --alter-collation
Changes the database table to the specified collation
eg. utf8_unicode_ci. If specified search/replace arguments
are ignored. They will not be run simultaneously.
-v, --verbose [true|false]
Defaults to true, can be set to false to run script silently.
--help
Displays this help message ;)
This happens occasionally and could be for a couple of reasons:
- When the script starts, it attempts to start your WordPress or Drupal installation to auto-detect your username and password settings. If this fails, you will see a message informing you that auto-detection failed. You will have to enter your details manually.
- Script was unable to set the timeout so PHP closed the connection before the table could be processed, this can happen on some server configurations.
- When using php-fpm (as you have with VVV) make sure that the socket is owned by the server user
chown www-data:www-data /var/run/php5-fpm.sock
.