Presspack
Make WordPress theme development great again.
- Features
- Requirements
- Getting Started
- Developing Locally
- Building for Production
- Changing ports
- Project Structure
- Local Database Backup
- Local Database Restore
- Author
Features
- Modern JavaScript through Webpack
- Live reload via BrowserSync
- SCSS support
- Easy dev environments with Docker Compose
- Stateless, immutable plugin management via Composer
- Helpful HTML5 Router for firing JS based on WordPress page slug.
- Nothing else.
Requirements
- Node.js
- Yarn
- PHP and Composer
- Docker for Mac / Windows
- Docker Compose
Getting Started
git clone git@github.com:jaredpalmer/presspack.git
yarn install
composer install # if you want plugins ( not required )
docker-compose up
Developing Locally
To work on the theme locally, open another window/tab in terminal and run:
yarn start
This will open a browser, watch all files (php, scss, js, etc) and reload the browser when you press save.
Building for Production
To create an optimized production build, run:
yarn build
This will minify assets, bundle and uglify javascript, and compile scss to css.
It will also add cachebusting names to then ends of the compiled files, so you
do not need to bump any enqueued asset versions in functions.php
.
Changing ports
There are two ports involved, the port of the dockerized WordPress instance,
and the port the Browser Sync runs on. To change the port of the dockerized
WordPress instance go into docker-compose.yml
and
modify ports
.
# docker-compose.yml
...
ports:
- "9009:80" # only need to change `9009:80` --> localhost:9009
...
If you want to change the port you develop on (the default is 4000), then open
scripts/webpack.config.js
and modify
BrowserSyncPlugin
's port
option. If you changed the WordPress port above,
be sure to also change proxy
accordingly. Don't forget the trailing slash.
// scripts/webpack.config.js
...
new BrowserSyncPlugin({
notify: false,
host: 'localhost',
port: 4000, // this is the port you develop on. Can be anything.
logLevel: 'silent',
files: ['./*.php'],
proxy: 'http://localhost:9009/', // This port must match docker-compose.yml
}),
...
Project Structure
.
βββ composer.json # Compose dependencies (plugins)
βββ composer.lock # Composer lock file
βββ docker-compose.yml # Docker Compose configuration
βββ package.json # Node.js dependencies
βββtemplate # Wordpress PHP theme files
β βββ footer.php
β βββ functions.php
β βββ header.php
β βββ index.php
β βββ page.php
βββscripts # Build / Dev Scripts
β βββ build.js # Build task
β βββ start.js # Start task
β βββ webpack.config.js # Webpack configuration
βββsrc
βββ index.js # JavaScript entry point
βββ routes # Routes
β βββ common.js # JS that will run on EVERY page
β βββ <xxx>.js # JS that will run on pages with <xxx> slug
βββ style.scss # SCSS style entry point
βββ styles # SCSS
β βββ _global-vars.scss
β βββ _base.scss
β βββ ...
βββ util
βββ Router.js # HTML5 Router, DO NOT TOUCH
βββ camelCase.js # Helper function for Router, DO NOT TOUCH
Local Database Backup
Here's how to dump your local database with Docker into a .sql
file
docker exec -it host_db_1 /usr/bin/mysqldump -u username -ppassword database_name > backup.sql
Local Database Restore
Restore a previous database backup
docker exec -i host_db_1 /usr/bin/mysql -u username -ppassword database_name < backup.sql
Author
- Jared Palmer @jaredpalmer