Key Features • Usage • RoadMap • Changelog • Credits • License
WordOps.net • Documentation • Community Forum • Dashboard demo
- Easy to install : One step automated installer with migration from EasyEngine v3 support
- Fast deployment : Fast and automated WordPress, Nginx, PHP, MySQL & Redis installation
- Custom Nginx build : Nginx 1.16.0 - TLS v1.3 Cloudflare HTTP/2 HPACK & Brotli support
- Up-to-date : PHP 7.2 & 7.3, MariaDB 10.3 & Redis 5.0
- Secured : Hardened WordPress security with strict Nginx location directives
- Powerful : Optimized Nginx configurations with multiple cache backends support
- SSL : Domain, Subdomain & Wildcard Let's Encrypt SSL certificates with DNS API support
- Modern : Strong ciphers_suite, modern TLS protocols and HSTS support (Grade A+ on ssllabs)
- Monitoring : Live Nginx vhost traffic with ngx_vts_module and server monitoring with Netdata
- User Friendly : WordOps dashboard with server status/monitoring and tools (demo)
- Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic)
- Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial)
- Ubuntu 19.04 (Disco)
- Debian 9 (Stretch)
- Debian 10 (Buster) - Not ready for production
- Raspbian 9 (Stretch)
wget -qO wo wops.cc && sudo bash wo # Install WordOps
sudo wo site create example.com --wp # Install required packages & setup WordPress on example.com
Detailed Getting Started guide with additional installation methods can be found in the documentation.
wo site create example.com --wp # install wordpress without any page caching
wo site create example.com --wp --php73 # install wordpress with PHP 7.3 without any page caching
wo site create example.com --wpfc # install wordpress + nginx fastcgi_cache
wo site create example.com --wpredis # install wordpress + nginx redis_cache
wo site create example.com --wpsc # install wordpress with wp-super-cache plugin
wo site create example.com --wpsubdir # install wpmu-subdirectory without any page caching
wo site create example.com --wpsubdir --wpsc # install wpmu-subdirectory with wp-super-cache plugin
wo site create example.com --wpsubdir --wpfc # install wpmu-subdirectory + nginx fastcgi_cache
wo site create example.com --wpsubdir --wpredis # install wpmu-subdirectory + nginx redis_cache
wo site create example.com --wpsubdomain # install wpmu-subdomain without any page caching
wo site create example.com --wpsubdomain --wpsc # install wpmu-subdomain with wp-super-cache plugin
wo site create example.com --wpsubdomain --wpfc # install wpmu-subdomain + nginx fastcgi_cache
wo site create example.com --wpsubdomain --wpredis # install wpmu-subdomain + nginx redis_cache
wo site create example.com --html # create example.com for static/html sites
wo site create example.com --php # create example.com with php support
wo site create example.com --php73 # create example.com with php 7.3 support
wo site create example.com --mysql # create example.com with php & mysql support
wo site create example.com --mysql --php73 # create example.com with php 7.3 & mysql support
wo site create example.com --proxy=127.0.0.1:3000 # create example.com with nginx as reverse-proxy
wo site create example.com --wp --letsencrypt # wordpress & letsencrypt
wo site create sub.example.com --wp --letsencrypt=subdomain # wordpress & letsencrypt subdomain
wo site create site.tld --wp --letsencrypt --hsts # wordpress & letsencrypt with HSTS
wo site create site.tld --wp --letsencrypt=wildcard --dns=dns_cf # wordpress & wildcard SSL certificate with Cloudflare DNS API
wo update
If you feel there is a bug directly related to WordOps, or if you want to suggest new features for WordOps, feel free to open an issue. For any other questions about WordOps or if you need support, please use the Community Forum.
If you'd like to contribute, please fork the repository and make changes as you'd like. Pull requests are warmly welcome. There is no need to be a developer or a system administrator to contribute to WordOps project. You can still contribute by helping us to improve WordOps documentation.
- Source : EasyEngine
Apps & Tools shipped with WordOps :