I am new to the WordPress. After purchase and mapping the dns server, I have installed the WordPress to my site.
After installing the website, when I visit my domain it stuck here(screenshot attached for your reference)
Please guide me to resolve the issue.
Regards
]]>I’m migrating an existing wordpress installation to a new server and placing the wordpress installation behind a reverse proxy.
The reverse proxy is a NGINX server and the wordpress installation is also being put on a NGINX server. The 2 servers are individual VMs.
I have the wordpress site working just fine, until I attempt to access the wp-admin pages. When I use the url https://www.example.com/wp-admin – I get a 301 redirect to https://<backend-server-fqdn>/wp-admin.
What am I missing here? I managed to fix the issue by forcing $_SESSION[‘HTTP_HOST’] = <frontend-fqdn>;
But this seems pretty hacky. I would imagine WP would allow for reverse proxy on its own.
Any help or advice would be great!
]]>Can anyone Please Tell Us How To Fix This Error???
We are getting a the following error:
Warning: Cannot modify header information – headers already sent by (output started at /home1/rosemedi/public_html/faheyelectrical/wp-config.php:2) in /home1/rosemedi/public_html/faheyelectrical/wp-includes/functions.php on line 3759
Error establishing a database connection
Can anyone Please Tell Us How To Fix This Error???
]]>Thanks
M Bey
]]>And I quote:
‘2. The Roll Up Your Sleeves and Use a Little Elbow Grease Method: Uncompress the provided .zip file and upload the template contents to the /wp-content/themes/ directory of your WordPress installation via your chosen FTP client.’
Do not understand the step ‘upload the template contents to the /wp-content/themes/ directory of your wordpress installation via your chosen FTP client.’
Forgive the basic questions but, FTP client would imply the ‘host’?
Feedback is much appreciated.
Thanks!
]]>We were able to connect to the database server (which means your username and password is okay) but not able to select the WordPress database.
Are you sure it exists?
Does the user root have permission to use the WordPress database?
On some systems the name of your database is prefixed with your username, so it would be like username_wordpress. Could that be the problem?
If you don’t know how to set up a database you should contact your host. If all else fails you may find help at the WordPress Support Forums.
I’m not sure which version I’m using, but it was installed in August.
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