Viewing 9 replies - 1 through 9 (of 9 total)
  • I did a quick Google search and it looks like this link might help.

    Thread Starter DigitalNinjaZA

    (@digitalninjaza)

    Thanks for the response, however this wont work as my root directory only has the installer.php and zip file of my site. Made from duplicator

    Thread Starter DigitalNinjaZA

    (@digitalninjaza)

    Would there be a way to edit the plugins php or other file to disable it that way? I used easy maintenance mode.

    I would try to backup that folder /plugins/easy_maintenance_mode/ (or whatever the real name is) and then delete it. Hopefully that would keep the code from running which seems to be forcing the maintenance mode…

    Thread Starter DigitalNinjaZA

    (@digitalninjaza)

    First thing I tried man.. Didnt help.

    I’m not sure what to say, no one has have reported that issue. If your browsing directly to the installer.php file and its getting redirected to another page then you have a redirect or some other setting on your server which isn’t even calling the installer.php file.

    If I understand your original question it sounds like all you have in the root directory is the installer and archive file, no other files? When you try to browse to the installer your taken directly to the maintenance mode page?

    If that is the case then you definitely have a redirect problem, as the installer.php is an isolated php process and wouldn’t be capable of rendering other code. If that is in fact the case then you may have to look at the httd.conf file or see if you have an .htaccess file that is forcing you to another route on your server…

    Thread Starter DigitalNinjaZA

    (@digitalninjaza)

    Okay I seemed to fix it. Now it runs but says requirements fail. Under

    Root Directory Fail

    The rest past. Why is this?

    Hey DigitalNinjaZA

    I noticed you started a new thread on this… Is this item still an issue…

    Cheers~

    Just curious though… none of the maintenance mode settings affect the Admin of WordPress; how you had this bad time?

    Well, if you’ve set the Maintenance Mode using a Plugin then use your FTP and go to plugins folder, rename the folder of your Maintenance Mode plugin. Next, go to your website’s root folder and see if you find a file named .maintenance; if so, delete it. Now you should be able to access your wp-admin and login.

Viewing 9 replies - 1 through 9 (of 9 total)
  • The topic ‘Maintenance mode was enabled, cant get in. :/ Please help urgently’ is closed to new replies.