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  • Thread Starter AiedailEclipsed

    (@aiedaileclipsed)

    @corrinarusso

    Nothing in the wp-posts table for attachments at all. Given the error message (and how the media upload works without the option enabled), I think it’s more about a weird permissions error. I think I might have to contact my host and see what they say.

    Thread Starter AiedailEclipsed

    (@aiedaileclipsed)

    @corrinarusso

    We might just have to admit defeat on this. ?? Thank you so much for all the help and troubleshooting you’ve given!

    I couldn’t find anything referencing metadata for the media being uploaded. Checked a couple different tables just to be sure I wasn’t missing anything.

    That’ll probably be my last step to do, as I’m off for the next couple days and will have some free time to dedicate to this again.

    And no, I don’t have anything like that setup. The only thing I have in .htaccess is indexing disabled in a couple places.

    Thread Starter AiedailEclipsed

    (@aiedaileclipsed)

    Hey again @corrinarusso!

    I’m good on disk space and deactivating plugins had no effect on the issue unfortunately. I tried the suggested permission set for the media directory, but no effect there either. Also checked the Apache logs and all the errors there are not related to either directory. ??

    This error is very stubborn. ??

    Thread Starter AiedailEclipsed

    (@aiedaileclipsed)

    Hey @corrinarusso, thanks for taking the time to reply.

    I’m on a shared hosting setup, so this isn’t something I normally play around with. That being said, I did some investigation/digging. I’m guessing the user being used is my root account. I looked at the media subdomain I want to use and the owner is the root, but the group was listed as “nobody”. I would figure that the root nature of the account would override any group restriction, but I decided to give it a shot. I used SSH to change the group to the root account and even made sure that the file directory path had group write permissions at all points. Still nothing.

    Any more ideas, anyone?

    ETA: It occurs to me that I should probably mention that this setup had worked fine until October of last year. I had several months of the year/month based file directories. I didn’t notice until I was doing some work on this site that it had apparently stopped. Maybe something to do with a change in a WP update during that time?

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 6 months ago by AiedailEclipsed. Reason: new detail
    • This reply was modified 4 years, 6 months ago by AiedailEclipsed. Reason: new detail
    Thread Starter AiedailEclipsed

    (@aiedaileclipsed)

    As far as I’m aware, yes.

    Thread Starter AiedailEclipsed

    (@aiedaileclipsed)

    Hey Kyle!

    Sorry it took so long for me to get back to you. I had forgotten I had even posted anything on here.

    In any case, what I mean is that to me, there really isn’t a good way for you to view submissions to forms without going into the edit interface on the ACP. When you get huge paragraphs of information, it can quickly become tedious to go into each one and resize the textbox to fit the full response. Imagine if your form were filled with those. And some things aren’t going to display correctly (rich text formatting).

    I’ve tried experimenting with getting form field submissions to cross over to custom content types to display/view (and to some extent edit) them via the native WordPress content management, but didn’t have success. At the simplest, I think it would be nice to have an added option to just view the submission with full formatting (handy if you allow rich text in text-areas), the same as if it were a post or page. Anything more robust would be best served with me figuring out how to get the form submissions to create submissions as a custom content type (which I think is possible, if I read the documentation right).

Viewing 6 replies - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)