This article covers a version of CentOS that is no longer supported. If you are currently operating a server running CentOS 6, we highly recommend upgrading or migrating to a supported version of CentOS.
Reason: CentOS 6 reached end of life (EOL) on November 30th, 2020 and no longer receives security patches or updates. For this reason, this guide is no longer maintained.
See Instead:
This guide might still be useful as a reference, but may not work on other CentOS releases. If available, we strongly recommend using a guide written for the version of CentOS you are using.
The following DigitalOcean tutorial may be of immediate interest, as it outlines installing WordPress on a CentOS 7 server:
Wordpress is a free and open source website and blogging tool that uses php and MySQL. It was created in 2003 and has since then expanded to manage 22% of all the new websites created and has over 20,000 plugins to customize its functionality.
The steps in this tutorial require the user to have root privileges. You can see how to set that up here in steps 3 and 4.
Before working with wordpress, you need to have LAMP installed on your server. If you don't have the Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP stack on your server, you can find the tutorial for setting it up here.
Once you have the user and required software, you can start installing wordpress!
We can download Wordpress straight from their website:
wget http://wordpress.org/latest.tar.gz
This command will download the zipped wordpress package straight to your user's home directory. You can unzip it the the next line:
tar -xzvf latest.tar.gz
After we unzip the wordpress files, they will be in a directory called wordpress in the home directory.
Now we need to switch gears for a moment and create a new MySQL directory for wordpress.
Go ahead and log into the MySQL Shell:
mysql -u root -p
Login using your MySQL root password, and then we need to create a wordpress database, a user in that database, and give that user a new password. Keep in mind that all MySQL commands must end with semi-colon.
First, let’s make the database (I’m calling mine wordpress for simplicity’s sake; feel free to give it whatever name you choose):
CREATE DATABASE wordpress; Query OK, 1 row affected (0.00 sec)
Then we need to create the new user. You can replace the database, name, and password, with whatever you prefer:
CREATE USER wordpressuser@localhost; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
Set the password for your new user:
SET PASSWORD FOR wordpressuser@localhost= PASSWORD("password"); Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
Finish up by granting all privileges to the new user. Without this command, the wordpress installer will not be able to start up:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON wordpress.* TO wordpressuser@localhost IDENTIFIED BY 'password'; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
Then refresh MySQL:
FLUSH PRIVILEGES; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
Exit out of the MySQL shell:
exit
The first step to is to copy the sample wordpress configuration file, located in the wordpress directory, into a new file which we will edit, creating a new usable wordpress config:
cp ~/wordpress/wp-config-sample.php ~/wordpress/wp-config.php
Then open the wordpress config:
vi ~/wordpress/wp-config.php
Find the section that contains the field below and substitute in the correct name for your database, username, and password:
// ** MySQL settings - You can get this info from your web host ** // /** The name of the database for WordPress */ define('DB_NAME', 'wordpress'); /** MySQL database username */ define('DB_USER', 'wordpressuser'); /** MySQL database password */ define('DB_PASSWORD', 'password');
Save and Exit.
We are almost done uploading Wordpress to the server. The final move that remains is to transfer the unzipped WordPress files to the website's root directory.
sudo cp -r ~/wordpress/* /var/www/html
From here, WordPress has its own easy to follow installation form online.
However, the form does require a specific php module to run. If it is not yet installed on your server, download php-gd:
sudo yum install php-gd
Last of all restart Apache:
sudo service httpd restart
Once that is all done, the wordpress online installation page is up and waiting for you:
Access the page by adding /wp-admin/install.php to your site's domain or IP address (eg. example.com/wp-admin/install.php) and fill out the short online form (it should look like this).
Once Wordpress is installed, you have a strong base for building your site.
If you want to encrypt the information on your site, you can Install an SSL Certificate
Thanks for learning with the DigitalOcean Community. Check out our offerings for compute, storage, networking, and managed databases.
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I used your guides to install LAMP and Wordpress… they worked perfectly… thank you for your time and effort!
Thank you for your kind words! Please let us know if there are any other article topics that you’d like to see. =]
I’m having an extremely frustrating problem installing wordpress on my centos 6.3 guest (vmware workstation) … I’m at the step where I am supposed to run the install.php file from a web browser, and I can’t run the file because it’s not there in the package! I’ve re-downloaded the wordpress package several times now, and every time I look inside the wp-admin folder, the install.php file is nowhere to be found. Any idea why this would be happening?
The install.php file should come automatically with Wordpress. I just ran through these steps once again on a droplet with Centos 6.3 and it worked without the issue you described above.
What message do you get when you try to access the Wordpress install page?
Hi there, your tutorials are easy to follow and well documented! Thanks ;) I need some help, I cannot setup the automatic wordpress update because i don’t have the good credentials for ftp user in wordpress. How can I add a user/pwd for wordpress access to my server ? Help will be really appreciated ;)
You can actually use SSH instead of FTP to update wordpress.
There are a few steps you need to take:
Install the EPEL repo: <pre>sudo rpm -Uvh http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/6/i386/epel-release-6-8.noarch.rpm</pre><br/>
Install the php-ssh2 module: <pre>sudo yum install php-pecl-ssh2</pre><br/>
Reload Apache: <pre>sudo service httpd reload</pre><br/>
Then, once you are in wordpress and trying to update something, you will be able to choose another connection. You will see in the section where it asks you for the FTP user and password, there will be another option to use the connection type SSH2. Using SSH2, put in your server userid and password and you should be able to update wordpress.
Hello, it’s working fine! thanks you very much, you rock!
Great stuff. However, I get the following error when browsing to the <ip address>/wp-admin/install.php page:
Can’t select database
We were able to connect to the database server (which means your username and password is okay) but not able to select the intranet database.
Any assistance would be great. Thanks.
Thank you Very MUCH! Appreciate this post. There is a few thing however that I had to change:
Directory structure. First of all, most users will be inside the root folder when running the following command: wget http://wordpress.org/latest.tar.gz So, you need to download the package to the right directory, which is: /var/www/html. Your shell console should
show the following to know you are downloading in the right directory: [root@yourservername html]# wget http://wordpress.org/latest.tar.gz
Running the following command: tar -xzvf latest.tar.gz created a ‘wordpress’ folder inside my ‘html’ folder. This means that when you visit your site, you will have to go
to: www.mysite.com/wordpress. To take all the files out of the wordpress directory up one directory(into the hmtl folder), run the following command when inside the ‘wordpress’ folder shopt -s dotglob ## activate dotglob mv ./* …/ shopt -u dotglob ## deactivate dotglob
Configuring the wp-config.php file If you are stupid like me, you would assume that you should add your user to the config file like this define(‘DB_USER’, ‘wordpressuser@localhost’); like it the post, DO NOT add the @localhost… This caused my site to respond with the annoying ‘database not found’ message
Thanks again for your help
my wordpress is runing but i cant upload themes using the upload function of wordpress: Unable to create directory wp-content/uploads/2013/07. Is its parent directory writable by the server?
this is the message and i upload the theme from ftp but i cant see the theme in my wordpress desktop
i have a shared hosting and i upload the theme all work in these shared hosting.