Use Virtual Wordpress Appliance to learn Wordpress

Written by Alex Bogak on February 24th, 2008
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For anyone who tries to be a blogger or create some sort of information resource, the most important issue is always with high quality of the blog or site. It relates both to design and content. It takes awhile until the design makes you happy, and it can also take few iterations until you’re happy with the posts.

You create the post, and proofreading it, and post as draft, and reading it again. Then you fix few things, post it online. And then you find that you’re not so happy with some phrases, and you change them and post again…it takes awhile until you’re totally happy. All these back and forth iterations are not always convenient – you may have a bad connection. Or you have a hosting with limited bandwidth. Or you’re not sure, or anything else. Or, maybe, you’d like to see how it would look like without actually posting.

Or, you’re just like me. I’ve posted few times already that I’m thinking about moving my blog to Wordpress. I want to try Wordpress and see how it looks and feels like before I do it on a real blog.

I might have a solution for you. It will help you to do anything you want without actual posting or making design changes to your blog. It is very simple actually, and the magic is in virtualization. It’s hardly a surprise for anyone. Our personal computers are strong enough to be the host for both our own tasks and also for virtual computers. So, what you can do is to create your own virtual server that will only run Wordpress (and its all required components, such as web server, database and php engine). You can then work with your local server while you’re trying to verify issues such as design and/or posts, and only after you’re sure – you could post it to your official blog.

Now I will explain the procedure I tested. Just keep in mind that while it shows how to work with Wordpress blog engine, the idea can work for any other web or other resource you’d like to use. I looked over the web for all sorts of virtualization techniques, and the one I found to be the easiest is the VMWare image of rPath Wordpress Appliance. It is the basic VMWare image of a virtual computer, which includes all required software components needed to run Wordpress. Its size is about 130Mb, which is while not that small, is not big either – a connection to DSL would be enough to get it in about half an hour.

The download includes Wordpress version 2.2, so you will need to update it if you want the latest and the greatest. After the download is complete, unzip the file, and start VMWare Player with the file inside extracted folder. It will start the virtual machine. Here is the example of how will the login look like after the start. I have a DHCP server running on my network, so the appropriate IP address (the picture is clickable):

Then, go to {IP}/wordpress/wp-admin/upgrade.php in your browser (IP will be written on that login screen, user: admin, password is: password) – it will allow you to update the MySQL database and now you will have the Wordpress installed. To update it to the latest version from rPath, go back to the virtual machine, and do the following:

  • login as root, no password needed.
  • execute “conary updateall”

After all updates are done, the appliance will be updated to Wordpress 2.3.1. Another way to update, is to follow the standard Wordpress Update procedures.

After the update, go to {IP}/wordpress/wp-admin/upgrade.php again – and then you have the up-to-date Wordpress with basic installation.

Now, you’ll be able to “play” with themes, plugins and design without hurting your live site. You can try out and build your new site. You can post here and fix those posts until you’re happy. And after you are, you can post it on your live blog. Here’s the example of my “possible” blog after few tweaks – I imported my own blog there just to see how can it look like (click to see larger picture):

This technique allows to do all sorts of experimenting while your live site is still very untouched, functional and working. It is also very helpful if you don’t have a Wordpress blog yet and thinking about the move. It would allow you to play with it and to test it and to decide whether it worth the effort.

Enjoy being your own webmaster!!!

I have my own technology blog at www.thetechandcents.com. There I review all the variety of effects that technology has on our lives.

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24 Responses to “Use Virtual Wordpress Appliance to learn Wordpress”

  1. John Cow dot ComUse Virtual Wordpress Appliance to learn WordpressPosted: 24 Feb 2008 06:44 AM CST

  2. 3.Use Virtual Wordpress Appliance to learn Wordpresswww.johncow.com74 commentsSocialRank For anyone who tries to be a blogger or create some sort of information resource, the most important issue is always with high quality of the blog or site. It relates both to design and content. It takes awhile

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  5. ’re happy with the posts. You create the post, and proofreading it, and post as draft, and reading it again. Then you fix few things, post it online. And then you find that … See the rest here:Use Virtual Wordpress Appliance to learn Wordpress

  6. [...] to Google Latest Content Use Virtual Wordpress Appliance to learn Wordpress – 2 hours ago For anyone who tries to be a blogger or create some sort of information resource, the [...]

  7. This is really a great tool to have. I used it when changing the look of my blog as it allowed me to get my blog looking and running how i wanted it to before i changed the live version.

    Marketing Blog’s last blog post..Win A Premium Wordpress Theme

  8. ITrush says:

    It’s a must have tool, specially for those who want to redesign their sites look. Thanks for sharing.

    nhick

    http://www.itrush.com

    ITrush’s last blog post..Medi Points Foot Massager – Feel Totally Pampered In Just 10 Minutes

  9. Jason Boom says:

    Thanks for the great post. I’ll have to look into this.

    Jason Boom’s last blog post..Weekly Implosion: Academy Awards Edition

  10. Alex says:

    Jason:

    Yea, and its easy. Took me about 20 minutes to install and test, including downloads.

    Alex’s last blog post..La citta ideale

  11. Chris says:

    You could always just install easyphp or wamp. one click installs, and less intensive as you aren’t virtualizing anything.

    Chris’s last blog post..Member Introductions

  12. Erica DeWolf says:

    Thanks for sharing this great tool! I’ll have to check it out soon!

    Erica DeWolf’s last blog post..Email Marketing Effectiveness: Link Love

  13. -Paul says:

    great tool indeed. Will be on to this ASAP.

  14. ViralKing says:

    Yep good post :twisted: There are more guest posts on Cow then actual Cow posts though :evil:

  15. Neil Duckett says:

    ViralKing – there were a backlog of posts from guest bloggers from when Cow was on holidays so he’s honering their efforts by posting them.

    Neil Duckett’s last blog post..JR Yamanote Line – Akihabara

  16. Terence says:

    Hi John,

    while I don’t have much idea bout vmware.

    I am using xampp (http://www.apachefriends.org/en/xampp-windows.html) for a while now, to test the wordpress installation on a local machine (still tweaking) before going live.

    theres both setup and portable versions.

    its a freeware too.

  17. Minor quibble: It’s WordPress, not Wordpress. ;)

  18. Pete Moore says:

    Hi Alex,

    Great post, I am currently working on a step by step video series about how to build and monetize a wordpress blog and was thinking about the best way to do it without constantly being online. Now I have my answer.

    Again great post.

    Thanks

    Pete Moore

    Pete Moore’s last blog post..Free Keyword Research Tool If You Haven’t Got A Pot To Piss In

  19. Thanks for the post that is a great tool. I do like wordpress myself and decided to go with that over blogger.

  20. Daniel says:

    Or, if you do not want the overhead of virtualization, but still want the ease of use, there is the BitNami Wordpress Installers that are free and run on Windows, Linux and Mac.

  21. Ralph says:

    wow, this is the first time i heard this. thanks for sharing.

    will try this tonight. :twisted: :twisted: :twisted:

    Ralph’s last blog post..The real money making online

  22. yutube says:

    Thanks for sharing this great tool.

    yutube’s last blog post..idare edemeyenler yutube komik video

  23. Fish Farming says:

    thanks for info john.

    you can use XAMPP also to test php-mysql based application.

    it is easy to install and administer..