Reputation: 1306
I'm currently in the process of redeveloping my bespoke website to a WordPress-driven CMS.
The website I've been working on is simply my existing URL plus /dev/
, i.e. http://my.website.com/dev/
.
I'll be moving this website to http://my.website.com
over the weekend, and as such will need to remove all references to the /dev/
URL.
What I'd like to do is, basically, a "find and replace" for /dev
on my database. I can see exactly which tables have this value in, but naturally as per a WordPress install, quite a lot of these fields are serialized data - which a straightforward dump
> open with notepad++
> find & replace
will break.
The code I've developed for this purpose is here:
<?php
$look_at[] = array( "table" => "wp_options", "fields" => array( "option_value" ), "id_field" => "option_id" );
$look_at[] = array( "table" => "wp_postmeta", "fields" => array( "meta_value" ), "id_field" => "meta_id" );
$look_at[] = array( "table" => "wp_posts", "fields" => array( "post_content", "guid" ), "id_field" => "ID" );
$look_at[] = array( "table" => "wp_sfmeta", "fields" => array( "meta_value" ), "id_field" => "meta_id" );
$look_at[] = array( "table" => "wp_sfoptions", "fields" => array( "option_value" ), "id_field" => "option_id" );
$look_at[] = array( "table" => "wp_sferrorlog", "fields" => array( "error_text" ), "id_field" => "id" );
for ( $i = 0; $i < sizeof ( $look_at ); $i++ ) {
foreach( $look_at[$i]["fields"] as $field ) {
$sql = 'SELECT `' . $field . '`, `' . $look_at[$i]["id_field"] . '` FROM `' . $look_at[$i]["table"] . '`;';
$res = mysql_query( $sql );
while ( $row = mysql_fetch_assoc( $res ) ) {
$table = $look_at[$i]["table"];
$id_field = $look_at[$i]["id_field"];
$old_val = $row[$field];
$id = $row[$id_field];
$unserialized_value = @unserialize( $old_val );
if ( $old_val === 'b:0;' || $unserialized_value !== false )
$new_val = serialize( str_replace( array( "/dev/", "/dev" ), array( "/", "" ), $unserialized_value ) );
else
$new_val = str_replace( array( "/dev/", "/dev" ), array( "/", "" ), $old_val );
$update_array[] = array( "id_field" => $id_field, "id" => $id, "table" => $table, "key" => $key, "old_val" => $old_val, "new_val" => $new_val );
}
}
}
for ( $i = 0; $i < sizeof( $update_array ); $i++ ) {
if ( $update_array[$i]["old_val"] !== $update_array[$i]["new_val"] )
$updated_sql .= 'UPDATE ' . $update_array[$i]["table"] . ' SET `' . $update_array[$i]["key"] . '` = \'' . $update_array[$i]["new_val"] . '\' WHERE `' . $update_array[$i]["id_field"] . '` = \'' . $update_array[$i]["id"] . '\';';
}
mysql_query( $updated_sql );
?>
An example of the serialized data:
a:6:{s:5:"width";s:3:"400";s:6:"height";s:3:"530";s:14:"hwstring_small";s:22:"height='96' width='72'";s:4:"file";s:30:"2011/12/Amazonas-English-1.jpg";s:5:"sizes";a:13:{s:9:"thumbnail";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:30:"Amazonas-English-1-125x165.jpg";s:5:"width";s:3:"125";s:6:"height";s:3:"165";}s:6:"medium";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:30:"Amazonas-English-1-339x450.jpg";s:5:"width";s:3:"339";s:6:"height";s:3:"450";}s:5:"large";s:0:"";s:14:"post-thumbnail";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:30:"Amazonas-English-1-125x165.jpg";s:5:"width";s:3:"125";s:6:"height";s:3:"165";}s:23:"indexleft-species-thumb";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:30:"Amazonas-English-1-200x265.jpg";s:5:"width";s:3:"200";s:6:"height";s:3:"265";}s:13:"species-thumb";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:30:"Amazonas-English-1-288x381.jpg";s:5:"width";s:3:"288";s:6:"height";s:3:"381";}s:17:"indexheader-thumb";a:5:{s:4:"file";s:30:"Amazonas-English-1-400x300.jpg";s:5:"width";s:3:"400";s:6:"height";s:3:"300";s:4:"path";s:38:"2011/12/Amazonas-English-1-400x300.jpg";s:3:"url";s:88:"http://www.xxxxxxxxxxx.com/dev/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/Amazonas-English-1-400x300.jpg";}s:14:"random-thumb-1";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:28:"Amazonas-English-1-56x75.jpg";s:5:"width";s:2:"56";s:6:"height";s:2:"75";}s:14:"random-thumb-2";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:29:"Amazonas-English-1-75x100.jpg";s:5:"width";s:2:"75";s:6:"height";s:3:"100";}s:14:"random-thumb-3";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:29:"Amazonas-English-1-94x125.jpg";s:5:"width";s:2:"94";s:6:"height";s:3:"125";}s:14:"random-thumb-4";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:30:"Amazonas-English-1-113x150.jpg";s:5:"width";s:3:"113";s:6:"height";s:3:"150";}s:14:"random-thumb-5";a:3:{s:4:"file";s:30:"Amazonas-English-1-132x175.jpg";s:5:"width";s:3:"132";s:6:"height";s:3:"175";}s:13:"d4p-bbp-thumb";s:0:"";}s:10:"image_meta";a:10:{s:8:"aperture";s:1:"0";s:6:"credit";s:0:"";s:6:"camera";s:0:"";s:7:"caption";s:0:"";s:17:"created_timestamp";s:1:"0";s:9:"copyright";s:0:"";s:12:"focal_length";s:1:"0";s:3:"iso";s:1:"0";s:13:"shutter_speed";s:1:"0";s:5:"title";s:0:"";}}
ADDITIONAL EDIT
Unfortunately, there are other instances of /dev/
in other serialized arrays, such as this example:
'a:1:{i:0;a:5:{s:4:"type";s:5:"image";s:3:"loc";s:107:"/home/xxxxx/domains/xxxxxxxxx.com/public_html/dev/wp-content/sp-resources/forum-image-uploads/matt/2012/01/";...
Or,
a:1:{i:0;a:5:{s:4:"data";s:88:"Your search - <b>link:http://www.xxxxxxxxx.com/dev/</b> - did not match any documents. ";...
As such, I don't think a simple preg_replace
(or callback) will do the trick, but I guess an advanced one might?
My questions are:
I'm awful at forseeing problems with my code (bad programmer, I do apologise) and as such a little apprehensive about running tests with this code.
FINAL EDIT: WORKING CODE
Because my SQL dump was nearly 100mb
, I had to use WAMP with unlimited memory.
<?php
error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', 'On');
ini_set('memory_limit', '-1');
$handle = @fopen("amend-this.sql", "r");
if ($handle) {
while (($buffer = fgets($handle, 4096)) !== false) {
$newLine = preg_replace_callback('@s:(\d+)(:\\\"[^"]*www.seriouslyfish\.com)/dev@', create_function('$matches', 'return \'s:\'.($matches[1] - 4).$matches[2];'), $buffer);
$newLine = preg_replace_callback('@s:(\d+)(:\\\"[^\\\"]*/home/sfish/domains/seriouslyfish\.com/public_html)/dev@', create_function('$matches', 'return \'s:\'.($matches[1] - 4).$matches[2];'), $newLine);
$newLine = str_replace('http://dunc.seriouslyfish.com/dev/', 'http://www.seriouslyfish.com/', $newLine);
$newLine = str_replace('http://www.seriouslyfish.com/dev/', 'http://www.seriouslyfish.com/', $newLine);
$newLine = str_replace('/dev', '', $newLine);
file_put_contents( "amended.sql", $newLine, FILE_APPEND );
}
fclose($handle);
}
?>
This code put my new SQL file into the same directory (X:\wamp\www
) for me to manipulate further.
I had a few issues with data-repetition, and there were 67 instances of /dev
still in the file for some reason but I used Notepad++ and WinMerge to sort all of this out and in the end it took me around 45 minutes to search/replace a database of over 90 million characters.
Upvotes: 7
Views: 3684
Reputation: 269
Couldn't you just use WP CLI for this?
wp search-replace https://example.dev https://example.com
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1511
There is the serialization fixer wordpress plugin which does it for the non-programmer: http://davidcoveney.com/575/php-serialization-fix-for-wordpress-migrations/
You can also do it with PHP.
Also, here is a sample MySQL code which does it: https://data.stackexchange.com/drupal%20answersmeta/query/80128/sql-search-and-replace
Take care, since this is a very dangerous tool.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 7783
When I had the same problem I ran a mysqldump of the database, then opened in a text editor and just search/replaced the values, before using the SQL to create the new database. Quite simple, surprisingly fast,especially for a one off.
As pointed out, you have the problem with serialized data, so you could do a similar thing with a simple PHP file:
<?php
$handle = @fopen("/tmp/dump.sql", "r");
if ($handle) {
while (($buffer = fgets($handle, 4096)) !== false) {
$newLine = preg_replace_callback('@s:(\d+)(:\\\"[^"]*xxxxxxxxxxx\.com)/dev@', create_function('$matches', 'return \'s:\'.($matches[1] - 4).$matches[2];'), $buffer);
$newLine = preg_replace_callback('@s:(\d+)(:\\\"[^\\\"]*xxxxxxxxxxx\.com/public_html)/dev@', create_function('$matches', 'return \'s:\'.($matches[1] - 4).$matches[2];'), $newLine);
$newLine = str_replace('http://www.xxxxxxxxxxx.com/dev/', 'http://www.xxxxxxxxxxx.com/', $newLine);
echo $newLine;
}
fclose($handle);
}
?>
Note: this works on a mysqldump, if you're testing, you'll need to remove the \\\
before the "
s in the preg_replace_callback
s - this is just mysqldump escaping quotes.
Also Note: There are two preg replaces (one for normal URLs and one for server paths), and one str replace for standard URLs left over.
Upvotes: 7