Sorry for the same problem again, but I have tried various solutions provided by other people and still cannot solve this problem.
I have twice pulled a live website (which works fine) down to run locally under XAMPP Version 5.6.31. The first time I did everything manually, but could not solve this problem. I deleted that installation and tried again using the Duplicator plugin, but ended up with the same problem.
The website main page has a menu on it which takes the user to different pages (not posts) on the website. Each page is based on an individual template which loads the page. Examples of the standard codes used to move from one page to another are:
1. user Login
2. echo "<script type='text/javascript'> document.location = '/index.php/user-login/'; </script>";
The localhost website files are in c:\xampp\htdocs\mywebsite. I can login to Wordpress and edit the website pages, view the plugins etc.
I have set the wp-config.php to the correct database-name/root/no-password settings, tried saving the permalinks (pressing SAVE twice), tried changing the permalinks, checked the .htaccess file, corrected the Xampp config settings of "AllowOverride" and "mod_rewrite", checked I can access the database using Xampp MySQL, checked the database permissions and tried different settings in "c:\xampp\htdocs\index.php".
If I type "http://localhost/mywebsite/index.php/user-login" into the browser, the correct login page is displayed. If I hover over the menu option on the main page of mywebsite, "localhost/index.php/user-login" shows in the bottom left corner of Firefox. Pressing that just refreshes the main page - it does not take me to the login-page.
c:\xampp\htdocs\index.php includes the lines:
$uri .= $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'];
header('Location: '.$uri.'/mywebsite/index.php');
Any ideas will be greatly appreciated - thanks.
I am currently unable to get into my WP Dashboard. The wp-admin page is completely blank throwing no visible errors. I can hit wp-login.php, use my login credentials and hit Log In and then again just blank page, still not logged in. The site it self works fine.
I did enable wp_debug and this still is not showing any errors.
I just took over this site so I do not know of any recent updates or changes made to themes,plugins etc.
UPDATE: I was able to get wp-admin page to load the wp-login page properly by just uploading a clean version of wp-admin/index.php. However I am still seeing a blank page and unable to login after hitting 'log in'
I check the error logs for the server and I do not see anything related to this site.
Make sure that u don't have blank spaces in config and functions file at the top or bottom of theses.
btw, it seems like server's error. See his log :)
Sounds like a PHP error.
Add:
error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', '1');
To the top of wp-admin/index.php
A common troubleshooting technique would be to rename your
./wp-content/plugins
folder. This will temporarily deactivate all your plugins. Often such issues are caused by a malfunctioning plugin, usually after an automated update.
Another thing you can try is to switch the php version of your hosting account. Most hosting companies run CloudLinux and you have in cPanel -> Select PHP Version. You can test the administrator login with different versions.
You can also contact your webhosting provider and have them check if the ConfigServer eXploit Scanner (cxs), often installed on shared servers hasn't quarantined any of your website files.
It might be a long shot, but it is also worth checking your .htaccess file.
Good luck!
It may be caused from an error in your theme functions file. If you have a theme backup (which you are sure worked before), try restoring it from the file manager in your host panel. If you don't, try uploading a popular wordpress theme (e.g. twenty-sixteen) then change your default theme from PhpMyAdmin.
Go to your root folder, open wp-config.php,...
Enable Debug mode.(i.e)
define('WP_DEBUG', false);
to
define('WP_DEBUG', true);
And inspect it using Firebug.
Sorry, this is question don't have a code snippet but a situation. I've a Laravel application which was running fine on my localhost and server. Today I made some updates to the controllers and some views. The changes was working fine in the localhost. So I uploaded the files to the server. But when I tried to login in the server, I could see the home page, login pages and all. But getting a white blank page after login.
When I manually try to navigate to other pages in the logged in section, it redirects to the dashboard and blank page comes. Everything is working fine in the localhost. I didn't make any updates to the server configuration. Everything was as before.
OS: CentOS 6.6 (Final)
PHP version: 5.6
Laravel 4.2
Server version: Apache/2.2.15 (Unix)
I checked several answers from other similar questions such as this one and this one. But they all had some updating situation. But in my case not so.
What would be the problem? If you need any additional information, just let me know.
I can give some more information:
When I access a course page (which I need to login to see), it shows a 302 Found status code in the Network tab and then redirects to the Login page where it again shows a 302 Found status code and then to the dashboard with a 200 ok code. Session is being created. Thats' why it's redirecting back to the dashboard page. But the page is still empty.
A blank white screen usually means either
Your'e rendering a template with no content
A fatal PHP occurred before Laravel could completely bootstrap itself
The "right" thing to do here is to check your web server error logs, or your PHP error logs. I'm going to guess you don't know where those are or if they're setup properly. If that's the case you'll want to temporarily change PHP's display_error ini setting. In Laravel 4.2 I'd do this by setting the ini in the following file
#File: boostrap/start.php
<?php
ini_set('display_errors','1');
//... rest of file
This should result in the error being displayed on the screen, and from there you can debug further.
I am trying to move a WordPress site from my local server to the online server.
The problem is that, after the migration, if I try to open the administration page (wp-admin) I only obtain a white page, as you can see here: http://scorejava.com/wordpress/wp-admin/. Everything else seems work well in the homepage: http://scorejava.com/wordpress/.
In my local web server I have the WP site into the folder: /var/www/wordpress. I have moved it into a wordpress folder that is into my root directory of my online web server.
I have also import the local database into the onlyne database using MySql and then I have use the Search and Replace for WordPress Databases Script to change automatically all the http://localhost/wordpress occurrence into the database tables with http://scorejava.com/wordpress/.
There is an error on your site, and you need to find out what's happening.
WordPress URLs
When migrating WordPress sites where the URL changes, you will need to tell WordPress about the new URL. WordPress stores that information in the database, so if you're comfortable with that, you could find the correct entry in the wp_options table in your database and update its value.
I will show some fixes for standard WordPress installs (where the site URL is the WordPress root), but you may need to use different values for home and siteurl if you have a different setup.
Fix URLs via SQL
You will need to update the relevant fields in the DB, those being the entries of wp_options where the option_name is siteurl or home. You can find these fields using phpmyadmin, mysql-workbench, or another database management tool, or you can use the following query, changing the URL to be your own.
UPDATE `wp_options` SET `option_value`='http://www.myurl.com' WHERE `option_name` IN ('siteurl', 'home');
Fix URLs via wp-config.php
However, you can also do this via wp-config.php, which I find to be much more comfortable. Just open wp-config.php and add the lines:
// Site URLS (override DB settings)
define('WP_HOME','http://www.myurl.com'); //<-- NO TRAILING /
define('WP_SITEURL','http://www.myurl.com'); //<-- NO TRAILING /
Obviously you'll need to supply your correct URL.
It's possible that this is the only error you're having, and after adding those lines to wp-config.php, you will be able to log in and use your site normally.
Debugging WordPress errors
However, if you continue to experience problems, and any time you're working on developing a website, you will want to see error output. You can check your server logs for information about the errors, but you may find it more convenient for WordPress to simply display the errors in the page. To enable error display, change the following setting to true in wp-config.php.
define('WP_DEBUG', true);
Now WordPress will display any errors it encounters directly in the webpage. Be sure to change the setting to false for use on a production site.
Working with wp-config.php
This file will be located in the root directory of your wordpress installation. To make any of the changes mentioned here, you may either edit the file directly on the server (via ssh for example), or download the file with an FTP client, make your changes using a text editor, and upload the file again.
It's also a good idea to keep a backup copy before making any changes in case you break something while you're working.
References
You can read all about changing the WordPress site URL on the docs page.
Late To the party, I've experienced this recently and I managed to solve the issue. Here is what I've done.
Step 1: Set WP_DEBUG to true from the wp-config.php file
Step 2: I tried domain.com/wp-login.php instead of domain.com/wp-admin by this I was able to get atleast login form and some errors of Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by
Step 3: I've added ob_start(); in wp-login.php file after <?php in first line, of course to get me in for a while.
Step 4: This trick worked. I've disabled all the plugins, and errors are gone.
Step 5: Activated all the plugins one by one to find which plugin is causing error, So that I can fix the error in particular plugin. Like there was one plugin adding style before wp_enqueque_style so I set it to a function and hook it properly.
There were some minor errors too like deprecated functions. Its up to you whether you want to correct it or use alternate plugin.
And Don't forget to remove ob_start from wp_login.php file. The core files should not be changed.
Hope this helps someone like me.
Inside your settings for your WordPress dashboard there are two fields named "WordPress address (URL)" and "Site address (URL)". These are also known as the "Home" and the "Site URL" settings for your website. The values need to match the server you're actually running on.
If you can't get to the admin, you can use phpmyadmin, go into your database, find the fields kin the wp_options table, and make sure they reflect your domain.
It should be enough in most of cases.
I've fought the dreaded "White Screen of Death" myself a few times. You can browse the threads at the Wordpress Support Site to glean some suggestions, or Google it for lots and lots of people's stories and advice dealing with these. I can't recommend a single, authoritative reference for this.
In most of my cases it was caused by whitespace after a closing ?> tag that got introduced because of changes in newline schemes between my dev and production servers, usually in a plugin.
You might also try putting Wordpress into debug mode or adding error_reporting(E_ALL); to the first line of your site's /wp-admin/admin.php file to see if these give you any hints.
I've personally been able to avoid these (touch wood) by using the XCloner plugin to make transfers between my Win dev machine and *nix production server.
Edit wp-content/themes/active-theme-folder/function.php and add this code just before:
<?php
define('WP_HOME','http://www.myurl.com'); //<-- NO TRAILING /
define('WP_SITEURL','http://www.myurl.com');
Add the below line into the wp-config.php file:
define('WP_HOME', 'http://' . $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME']);
define('WP_SITEURL', WP_HOME . '/');
In you wp-config.php file just above the line stop editing line add this line:
define('RELOCATE',true);
/* That's all, stop editing! Happy blogging. */
Then go to your login URL, refresh the page and log in.
IMPORTANT: If you can log in, then remove the RELOCATE line before preceding any further. Then navigate to:
Settings > General
Set your Wordpress URL and Site address to the correct locations:
WordPress Address (URL): http://example.com/wordpress
Site Address (URL): http://example.com/myblog
Press "Save".
In many cases when migrating files to a different server this issue arises simply because of a minor error in one of your PHP files. The error is additional characters after the closing?> PHP tag in the file. These may just be simple whitespace or returns but they can often be the cause of the white screen of death.
A primary culprit is the functions.php file in your WordPress theme. Take a look at it in a plain text file editor (often available with most hosting accounts) and ensure you delete any lines after the closing tag.
If it's not in this file use error reporting to identify the culprit file, it may be in a plugin or another file in your theme.
As mentioned by Jon Surrell enable error display, change the following setting to true in wp-config.php.
define('WP_DEBUG', true);
I had the same problem after migrating to a local server.
A first attempt failed because there were many hardcoded filepaths in the database.
So I tried again and took care to create the same path as on the live server and the same hostname and databasename. Now the website was good but wp-login gave a white screen.
With wp-debug I found that the problem was caused by wp-super-cache plugin that had a full filepath hardcoded in the config.php
Changing this path to the full local path did the trick.
These are the steps I usually follow.
Upload files and database.
Set the correct file permissions.
Update the database configurations in the wp-config.php file to match the server db login.
Update the wp_options table for updating the site url and home url.
If everything goes well you should be able to login to the admin using the wp-login.php as the url.
The first thing next to do is to go to the permalinks and click save it will automatically update the .htaccess file. If there is no write permisson it will show you can copy it and edit the file via ftp.
Next thing you can easily update all the urls safetly with a plugin named velvet urls . Using it for many years. It will update all other urls in the database.
All these steps will be enough if everything goes correctly.
If you get a blank page or something you can turn on the error reporting and write the logs from the wp config file itself. You can try some of these to debug.
Just remove plugins from the folders one by one.
Remove the custom theme which you are using.
Unless you edited the core files mostly it will solve the issue. Only other chance is the version mismatch for php or mysql that is also very important thing to note while migrating. Hope this helps someone.
I'm adding this answer to the fray, in the hope, it might help somebody else. I followed all of the advice above to no avail. I actually had to hack the PHP files to force my administrator to have access to the panel. It's through the panel that I discovered that my administrator account was not assigned the administrator role.
This is my hack to "wp-includes/capabilities.php"
function current_user_can( $capability ) {
$current_user = wp_get_current_user();
if ( empty( $current_user ) ) {
return false;
}
return true; // HACK to get superuser power to any logged in user
$args = array_slice( func_get_args(), 1 );
$args = array_merge( array( $capability ), $args );
return call_user_func_array( array( $current_user, 'has_cap' ), $args );
}
This allowed the Administrator Panel to appear, with access to https://example.com/wp-admin/users.php and then I could assign the role. I then unhacked the capabilities.php to ensure all users had the correct rights, now that I had "Administrator" assigned to me.
everyone. A few days ago I ported by BlogVault the WordPress multisite instance. The process went smoothly, the sites worked as needed. But I could not get into the console, allways got the error "Your browser does not support cookies, please enable them and try again". I spent several days researching and figured out that the error occurs due to an entry in the code of the page "wp_options".
The original site uses the line
define ('COOKIE_DOMAIN', strtolower (stripslashes ($ _SERVER ['HTTP_HOST'])));
but the new server uses the line
define ('COOKIE_DOMAIN', mydomain.com);"
Replacing lines of code solved the problem. Hope this help somebody)
It's maybe a late replay, but hope it will help someone else.
In my case here are steps I used to resolve the issue.
Edit the wp-config.php file from your WordPress project root and change define('WP_DEBUG', true); instead of false.
Upload the same file to the project root for the new server.
Try to log in same as previously like www.yourDomain.com/wp-admin - Hope now you are able to login the backend admin
Go to settings -> Permalinks - under common settings - choose the radio button plan then click SAVE button for a sake, then again choose day and name SAVE again, don't forget to click save, got back your domain and check your site, the inner pages should work perfectly fine.
Go back to wp-config.php and revert the value to false and upload again.
That's it.
I am not a wordpress developer but the above solution was perfectly fine for me and didn't find anywhere it's explained properly.
I know that this question is asked many times before but I'm out of options and none of the answers given on Stackoverflow is helping.
I'm working on migrating a Magento webshop to another server, everything was working fine yesterday until I migrated the app/etc/modules, app/code/community, app/code/local, js and lib folders. Magento just gave me a blank page after that, I removed those folders (keeping the original Magento files) but all the pages are still blank.
My error logs don't give any detail about why the page isn't loading, and removing the # in the index.php for
ini_set('display_errors', 1);
Doesn't work either because the first error that is showing up is a PHP5.3 error because the client runs Magento 1.3.2.1 (fixed by using this tweak: http://spikomoko.wordpress.com/2009/08/19/magento-not-working-on-php-5-3).
Is there anyone with any information because I'm out of options.
Okay, found the answer.
I extracted my lib and js folder from a tar.gz file, this replaced the modified lib/Varien/Object.php with the original one. Causing a blank page error because the errors are disabled in the Magento index.php.