WordPress®, a web-based content management system, allows users to easily create a website or blog. This document describes how to install WordPress on your cPanel account.
In cPanel & WHM version 92 and newer, users can install WordPress through the WordPress Toolkit interface.
For instructions on how to install WordPress through WordPress Toolkit, read Plesk’s WordPress Toolkit documentation.
In cPanel & WHM version 70 through 90, users can install WordPress through the WordPress Manager interface.
For instructions on how to install WordPress through WordPress Manager interface, read our WordPress Manager documentation.
In cPanel & WHM version 90 and earlier, users can install WordPress as a cPAddon with cPanel’s Site Software interface (cPanel >> Home >> Software >> Site Software).
To install WordPress as a cPAddon, perform the following steps:
Navigate to cPanel’s Site Software interface (cPanel >> Home >> Software >> Site Software).
To receive a notice via email when the hosting provider installs WordPress, click here after the You currently are set to receive a notice when updates for your installs are available text.
Click WordPress.
Enter the requested information.
Click Install.
When the WordPress installation finishes, use your web browser to view the location that you entered in Step 4.
http://example.com/wordpress/
directory, browse to the http://example.com/wordpress/
URL.If WordPress is not available as a cPAddon, users can ask their hosting provider to add it, or they install WordPress directly themselves. For more information, read the User installs WordPress Manually section below.
The WordPress Manager interface (cPanel >> Home >> Applications >> WordPress Manager) allows you to manage the WordPress installations on your cPanel account. The WordPress Manager interface only manages WordPress installations that you create with the RPM-based WordPress cPAddon.
If your hosting provider does not offer WordPress as a cPAddon, you can manually download WordPress from the WordPress website and install it on your site.
For more information, read installation instructions from WordPress and their cPanel-specific instructions on how to create a database for WordPress.
Manual installations may encounter issues due to conflicting .htaccess
files or database connection errors:
In the following examples, the following statements are true:
example.com
represents the domain name.
example
represents the account name.
subdomain
represents a subdomain’s directory.
addon.com
represents an addon domain name.
Due to potential conflicts in the .htaccess
file, do not configure multiple WordPress installations to share a single document root. If you experience difficulties with WordPress, check the following requirements:
Each cPanel account user can host only one installation of WordPress in the document root directory.
The following are examples of document root directories:
/home/example/public_html/
/home/example/public_html/addon.com
/home/example/public_html/subdomain
Each directory may only contain one WordPress installation.
If the subdirectories are not a document root, cPanel account users can install additional WordPress installations in subdirectories under the domain’s home/example/public_html directory.
The following examples demonstrate installations that use the wordpress subdirectory:
Under the document root for the main domain: /home/example/public_html/wordpress
Under a subdomain: /home/example/public_html/subdomain/wordpress
Under an addon domain: /home/example/public_html/addon.com/wordpress
For more information, visit the WordPress website.
If WordPress returns a database connection error, ensure that the database’s name and password in the wp-config.php
file are identical to the database credentials in your account.
For a document root installation, the wp-config
file exists in the /home/username/public_html
directory, where username
represents the cPanel account name.
To change the database’s username or password, use cPanel’s MySQL Databases interface (cPanel >> Home >> Databases >> MySQL Databases).
To test a username and password combination, run the following command (where db_user
represents the database’s authorized username):
mysql -u db_user -p
After you enter the command, enter the user’s password. The system will respond with a success or failure message