9161 readersIf you are interested in keeping up with how the merge of WordPress & WordPress MU is progressing here is a list of resources that you can follow:
WordPress Contributors Twitter list
Andrea on Twitter
The WordPress merge trac ticket
Patches submitted to trunk related to the merge
Latest changes in WordPress trac
The WordPress development blog
Let the fun begin
6686 readersIt’s officially out: WPMU 2.9.1. As Donncha says, this will likely be the last release before 3.0 and the merge.
PLEASE see the info about adding the new commentsmeta table.
(Wow, what a crazy ride. )
January 21, 2010 — Testers, start your engines (6)
January 6, 2010 — Merge News (1)
January 5, 2010 — The merge begins
20575 readersI updated SharDB (Download) for WordPress MU 2.9.1.1 and added support for the comment meta table.
December 29, 2009 — Scaling WordPress MU with multiple databases (31)
September 24, 2009 — Changing the domain (17)
January 21, 2010 — Testers, start your engines (6)
January 14, 2010 — 2.9.1 released, last before merge (6)
January 6, 2010 — Merge News
6148 readersRyan has posted a short notice in the developer blog that the merge of the WPMU codebase will be starting in WordPress trunk very soon. It’s likely to be a bit rocky, so fasten your seatbelts, put your tray in the upright position and secure all valuables.
If you are playing along with the home game,
5902 readersYesterday, Donncha released WordPress MU version 2.9.2. 2.9.2 contains fixes for the major outstanding bugs in MU. Unless a security issue surfaces in either WordPress or WordPress MU, this is expected to be the last version of MU.
Thanks Donncha
January 14, 2010 — 2.9.1 released, last before merge (6)
November 26, 2009 — Facebook Dashboard Widget
6273 readersThe bulk of the merge has been done in WordPress core. At least with regards to moving over the files. Now the fun part begins: bug gardening, testing and tweaking.
Here’s what you can do to help not only the dev team and others, but also yourself:
- set up a local install of WPMU
- import some
4179 readersWith news of the merge of the Wordpress & WordPressMU codebase becoming more widespread, one of the questions I get asked with increasing frequency is should someone start a new site based on MU or should they wait for the merge.
My answer? It depends.
Is it time-critical? Do you need it up and running sooner rather
6289 readersThe penny has dropped, the vuvuzelas have sounded and the kitties have played themselves out. WordPress 3.0 has been officially released. Check out the official release post from Matt. I’ve been watching the download counter whirl by. This release marks the official end of separate WordPressMU development. The exisiting functionality is now a part of
3883 readersIf you have been testing out the beta of WordPress, and are new to the whole concept of multiple sites, you may have noted a lot of the wordpress-mu-specific plugins make reference to the mu-plugins folder. This is not created by default. You must create it in the wp-content folder. The “mu” does not stand
3914 readersHere are the slides from my presentation at WordCamp Chicago this weekend: BuddyPress Child Themes View more presentations from Ron Rennick. June 9, 2010 — I went to WordCamp Chicago and all you get is this lousy blog post (2) December 27, 2009 — Merge news and Buddypress awesomeness (7) December 1, 2009 — More