❗️ GRRR no longer maintains this plugin.
We recommend using the Pro plan of the Simply Static plugin. When we started this plugin, it fixed the lack of a deployment feature in Simply Static. Since then, the plugin has been updated, and the Pro plan offers exactly what we were missing.
GRRR has contributed code and features to the Simply Static plugin, and we're happy to see it grow.
We suggest taking a look, it's well worth the investment.
Thanks to everyone who has taken an interest in this plugin!
If you've enjoyed using this plugin or were inspired by it in any way, maybe you'd like to follow our blog, where we write about our work and the things we learn along the way: grrr.tech.
This plugin requires:
This plugin needs to be installed using Composer.
Make sure you have the right installer paths configured in your composer.json
. This has to be done before requiring the package:
"extra": {
"installer-paths": {
"wp-content/plugins/{$name}/": ["type:wordpress-plugin"]
}
}
Install via Composer:
$ composer require grrr-amsterdam/simply-static-deploy
If you're not using Composer in your project yet, make sure to require the Composer autoloader. A good place would be in your wp-config.php
:
/** Sets up WordPress vars and included files. */
require_once ABSPATH . 'vendor/autoload.php'; # ‹— add this
require_once ABSPATH . 'wp-settings.php';
First define SIMPLY_STATIC_DEPLOY_CONFIG
in your WordPress configuration:
define('SIMPLY_STATIC_DEPLOY_CONFIG', [
'aws' => [
'key' => '...', # AWS access key
'secret' => '...', # AWS secret key
'region' => '...', # AWS region
'bucket' => '...', # S3 bucket
'bucket_acl' => '...', # S3 bucket ACL (optional, defaults to `public-read`)
'distribution' => '...', # CloudFront distribution ID (optional, step is skipped when empty)
'endpoint' => '...', # For usage with providers other than AWS (optional)
],
'url' => '...', # Website url (used for displaying url after deploy is finished)
]);
Then configure the Simply Static plugin via the admin interface. The most important setting to get right is:
Delivery Method
: set to Local Directory
(files are synced to S3, zip won't work)Other settings which you should pay attention to:
Additional URLs
: add any URL the plugin is unable to findAdditional Files and Directories
: add additional directories (for example front-end assets)URLs to Exclude
: for example the uploads folder (but only when you're offloading uploads at runtime)If everything is configured correctly, hit Generate & Deploy
in the Deploy
tab.
Pages/posts come with single deploy button, so that a single page can be generated and deployed, see single page/post deploy user interface.
A single post or page deploy can also be done recursively by checking the recursive option, see checkbox in single page/post deploy user interface. When 'recursive' has been checked all pages/posts that containt the url of the current page/post will be generated and deployed as well.
Available filters to modify settings and data passed to the plugin:
Available actions to invoke or act upon:
Modify entries from the 'Additional Files and Directories' option. By default all paths are temporarily resolved to absolute paths via realpath, to ensure symbolic links are resolved. An array of unmodified files from the options is passed as an argument.
add_filter('simply_static_deploy_additional_files', function (array $files) {
# Modify files, and possibly resolve paths with `realpath`.
return $files;
});
Note: during generation of the static site, the additional_files
setting is updated. It is restored when finished.
When doing a single deploy only the given page/post will be generated, including the files given in the Simply Static 'Additional files' setting. You can change these additional files for single deploys via the simply_static_deploy_single_additional_files
filter. It takes two arguments: the first one is an array of filenames, the second one is the Simply Static Options instance.
Modify entries from the 'Additional URLs' option. This can be useful to add pages that can't be found by Simply Static (not in the sitemap, are excluded by a password, have noindex
, etc...). An array of unmodified URLs from the options is passed as an argument.
add_filter('simply_static_deploy_additional_urls', function (array $urls) {
# Modify urls, for example by adding missing pages.
return $urls;
});
Note: during generation of the static site, the additional_urls
setting is updated. It is restored when finished.
This filter adds the option to customize the excludable url setting. This can be useful when for instance you want to ignore exclusions when an url contains the recursive parent url.
add_filter('simply_static_deploy_recursive_excludable', function (
$excludable,
string $staticPageUrl,
string $recursiveUrl
) {
# Modify excludable url logic, for example ignore excludeable url setting when current page contains the recursiveUrl
return $excludable;
});
Called from the plugin, and receives a WP_Error
object explaining the error. You can decide how to handle the error, for instance by logging it with a service of choice.
add_action('simply_static_deploy_error', function (\WP_Error $error) {
# Handle the error.
});
This will be triggered after all deploy tasks are finished. The first and only argument you will get in the callback function is the Simply Static options instance.
add_action('simply_static_deploy_complete' , function (\Simply_Static\Options $options) {
// Finished static deploy job.
});
Called when Simply Static is done generating the static site. This allows you to modify the generated files before they're being deployed. The static site directory is passed as an argument.
add_action('simply_static_deploy_modify_generated_files', function (
string $directory
) {
# Modify generated files, like renaming or moving them.
});
Schedule a deploy event.
Arguments:
hourly
, twicedaily
and daily
. Can be extended via cron_schedules.do_action('simply_static_deploy_schedule', '12:00', 'daily');
Note: it is important that WP-Cron is called regularly. You could do so by disabling the default WP-Cron mechanism and switch to calling it via a dedicated cronjob.
To disable the default WP–Cron (which is normally called when a user visits pages), add the following to your WordPress configuration:
define('DISABLE_WP_CRON', true);
Create a cronjob calling the WordPres WP-Cron. Setting it to every 5 minutes would be a good default. For example via crontab -e
on a Linux machine:
*/5 * * * * curl https://example.com/wp/wp-cron.php?doing-cron > /dev/null 2>&1
Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Class 'Grrr\SimplyStaticDeploy\SimplyStaticDeploy' not found
Check the installation instructions, and require the Composer autoloader in your project.