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ToolKit
Methods:
-
get_environment()
- Returns value of
WP_ENV
, if defined (for example, in wp-config.php) - Returns value of environmental variable
ENVIRONMENT
, if defined. Supports phpdotenv. - Default return of "production" when no variables are set.
- Returns value of
-
is_production()
- Returns true ifget_environment()
== "production", else false.
Setting Environment/Environmental Variables:
For example, if you wanted to set the development environment to "development" or "staging," you could:
- In wp-config.php:
define( 'WP_ENV', 'staging' );
- Create a
.env
file in your WordPress (or plugin/theme, if supported) root containing:ENVIRONMENT=staging
. You may also set any other environmental variables in the.env
file(s) as desired (reference). - Define the environmental variable
ENVIRONMENT
in your OS.
The choices of the using "production," etc string values and .env
files was chosen to be compatible with Sage and Roots conventions.
Order of Operations:
This order can be useful for testing. Although the WP_ENV
constant always takes precedence over anything else, if absent and if supported by your plugin/theme, you could set ENVIRONMENT=production
in your WordPress root .env
but set ENVIRONMENT=development
in your plugin/theme's .env
.
This would allow you to test the site in production mode, however, keep the plugin/theme in development mode (which, as another example, you may have configured not to cache scripts/certain variables in non-production mode).