I was finally able to migrate my web server to another system and OS (Operating System) to better keep up with updates. I was on Fedora 34 Linux, and I moved the web server over to Rocky Linux 9.x. Fedora only goes 3 versions back for updates and their current version just moved to Fedora 40. Fedora is a bleeding edge Linux OS with a lot of the latest SW which can add further incompatibilities if developers have not had time to update their programs or utilities to use those libraries\software. Fedora actually does a nice job of updating through the versions but that often leads to incompatible versions of PhP or other SW with applications such as WordPress plugins, the MySQL DB etc.
Since I have my own XCP.ng virtual environment I cloned my webserver and worked on that offline after changing the Ip. Address on the system and in the MySQL database.
- First, I did the clone then updated to current versions of Fedora this led to a list of issues.
- Apache redirects in http.conf and .htacecss were highly customized and did not work
- Had to sync with MySQL dB Ip. Address entries as well
- The PHP version mismatches were all over the place
- Had to disable or remove many plugins
- This normally reliable method left me with an unusable website.
- I tried this a few times since it had worked for me in the past.
- Next, I created a new VM/system with the same system specs using Rocky Linux 9.
- Started with a brand-new version of WordPress
- Setup WordPress networking multi-site
- Created each site the way I wanted with no data
- Installed WordPress plugins fresh if the plugins were maintained and updated.
- Found new WordPress plugins or did not install outdate non-maintained plugins.
- Installed the WordPress themes I wanted to use and checked they were updated and maintained.
- Did a copy of the website files using rsync.
- Used Heidi SQL to copy the MySQL DB’s over to this new system
- Changed Ip. Addresses in DBs, Apache web server and web configuration files.
- This site started working I then decided to increase my website mountpoints size.
- Noticed it was under “/” which is root of course and it is not contiguous due to swap.
- I have extended “/” several times over the years but this time it just crashed the VM by not booting.
- I ended up restoring the VM (Virtual Machines) from a backup I do using the XCP-ng XOA (Xen Orchestra Appliance) source from GitHub.
- I did not want to have a large “/” so I decided to split off the mountpoint to a new drive and copy data over which was just as problematic because I had some other system files in the mountpoint.
- Since I decided I wanted more space on the website mountpoint I created a whole new VM with the drives sizes I wanted using Rocky Linux 9.x. Now I would be able to cleanly extend drives and mountpoint space if needed
- Initial install for some odd reason the system did not boot
- Figured it was how I ordered the mountpoints with the boot partition, swap but may have been how I formatted it. I was resizing and moving mountpoints around prior to the OS install probably chose the wrong formatting option without noticing.
- Once I got the system to bootup properly on Rocky Linux 9 I installed updates, and the software packages needed to run a web server.
- Started with a brand-new version of WordPress
- Setup WordPress networking multi-site
- Created each site the way I wanted with no data
- Installed WordPress plugins fresh if they were maintained and updated.
- Found new WordPress plugins or did not install outdate non-maintained plugins.
- Installed the WordPress themes I wanted to use and checked they were updated and maintained.
- Imported the posts, comments and other data using WP-Import data from the original site to each multi-site.
- Created new menus’ and exported them to the other sites using WPS Menu Exporter plugin.
- Initial install for some odd reason the system did not boot
- Used Heidi SQL to copy the MySQL DB’s over to this new system
- Did a copy of the website files using rsync.
- Used Heidi SQL to copy the MySQL DB’s over to this new system
- Changed Ip. Address in DBs, Apache web server and web configuration files
- Moved over ssl certificates to the new web server
- Fine-tuned settings for performance and SEO.
I still have a few things to accomplish but it’s comforting to get on Rocky Linux 9.x which is a long-term OS that will be around with updates for years instead of the bi-annual update cycle of Fedora that is only has. Just an FYI all places I have MySQL it’s the fork MariaDB.