Have you changed the prefix of your database tables? I'm 90% sure, that this is your problem.
The thing is that WordPress uses the $table_prefix
variable for forming the option and usermeta keys names, where it's storing the roles and capabilities information. So once you change the prefix, but don't update your db, you get this error. Here's how to fix it - execute this SQL command through phpMyAdmin, or a different interface for interacting with your DB(you can do it with PHP as well):
UPDATE `{%TABLE_PREFIX%}usermeta` SET `meta_key` = replace(`meta_key`, '{%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%}', '{%NEW_TABLE_PREFIX%}');
UPDATE `{%TABLE_PREFIX%}options` SET `option_name` = replace(`option_name`, '{%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%}', '{%NEW_TABLE_PREFIX%}');
Where:
{%TABLE_PREFIX%}
is your current $table_prefix
(as set in wp-config.php
)
{%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%}
is your previous $table_prefix
{%NEW_TABLE_PREFIX%}
is your new(current) $table_prefix
- it will most-likely be the same as your {%TABLE_PREFIX%}
.
So if your old $table_prefix
was wp_test_
and your new one is wp_
, you would do this query:
UPDATE `wp_usermeta` SET `meta_key` = replace(`meta_key`, 'wp_test_', 'wp_');
UPDATE `wp_options` SET `option_name` = replace(`option_name`, 'wp_test_', 'wp_');
EDIT: As @Francisco Corrales noted, if you are having troubles accessing an admin page that you created(if you don't write PHP, this is not your case), you can check out this link: Wordpress Error while developing a plugin -"You do not have sufficient permissions to access this page."
EDIT 2: As @Kasper Souren noted, you might want to add a WHERE clause to the options UPDATE query. Like so(don't remove the %
after the last %}
):
UPDATE `{%TABLE_PREFIX%}options` SET `option_name` = replace(`option_name`, '{%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%}', '{%NEW_TABLE_PREFIX%}') WHERE option_name like '{%OLD_TABLE_PREFIX%}%';