How can I retrieve the path to the root directory in WordPress CMS?
16 Answers
Looking at the bottom of your wp-config.php file in the wordpress root directory will let you find something like this:
if ( !defined('ABSPATH') ) define('ABSPATH', dirname(__FILE__) . '/');
For an example file have a look here:
http://core.trac.wordpress.org/browser/trunk/wp-config-sample.php
You can make use of this constant called ABSPATH in other places of your wordpress scripts and in most cases it should point to your wordpress root directory.
-
10this is only useful if wp-config.php have already been included. in some cases (specifically an out of context ajax call to your plugin code) this does not hold true. Mar 1, 2010 at 14:43
-
19You should be using the built-in WordPress AJAX handler to manage all AJAX calls. Feb 7, 2013 at 4:56
-
6Update: ABSPATH is now defined in the wp-load.php file which is always included therefore the inclusion of wp-config.php doesn't make a difference anymore– BenjaminNov 12, 2018 at 11:02
-
@Lance Cleveland There are other situations where you would not have already loaded WordPress, such as if you have a dynamically-generated javascript or css file that needs to find the location of wp-load.php so that it can use the get_option or get_theme_mod functions.– kloddantJun 11, 2021 at 13:57
echo ABSPATH;
// This shows the absolute path of WordPress
ABSPATH
is a constant defined in the wp-config.php file.
Note: This answer is really old and things may have changed in WordPress land since.
I am guessing that you need to detect the WordPress root from your plugin or theme. I use the following code in FireStats to detect the root WordPress directory where FireStats is installed a a WordPress plugin.
function fs_get_wp_config_path()
{
$base = dirname(__FILE__);
$path = false;
if (@file_exists(dirname(dirname($base))."/wp-config.php"))
{
$path = dirname(dirname($base))."/wp-config.php";
}
else
if (@file_exists(dirname(dirname(dirname($base)))."/wp-config.php"))
{
$path = dirname(dirname(dirname($base)))."/wp-config.php";
}
else
$path = false;
if ($path != false)
{
$path = str_replace("\\", "/", $path);
}
return $path;
}
-
2This is good but since the OP asked for the root directory make sure that the both of the
$path = dirname(...
lines do NOT end with."/wp-config.php"
Jun 12, 2012 at 22:35 -
2Note that wp-config.php can be one placed one folder above wordpress installation. Using wp-load.php or wp-login.php might be a better option. Sep 16, 2012 at 6:52
-
3would be more useful for others if you would change the filename wp-config.php into an variable that should be passed to the function when called like
get_wp_path('wp-config.php');
Apr 30, 2013 at 18:25 -
21No no no! How can that be an accepted answer? Not only the OP didn't mention about his code being in a plugin, but relying on such a frail code should always be avoided. Wordpress structure may evolve. If you really need to know Wordpress' root dir, maybe there's a conception mistake. Try top store your file somewhere else that will be at a known relative path from the file you're loading it from. Anyway, if you still really need to play with the root dir, Wordpress 3 now features the ABSPATH constant, which has what you are looking for. For prior versions, just check the code of wp-load.php– NinjFeb 19, 2014 at 20:35
-
1just use the already available ABSPATH constant. the accepted answer should be the one below by Jaya Kuma. Oct 27, 2014 at 23:28
There are 2 answers for this question Url & directory. Either way, the elegant way would be to define two constants for later use.
define (ROOT_URL, get_site_url() );
define (ROOT_DIR, get_theme_root() );
This an old question, but I have a new answer. This single line will return the path inside a template: :)
$wp_root_path = str_replace('/wp-content/themes', '', get_theme_root());
-
1That assumes the templates are until wp-content, which may not be the case. You can redefine the name of the content directory when you install WP. It is not generally recommended as many plugins make this same assumption and break, but the possibility is there. However, there is no point continuing to repeat those incorrect assumptions here.– JasonFeb 5, 2013 at 13:57
-
Honestly, I wasn't aware wp-content could be renamed. In that case, you could change
wp-content
in my code snippet to the modified name and it would still work.– yitwailFeb 14, 2013 at 18:21
Please try this for get the url of root file.
First Way:
$path = get_home_path();
print "Path: ".$path;
// Return "Path: /var/www/htdocs/" or
// "Path: /var/www/htdocs/wordpress/" if it is subfolder
Second Way:
And you can also use
"ABSPATH"
this constant is define in wordpress config file.
theme root directory path code
<?php $root_path = get_home_path(); ?>
print "Path: ".$root_path;
Return "Path: /var/www/htdocs/" or "Path: /var/www/htdocs/wordpress/" if it is subfolder
Theme Root Path
$theme_root = get_theme_root();
echo $theme_root
Results:- /home/user/public_html/wp-content/themes
For retrieving the path you can use a function <?php $path = get_home_path(); ?>
. I do not want to just repeat what had been already said here, but I want to add one more thing:
If you are using windows server, which is rare case for WordPress installation, but still happens sometimes, you might face a problem with the path output. It might miss a "\" somewhere and you will get an error if you will be using such a path. So when outputting make sure to sanitize the path:
<?php
$path = get_home_path();
$path = wp_normalize_path ($path);
// now $path is ready to be used :)
?>
Here are the various WorPress solutions get the directory. You can pick anyone as per the need.
echo "<br/>".get_home_url(); // https://mysiteurl.com
echo "<br/>".ABSPATH; // /app/
echo "<br/>".get_home_path(); // /app/
echo "<br/>".get_site_url(); // https://mysiteurl.com
echo "<br/>".get_template_directory(); // /app/wp-content/themes/mytheme
echo "<br/>".dirname(__FILE__); // /app/wp-content/plugins/myplugin/includes
echo "<br/>".get_theme_root(); // /app/wp-content/themes
echo "<br/>".plugin_dir_path( __FILE__ ); // /app/wp-content/plugins/myplugin/includes/
echo "<br/>".getcwd(); // /app/wp-admin
I think this would do the trick:
function get_wp_installation()
{
$full_path = getcwd();
$ar = explode("wp-", $full_path);
return $ar[0];
}
-
This cannot be used in a plugin as it is possible to configure Wordpress to place the plugin folder outside the Wordpress root. Also beware that you should not use such method if the purpose is to dynamically load "wp-load.php" as this isn't secure. Aug 13, 2019 at 8:17
I like @Omry Yadan's solution but I think it can be improved upon to use a loop in case you want to continue traversing up the directory tree until you find where wp-config.php
actually lives. Of course, if you don't find it and end up in the server's root then all is lost and we return a sane value (false
).
function wp_get_web_root() {
$base = dirname(__FILE__);
$path = false;
while(!$path && '/' != $base) {
if(@file_exists(dirname($base)).'/wp-config.php') {
$path = dirname($base);
} else {
$base = dirname($base);
}
}
return $path;
}
If you have WordPress bootstrap loaded you can use get_home_path()
function to get path to the WordPress root directory.
-
get_home_patth is a core function, you don't need boostrap to access it. Jun 29, 2020 at 8:28
I like the accepted answer and @cfx's solution, but they can be consolidated a bit more:
function base_dir () {
$path = dirname(__FILE__);
while (true) {
if (file_exists($path."/wp-config.php")) {
return $path."/";
}
$path = dirname($path);
}
}
This allows for you to find the base directory in files that are not loaded by WordPress, such as dynamically-created javascript and css files.
-
if the function cannot find any wp-config.php in all levels, what will happen?– xjlin0Jul 25, 2021 at 16:05
-
1Infinite loop then, but assuming you are using this function in a WordPress installation, that should never happen because the wp-config.php file will always be there. If you are concerned about this though, you could always add a counter and stop the loop after a certain threshold if you want.– kloddantJul 27, 2021 at 13:21
Why was this made so complicated? One command:
Nginx
grep -i 'root' /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/*
Apache
grep -i 'DocumentRoot' /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/*
You can use get_site_url() function to get the base url of the wordpress site.
For more information, please visit http://codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/get_site_url
Try this function for get root directory path:
get_template_directory_uri();
-
1First of all, this returns the path to the current template, and second, it returns the URI, not the filesystem path.– GavinOct 16, 2019 at 6:07
-
-