How can I know which version of Drupal is installed in my server?
18 Answers
You can get this by logging in to admin. Go to Administer → Reports → Status Report.
This will let you know all your config information of the site including your Drupal version.
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13
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This only give you the first part. I often see modules that requires for example 7.x-1.5. So here you will get the 7.x. but where to get the "-1.5" part? Feb 25, 2015 at 20:42
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@GuillaumeBois, Drupal versioning is only two-numbered. Versioning like "7.x-1.5" used only for modules express that some version is compatibile with eg. Drupal 7.x, and "-1.5" part is in deed version of the module.– maciekOct 13, 2015 at 13:16
You can also type:
drush status
in your project folder. It will print out something like this:
$ drush status
Drupal version : 7.27 **<--**
Default theme : garland
Administration theme : garland
PHP executable : php
PHP configuration : "C:\Program Files (x86)\Drush\Php\php.ini"
PHP OS : WINNT
Drush version : 6.0
Drush configuration :
Drush alias files : c:/users/spaden/.drush/pantheon.aliases.drushrc.php
Drupal root : c:/Users/spaden/localSite/
Hope this helps!
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Note that for me the project folder was
/opt/bitnami/drupal
found usingsudo find / -type d -name drupal
Jan 1, 2022 at 7:11
To easily check Drupal version, go to www.yourwebsite.com/CHANGELOG.txt
CHANGELOG.txt
will show you the version and change log updates to the Drupal build version.
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11A lot of people recommend removing that file, so it will not be available everywhere.– Fuzzy76Mar 11, 2014 at 14:58
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2Most of the site owners remove CHANGELOG.txt so as to keep their site information hidden from intruders.– vipul_vjAug 3, 2014 at 10:44
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@jaesperanza this boggles my mind... If I manually update drupal (delete files on site, copy new drupal version up and run update.php) and it fails... the changelog is going to say "new version" even tho it didn't successfully update. btw, i've used other CMS's, the whole delete files upload files process seems real stupid to me.– nthChildSep 18, 2015 at 15:06
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@nthChild you should not delete the
sites
folder. Delete everything except forsites
folder. Or you can actually just copy paste as it will update all the corresponding files. Be sure to backup some of the files likerobots.txt
if you modified it before updating the core. After updating the core the next thing that you need to do is to rundrush updb
or/update.php
.– GulokJul 13, 2016 at 5:01
This is defined as a global PHP variable in /includes/bootstrap.inc
within D7. Example: define('VERSION', '7.14');
So use it like this...
if (VERSION >= 7.1) {
do_something();
}
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1Drush is an optional command line utility. Anyone asking this question has likely inherited a system and does not have command line tools installed on the production server they find themselves managing ;) Jul 6, 2018 at 4:48
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1exactly. having fallen into a broken environment where drush was missing, this answer led me to the place in bootstrap where drush itself finds the version. thanks!– rymoJul 6, 2018 at 23:44
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@doublejosh or, like me, they don't know which particular Drush spell to invoke.– toon81Apr 18, 2019 at 11:57
In Drupal 7
Open CHANGELOG.txt and the top most version will be the installed version.
In Drupal 8
Open core/lib/Drupal.php file and there will be a version mentioned like const VERSION = '8.1.8';
Drush Tool
Drush status
Admin Interface
Go to Administer -> Reports -> Status Report or enter URL /admin/reports/status
Above is the simplest way otherwise installed wappalyzer browser addons and see the magic.
Log into Drupal admin interface. Then go to "Administer -> Available Updates". And you'll be able to see what drupal version your are using.
or you can go to the file /modules/system/system.info and you will see something like version = "6.2"
From the database
Run the following query:
SELECT info FROM system WHERE type = 'module' AND name = 'node';
After, you will receive a serialized string value like:
a:10:{s:4:"name";s:4:"Node";s:11:"description";s:66:"Allows content to be submitted to the site and displayed on pages.";s:7:"package";s:15:"Core - required";s:7:"version";s:4:"6.20";s:4:"core";s:3:"6.x";s:7:"project";s:6:"drupal";s:9:"datestamp";s:10:"1292447788";s:12:"dependencies";a:0:{}s:10:"dependents";a:0:{}s:3:"php";s:5:"4.3.5";}
Then, unserialize this string. You can use the php unserialize function or any online web service such as: http://unserialize.me
You should see two array elements as below which shows the current version number:
[version] => 6.20
[core] => 6.x
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I tried this and got a string like
\x613a31353a7...
instead. Any idea what encoding that can be? Feb 25 at 14:46
The really easy way is: go to your site, and into the Browser go to: view source.
Generally you can find:
<meta name="generator" content="Drupal 7 (http://drupal.org)" />
Or just press: Ctrl/Cmd "F": And find the word Drupal.
You will find the Drupal version in the code without check anything in the admin.
For Drupal7
Two ways you can find installed drupal version.for this you have to logged in as admin.
1.Go to Url 'admin/reports/status',on status report page it will show first drupal with its version.
2.Go to Url 'admin/modules',on finding core tab ,we can find drupal contributed modules with 'version'.
For Drupal8
Open drupal\core\lib\Drupal.php in your text editor
you will see something like this (from line 79 to line 84)
open drupal\core\lib\Drupal.php in your text editor
you will see something like this (from line 79 to line 84)
class Drupal {
/**
* The current system version.
*/
const VERSION = '8.2.3';
For older versions you can find the details here: modules/system/system.module
One of my installs says:
define('VERSION', '5.6');
use drush to know which drupal version you are using. command : drush status
Below is the list of information it will show:
Drupal version : 8.7.10
Site URI : http://default
DB driver : mysql
DB hostname : localhost
DB port : 3306
DB username : root
DB name : drupal_8_7_10
PHP binary : /usr/bin/php7.4
PHP config : /etc/php/7.4/cli/php.ini
PHP OS : Linux
Drush script : /opt/lampp/htdocs/drupal-8.7.10/vendor/drush/drush/drus
h
Drush version : 10.2.0
Drush temp : /tmp
Drush configs : /opt/lampp/htdocs/drupal-8.7.10/vendor/drush/drush/drus
h.yml
Drupal root : /opt/lampp/htdocs/drupal-8.7.10
Site path : sites/default
Indeed, looking at any .info file on your Drupal instance in any theme or module folder (inside /sites/all) may be easiest/quickest for you as opposed to adding PHP code though both are quite easy.
If for any reason you don't have FTP/SSH access to your Drupal server, there are other ways like viewing page source in the browser (if you know what look for) or a simple browser pluggin such as 'Drupal for Firebug' or similar utlity:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/drupal-for-firebug/
Alternatively you can install Drupal version check plugin in your browser and click on the drupal icon in your navigation bar. This is the easiest way to check Drupal version.
Here is the link to the plugin - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/drupal-version-check/
Open project folder. Look for CHANGELOG.txt and open it. Here you can find version.
Drupal 7 admin->modules->(see version of core module like block ) admin->reports->status->drupal version
Drupal 8 admin->reports->updates : see Drupal core
To find the version of Drupal installed, follow these steps:
- Log in to your Drupal website as an administrator.
- Go to the "Reports" section in the admin panel, located under the "Reports" tab.
- Scroll down to the "System Information" section, and look for the "Drupal Version" field.
- The version of Drupal installed will be displayed next to "Drupal Version."
Note: If you do not have access to the Drupal admin panel, you can also check the version of Drupal installed by looking at the version number in the "core" directory located in the Drupal installation directory. Drupal 8,9 /web/core/lib/Drupal.php
In Drupal admin panel, you can find using the menu as follows, Drupal admin Reports->Status report. or else
You can find Drupal version via URL or View Source.
URL=> type CHANGELOG.txt in http://example.com/CHANGELOG.txt
View Source => You can find this by the following [meta tag]
This meta tag appears only in Drupal Site. You can confirm that the web application is based on Drupal CMS.
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1it is a good practice (security wise) to remove the CHANGELOG, just FYI in case you don't find that file in some of your projects Jul 10, 2019 at 16:01