645

I am using WordPress on my live server which only uses SFTP using an SSH key.

I want to install and upgrade plugins, but it appears that you are required to enter your FTP login to install the plugins. Is there a way to install and upgrade plugins by manually uploading the files instead of having WordPress handle the entire process?

3
  • 3
    Yes you can. Simply using cPanel or any other file upload tool you have; upload the zipped plugin and extract into wp-content/plugins/ then from wp dashboard go to plugins tab and enable it.
    – WPDev
    May 8, 2018 at 0:49
  • If using a VPS, should try this: stackoverflow.com/a/44137965/3160597
    – azerafati
    Nov 12, 2018 at 7:58
  • @WPDev If your comment was listed as an answer I would upvote it again, that was the most helpful.
    – Tensigh
    Sep 17, 2019 at 5:50

32 Answers 32

837

WordPress will only prompt you for your FTP connection information while trying to install plugins or a WordPress update if it cannot write to /wp-content directly. Otherwise, if your web server has write access to the necessary files, it will take care of the updates and installation automatically. This method does not require you to have FTP/SFTP or SSH access, but it does require your to have specific file permissions set up on your webserver.

It will try various methods in order, and fall back on FTP if Direct and SSH methods are unavailable.

https://github.com/WordPress/WordPress/blob/4.2.2/wp-admin/includes/file.php#L912

WordPress will try to write a temporary file to your /wp-content directory. If this succeeds, it compares the ownership of the file with its own uid, and if there is a match it will allow you to use the 'direct' method of installing plugins, themes, or updates.

Now, if for some reason you do not want to rely on the automatic check for which filesystem method to use, you can define a constant, 'FS_METHOD' in your wp-config.php file, that is either 'direct', 'ssh', 'ftpext' or 'ftpsockets' and it will use that method. Keep in mind that if you set this to 'direct', but your web user (the username under which your web server runs) does not have proper write permissions, you will receive an error.

In summary, if you do not want to (or you cannot) change permissions on wp-content so your web server has write permissions, then add this to your wp-config.php file:

define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');

Permissions explained here:

11
  • 41
    I had to do: sudo chown -R www-data wp-content as well as granting write permissions Feb 12, 2012 at 20:32
  • 5
    The use of getmyuid on line 876 is arguably incorrect here, as it returns the UID of the script owner, not the script executor. I believe it should be posix_getuid.
    – cmbuckley
    Apr 8, 2012 at 19:37
  • 7
    What are the security implications of this approach? Oct 1, 2013 at 11:03
  • 1
    If you want to see under which user is php running, you can use this: print_r(posix_getpwuid(posix_geteuid())); You can add the code in the wp-config file.
    – Ivan V.
    Mar 18, 2014 at 19:06
  • 8
    chown -R www-data wordpress/wp-content did not work for me, but chown -R www-data wordpress did
    – Martin
    Dec 8, 2015 at 14:09
284

As stated before none of the perm fixes work anymore. You need to change the perms accordingly AND put the following in your wp-config.php:

define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');
8
  • 14
    Even though I had the correct permissions such that the web server could write to the plugins directory and wp-content directory, this setting fixed it so the admin did not prompt for the FTP/SFTP settings for updating plugins. Thank you. Worked perfectly. Mar 12, 2012 at 19:00
  • 9
    I had to explicitly do this as well.
    – julien_c
    Mar 23, 2012 at 10:49
  • 5
    When did they make this a requirement?
    – danjp
    May 25, 2012 at 1:04
  • I also had to rely on this setting, on the WP installed by the debian package on Ubuntu 12.04. Otherwise, permissions were alright, wp-content has rwx permission for group www-data...
    – alci
    Nov 29, 2012 at 11:44
  • 2
    Watch to make sure the following isn't already in the wp-config.php file: define('FS_METHOD','ftpext'); In this case, placing define('FS_METHOD', 'direct'); at the bottom of the file won't work. You'll have to erase or comment out the define('FS_METHOD','ftpext'); This might be particularly likely to happen if you've migrated from another server that required FTP.
    – Doug
    Apr 7, 2014 at 21:57
118

Just wanted to add that you must NEVER set the wp-content permission or permission of any folder to 777.

This is what I had to do to:

1) I set the ownership of the wordpress folder (recursively) to the apache user, like so:

# chown -R apache wordpress/

2) I changed the group ownership of the wordpress folder (recursively) to the apache group, like so:

# chgrp -R apache wordpress/

3) give owner full privilege to the directory, like so:

# chmod u+wrx wordpress/*

And that did the job. My wp-content folder has 755 permissions, btw.

TL;DR version:

# chown -R apache:apache wordpress
# chmod u+wrx wordpress/*
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  • 11
    setting your wordpress as owned by apache is just as bad as setting 777. The result is the same: any php script can now alter your wordpress files. Best option is to chown apache:apache temporary, install your updates and chown back to original OR use the ssh/ftp trick
    – woens
    Oct 24, 2013 at 11:09
  • 14
    I disagree. It's not quite the same as setting to 777. Any user in the machine would have write access if you set the permissions to 777. That is a problem in itself. and while you are correct, that apache can alter php files now, that would be the intent in the first place (in order to update or install anything). If somebody manages to put malicious php files in the server, that's a whole new problem and chowning to different users would do little to help.
    – sufinawaz
    Oct 25, 2013 at 14:07
  • 2
    Thanks, it saved my day too, as i don't have FTP privileges, but only root access. Feb 21, 2014 at 11:19
  • 4
    This is the only one that helped me! Thanks a lot, after years developing Wordpress sites, this is still a classic problem!
    – acidghost
    Sep 30, 2014 at 15:06
  • 2
    If you're running WordPress under an unusual build, stick this in a PHP file to check who Apache is running as (ubuntu, for example, is www-data): <?php echo exec('whoami'); ?>
    – Imperative
    Dec 19, 2014 at 22:44
69
  1. In wp-config.php add define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');
  2. Make server writable the directories wp-content/, wp-content/plugins/.
  3. Install the plugin (copy the plugin dir into the wp-content/plugins dir).

Worked on version 3.2.1

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  • 4
    Worked on version 4.0 as well.
    – Meetai.com
    Sep 8, 2014 at 12:08
  • 1
    You must add this option but you only need to change the perms on wp-content/plugins Oct 30, 2014 at 0:09
  • This is explicitly the steps you should take to install a plugin without getting prompted for FTP info. You can take the steps to Harden WordPress with permissions, and then make these 2 changes, and you should remain mostly secure.
    – bozdoz
    Dec 20, 2016 at 12:56
34

Just a quick change to wp-config.php

define('FS_METHOD','direct');

That’s it, enjoy your wordpress updates without ftp!

Alternate Method:

There are hosts out there that will prevent this method from working to ease your WordPress updating. Fortunately, there is another way to keep this pest from prompting you for your FTP user name and password.

Again, after the MYSQL login declarations in your wp-config.php file, add the following:

define("FTP_HOST", "localhost");
define("FTP_USER", "yourftpusername");
define("FTP_PASS", "yourftppassword");
29

Change from php_mod to fastcgi with cgi & SuEXEC enabled (ISPConfig users). Works for me.

If don't work, try to change wp-content to 775 as root or sudo user:

chmod -R 775 ./wp-content

Then Add to wp-config.php:

define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');

Good Luck

23

Usually you can just upload your plugin to the wp-content\plugins directory. If you don't have access to this directory via SFTP I'm afraid you may be stuck.

1
  • Yep, just drop 'em in wp-content/plugins.
    – ceejayoz
    Mar 13, 2009 at 0:56
22

In order to enable the use of SSH2 for your updates and theme uploads, you have to generate your SSH keys and have the PHP SSH module installed. Then WordPress will detect that you have SSH2 available and you'll see a different option (SSH2) displayed when doing an upload/upgrade.

1.) Make sure you have the PHP module installed for debian it is:

sudo apt-get install libssh2-php

2.) Generate SSH keys, adding a passphrase is optional:

ssh-keygen
cd  ~/.ssh
cp id_rsa.pub authorized_keys

3.) Change the permission so that WordPress can access those keys:

cd ~
chmod 755 .ssh
chmod 644 .ssh/*

Now you'll get the SSH2 option when doing an upload/upgrade/plugin. WP SSH Connection

4.) For added ease you can setup the defaults in your wp-config.php and this will pre-populate the SSH credentials in the WordPress upload window.

define('FTP_PUBKEY','/home/<user>/.ssh/id_rsa.pub');
define('FTP_PRIKEY','/home/<user>/.ssh/id_rsa');
define('FTP_USER','<user>');
define('FTP_PASS','passphrase');
define('FTP_HOST','domain.com');

The 'passphrase' is optional, if you don't setup a passphrase during ssh-kengen; then don't add it in wp-config.php

This solved my issue. And I didn't have to do the chown at all. But I have seen this method referenced in other places.

References:

4
  • i am not a security expert, and i realize wordpress included this capability and thought it was OK.... but i do not feel good about this... 1. having an ssh account with no passphrase, (anyone who ever gets the private key can then login remotely any time they want without a password) and 2. having a passphrase stored in plaintext (see 1). it reminds me of rsh, depending on the idea that "nobody will have access to my local files" to protect the network password to a system.
    – don bright
    Feb 26, 2015 at 3:47
  • I'm sure you can generate the passphrase and NOT add it to wp-config.php, then you'll just have to type it in when you get to the Connection Information dialog. Jul 25, 2015 at 19:32
  • It IS a huge security hole to use an unencrypted private key this way. But you can mitigate the problem by prepending a "from=whatever " to the relevant line in authorized_keys.
    – markhahn
    Jan 16, 2017 at 21:27
  • This is great, but seems there's an incomptability with php7: core.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/35517
    – Supaiku
    Jul 29, 2017 at 20:42
19

You can get it very easily by typing the following command on command promt

sudo chown -R www-data:www-data your_folder_name

or copy & paste the following code in your wp-config.php file.

define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');

Where "your_folder_name" is the folder where your WordPress is installed inside this folder.

0
16

If you're on Ubuntu, a quick solution that worked for me is giving ownership to the Apache user (www-data by default) like so:

cd your_wordpress_directory
sudo chown -R www-data wp-content
sudo chmod -R 755 wp-content
1
  • 3
    Don't give execute permission to files that don't need it.
    – Burhan Ali
    Aug 28, 2012 at 9:54
16

Execute the following code in terminal

sudo chown -R www-data /var/www

For further detail visit Wordpress on Ubuntu install plugins without FTP access

2
  • 4
    It's not a good idea to give www-data access to everything in your webdirectory
    – WoodyDRN
    Jan 26, 2017 at 8:38
  • variant that worked for me: sudo chown -R www-data /var/www/html Jul 31, 2019 at 17:00
15

Add the following code to wp-config

define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');

FS_METHOD forces the filesystem method. It should only be direct, ssh2, ftpext, or ftpsockets. Generally, you should only change this if you are experiencing update problems. If you change it and it doesn't help, change it back/remove it. Under most circumstances, setting it to 'ftpsockets' will work if the automatically chosen method does not.

(Primary Preference) "direct" forces it to use Direct File I/O requests from within PHP, this is fraught with opening up security issues on poorly configured hosts, This is chosen automatically when appropriate.

(Secondary Preference) "ssh2" is to force the usage of the SSH PHP Extension if installed

(3rd Preference) "ftpext" is to force the usage of the FTP PHP Extension for FTP Access, and finally

(4th Preference) "ftpsockets" utilises the PHP Sockets Class for FTP Access

For more information visit: http://codex.wordpress.org/Editing_wp-config.php#WordPress_Upgrade_Constants

12

WordPress 2.7 lets you upload a zip file directly (there's a link at the bottom of the plugins page) -- no FTP access needed. This is a new feature in 2.7, and it works for plugins only (not themes yet).

2
  • BTW, upgrading is even easier -- you'll see an icon indicating that a new version is available, and you click "upgrade" and let it do its thing. Very nice. Even the WordPress core is upgraded this way - I went from 2.7 to 2.7.1 w/o uploading anything.
    – D. Lambert
    Mar 12, 2009 at 21:07
  • This is only true if you have the file permissions set so the web server / PHP user can write to them. If not, it will prompt you for FTP/SFTP credentials. See stereointeractive.com's answer. Dec 15, 2011 at 16:08
12

Please add define('FS_METHOD','direct'); in wp-config.php

9

Resurrecting an old thread, but there's a fantastic new plugin called SSH SFTP Updater Support that adds in SFTP capabilities without needing to edit your wp-config.php file. Also, Wordpress's SFTP implementation relies on some somewhat obscure PHP modules that are often not enabled on servers; this plugin packages a different PHP SFTP plugin so you don't have to configure anything on the Apache side.

I had run into tons of problems getting SFTP support to work - this plugin solved all of them and is just fantastic.

8

The answer from stereointeractive covers all the options. Just wanted to mention an alternate way of using FTP. I'm guessing that the reason you are not allowing FTP access is for security. One way to address those security concerns is to run your FTP server listening only on 127.0.0.1

This allows you to use FTP from inside WordPress and you will be able to install plugins while not exposing it to the rest of the world. This can also be applied to other popular web applications such as Joomla! and Drupal. This is what we do with our BitNami appliances and cloud servers and works quite well.

8

I also recommend the SSH SFTP Updater Support plugin. Just solved all my problems too...especially in regards to getting plugins to delete through the admin. Just install it in the usual way, and the next time you're prompted by WordPress for FTP details, there'll be extra fields for you to copy/paste your private SSH key or upload your PEM file.

Only problem I have is in getting it to remember the key (tried both methods). Don't like the idea of having to find and enter it every time I need to delete a plugin. But at least it's a solid fix for now.

1
  • 1
    " there'll be extra fields for you to copy/paste your private SSH key" .... i am not a security genius but ... isnt the whole point of private ssh keys that you never have to send them across a network?
    – don bright
    Feb 26, 2015 at 3:49
8

Yes, directly install the plugin in WordPress.

  1. Copy the plugin folder and paste in WordPress plugin folder.
  2. go to admin side (/test/wp-admin) then after go to on the plugin link and check the name of the plugin.
  3. Activate the plugin so Install the plugin easily.

other Option

  1. create the zip file for the plugin code.
  2. go to admin side (/test/wp-admin) then after go to on the plugin link and then click on the add new then browse the plugin zip folder and install the plugin then come out the option activate plugin so so do activate plugin and activate plugin.
7

I saw a lot of people recommending to set permission to 777. I had same problem like 2 days ago and all I did was, add this to wp-content

define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');

and

set permission to 775 for plugin folder

This solved my problem of asking FTP access login/password.

Before that, I had to add plugin manually by adding .zip file to plugin folder and then go to wp-admin/plugins and had to installed it.

6

It is possible to use SFTP or SSH to auto update Plugins in WordPress, but you need to have ssh2 pecl extension. You can find out how to do it, using the following tutorial

6

We use SFTP with SSH (on both our development and live servers), and I have tried (not too hard though) to use the WordPress upload feature. I agree with Toby, upload your plugin(s) to the wp-content/plugins directory and then activate them from there.

6

Try this

1) In the wp-config.php add define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');

2) Set the wp-content directory to 777 for writable.

3) Now install the plugin.

2
  • 7
    Hi Mohan, thanks heaps for the FS_METHOD option. This is indeed what I was looking for. I do need to say the following: no directory should every need 777 unless circumstances are exceptional. This makes a directory world readable,writeable and executable. This is a massive security risk. The proper solution is finding out who your apache user is (www-data, _www or similar). This user needs read and write access to wp-content or needs ownership over this dir ('sudo chown www-data wp-content'), no execution rights. I'm sorry to be a bit blunt but 777 is dangerous for web content.
    – Ruben
    Aug 5, 2013 at 13:04
  • 10
    Do not 777 your uploads directory, this is unsafe and should not be an answer! Mar 27, 2014 at 21:34
5

Try this Check whether the correct permission is given to wp-content folder.

Edit the wp-config.php add the following line

define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');

chmod the "wp-content" directory to www-data for full access.

Now try installing the plugin.

4

Yes you can do it.

You need to add

define('METHOD','direct');

in your wpconfig. But this method won't be preferable because it has security voilances.

Thanks,

1
  • 1
    shouldn't be FS_METHOD?
    – ericksho
    Aug 5, 2020 at 15:12
3

setting up a ftp or even an SFTP connection or chmod 777 are bad ways to go for anything other than a local environment. Opening even an SFTP method introduces more security risks that are not needed.

what is needed is a writeable permission to /wp-content/uploads & /wp-content/plugins/ by the owner of those directories. (linux ls -la will show you ownership).

Default apache user that runs is www-data.

chmod 777 allows any user on the machine to edit those file, not just the apache/php thread user.

SFTP if you are not already using it, will introduce another point of possible failure from an external source. Whereas you only need access by the local user running the apache/php process to complete the objective.

Didn't see anyone making these points, so I thought I would offer this info to help with our constant WP security issues online.

3

Method 1: You can set this: 1. in wp-config.php you need to write this lines.

define('FS_METHOD', 'direct'); 

Note: put this after define( 'DB_CHARSET', 'utf8mb4' ).

  1. set wp-content permission or permission recursively 775 full permission you can give it via filezilla. write click on directory > permissions> check read-write and execute and also check Recurse into subdirectories

Method 2:

or You can also set this

define("FTP_HOST", "localhost");
define("FTP_USER", "yourftpusername");
define("FTP_PASS", "yourftppassword");
1
  • by Feb 2020, it's a clear instruction, Note: put this after define( 'DB_CHARSET', 'utf8mb4' ).
    – Osify
    Feb 5, 2020 at 8:46
2

Here is a simple method.

Execute following commands.

This will enable your mod_rewrite module for Apache

$sudo a2enmod rewrite

This Command will change the owner of the folder to www-data

$sudo chown -R www-data [Wordpress Folder Location]

After You executing above commands you can install any themes without FTP.

1
  • 1
    For Nginx just run the second command sudo chown -R www-data [Wordpress Folder Location]
    – srokatonie
    Jul 12, 2019 at 10:34
1

The best way to install plugin using SSH is WPCLI.

Note that, SSH access is mandatory to use WP CLI commands. Before using it check whether the WP CLI is installed at your hosting server or machine.

How to check : wp --version [ It will show the wp cli version installed ]

If not installed, how to install it : Before installing WP-CLI, please make sure the environment meets the minimum requirements:

UNIX-like environment (OS X, Linux, FreeBSD, Cygwin); limited support in Windows environment. PHP 5.4 or later WordPress 3.7 or later. Versions older than the latest WordPress release may have degraded functionality

If above points satisfied, please follow the steps : Reference URL : WPCLI

curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wp-cli/builds/gh-pages/phar/wp-cli.phar
[ download the wpcli phar ]

php wp-cli.phar --info [ check whether the phar file is working ]

chmod +x wp-cli.phar [ change permission ]
sudo mv wp-cli.phar /usr/local/bin/wp [ move to global folder ]
wp --info [ to check the installation ]

Now WP CLI is ready to install.

Now you can install any plugin that is available in WordPress.org by using the following commands :

wp install plugin plugin-slug
wp delete plugin plugin-slug
wp deactivate plugin plugin-slug

NOTE : wp cli can install only those plugin which is available in wordpress.org

1

The only reason by which WordPress won't allow you to upload any plugin via WordPress admin dashboard when you don't got permission to write on the /wp-content directory. Remember that your wordpress directory /wp-content requires 0755 permission level. There are various ways to change a folder's permission level.

Changing file permissions using cPanel:

Go to File Manager at open the public HTML folder where your wordpress website is supposed to be, or open the site root directory if your website is in some other folder. In your WordPress root directory navigate towards wp-content folder; at the end of wp-content folder row the very last box carries file permissions for this folder. Make sure to edit the folder permission level to 0755, and you are done.

Changing file permissions using SSH terminal:

In your terminal locate the root of WordPress site which in my case was /var/www/html so to move into WordPress root directory enter the following command:

cd /var/www/html 

Now you are in WordPress root directory where the required folder /wp-content is located. So to change the file permissions type the following command:

sudo chmod wp-content 755 

This will change your /wp-content directory file permission to 0755.

Now you won't get error message of uploading wordpress plugins via FTP.

1

Two steps

  1. Add below code in wp-config file

    define('FS_METHOD', 'direct');
    
  2. We need to give full permission to the folder like if server connected with SSH then paste below code in terminal and make sure you are inside on website folder and then run below code

    sudo chmod -R 775 wp-content/plugins 
    

    or give full permission to website folder

    sudo chown -R www-data:www-data website_folder
    

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