339 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
339 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
---
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name: wp-env
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description: Local WordPress development environment management using @wordpress/env for plugin and theme development. Use this skill when setting up, configuring, starting, stopping, or managing wp-env Docker-based WordPress environments.
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---
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# wp-env - WordPress Local Development Environment
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This skill provides assistance for working with `wp-env`, a tool that sets up local WordPress development environments using Docker with minimal configuration.
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## About wp-env
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`wp-env` (`@wordpress/env`) creates Docker-based WordPress environments for plugin and theme development. It provides:
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- **Zero-config setup** - Works out of the box for plugins and themes
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- **Dual environments** - Separate development (port 8888) and testing (port 8889) instances
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- **Pre-configured tools** - Includes WP-CLI, Composer, PHPUnit, and Xdebug
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- **Flexible configuration** - Customize via `.wp-env.json` for complex setups
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**Default Access:**
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- Development site: <http://localhost:8888>
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- Testing site: <http://localhost:8889>
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- Login: username `admin`, password `password`
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- Database: user `root`, password `password`
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## Prerequisites Check
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Before working with wp-env, verify these dependencies are installed and running:
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```bash
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# Check Docker is installed and running
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docker --version
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docker ps
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# Check Node.js and npm
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node --version
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npm --version
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# Check if wp-env is installed
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wp-env --version
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```
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**If Docker is not running:** Start Docker Desktop application first - wp-env cannot function without Docker.
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**If wp-env is not installed:** Install globally with `npm -g install @wordpress/env`
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## Common Workflows
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### First-Time Environment Setup
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When setting up wp-env for the first time in a plugin or theme directory:
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```bash
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# 1. Ensure Docker Desktop is running
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docker ps
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# 2. Install wp-env globally (if not already installed)
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npm -g install @wordpress/env
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# 3. Navigate to your plugin or theme directory
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cd /path/to/your/plugin
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# 4. Start the environment (downloads WordPress, sets up containers)
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wp-env start
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# 5. Access the site at http://localhost:8888
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# Login with admin/password
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```
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wp-env will automatically detect if the current directory is a plugin or theme and mount it appropriately.
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### Daily Development Operations
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**Starting the environment:**
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```bash
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# Start with existing configuration
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wp-env start
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# Start and update WordPress/sources
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wp-env start --update
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# Start with Xdebug enabled for debugging
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wp-env start --xdebug
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```
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**Stopping the environment:**
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```bash
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# Stop containers (preserves data)
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wp-env stop
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```
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**Checking environment status:**
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```bash
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# View running containers
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docker ps
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# Should show: wordpress (8888), tests-wordpress (8889), mariadb (3306)
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```
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### Running WP-CLI Commands
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Execute WordPress CLI commands inside the environment using `wp-env run`:
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```bash
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# List users on development instance
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wp-env run cli wp user list
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# Install a plugin
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wp-env run cli wp plugin install contact-form-7 --activate
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# Create a test post on the testing instance
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wp-env run tests-cli wp post create --post_title="Test Post" --post_status=publish
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# Update permalink structure (enables REST API access)
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wp-env run cli "wp rewrite structure /%postname%/"
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# Open WordPress shell for interactive PHP
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wp-env run cli wp shell
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```
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**Environment types:**
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- `cli` / `wordpress` - Development environment (shares database with port 8888)
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- `tests-cli` / `tests-wordpress` - Testing environment (separate database, port 8889)
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**Working directory context:**
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By default, commands run from WordPress root. For plugin-specific commands, use `--env-cwd`:
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```bash
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# Run composer install in your plugin directory
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wp-env run cli --env-cwd=wp-content/plugins/your-plugin composer install
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# Run PHPUnit tests in your plugin
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wp-env run tests-cli --env-cwd=wp-content/plugins/your-plugin phpunit
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```
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### Database Reset for Testing
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Reset the database to clean state:
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```bash
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# Reset only the tests database (default)
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wp-env clean
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# Reset development database
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wp-env clean development
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# Reset both databases
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wp-env clean all
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```
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⚠️ **Warning:** This permanently deletes all posts, pages, media, and custom data.
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### Viewing Logs
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Monitor PHP errors and Docker container logs:
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```bash
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# View development environment logs (follows/watches by default)
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wp-env logs
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# View testing environment logs
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wp-env logs tests
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# View both environments
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wp-env logs all
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# Disable following/watching
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wp-env logs --watch=false
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```
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### Working with Ports
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If the default port 8888 conflicts with another service:
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```bash
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# Using environment variables
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WP_ENV_PORT=3333 wp-env start
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# Check which ports are in use
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docker ps
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```
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Or configure ports in `.wp-env.json`:
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```json
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{
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"port": 3333,
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"testsPort": 3334
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}
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```
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Note: Environment variables take precedence over `.wp-env.json` values.
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## Quick Reference - Essential Commands
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| Command | Description |
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| ---------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------- |
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| `wp-env start` | Start the environment |
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| `wp-env start --update` | Start and update WordPress/sources |
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| `wp-env stop` | Stop the environment |
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| `wp-env clean [env]` | Reset database (env: tests, development, all) |
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| `wp-env destroy` | Completely remove containers and data |
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| `wp-env logs [env]` | View logs (env: development, tests, all) |
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| `wp-env run <container> <command>` | Execute command in container |
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| `wp-env install-path` | Show where environment files are stored |
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| `docker ps` | Check which containers are running |
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**Common containers for `wp-env run`:**
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- `cli` - WP-CLI, Composer, PHPUnit (development)
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- `tests-cli` - WP-CLI, Composer, PHPUnit (testing)
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- `wordpress` - WordPress PHP environment (development)
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- `tests-wordpress` - WordPress PHP environment (testing)
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## Configuration with .wp-env.json
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Create a `.wp-env.json` file in your project root to customize the environment.
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### Common Configuration Patterns
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**Basic plugin development:**
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```json
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{
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"plugins": ["."]
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}
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```
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**Custom WordPress version:**
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```json
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{
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"core": "WordPress/WordPress#6.4.0",
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"plugins": ["."]
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}
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```
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**Multi-plugin setup:**
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```json
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{
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"plugins": [".", "WordPress/classic-editor", "../another-plugin"]
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}
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```
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For complete configuration reference with 20+ examples, environment-specific overrides, custom mappings, multisite setup, and lifecycle scripts, see [references/configuration-guide.md](references/configuration-guide.md).
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## When Things Go Wrong
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### Common Errors
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**Error: "Error while running docker-compose command"**
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- Check that Docker Desktop is started and running
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- Check Docker Desktop dashboard for logs, restart, or remove existing virtual machines
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- Then try rerunning `wp-env start`
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**Error: "Host is already in use by another container"**
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- The container you are attempting to start is already running, or another container is. You can stop an existing container by running `wp-env stop` from the directory that you started it in
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- If you do not remember the directory where you started `wp-env`, you can stop all containers by running `docker stop $(docker ps -q)`. This will stop all Docker containers, so use with caution
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- Then try rerunning `wp-env start`
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For comprehensive troubleshooting including Ubuntu Docker setup, database issues, and advanced debugging, see [references/troubleshooting.md](references/troubleshooting.md).
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## Advanced Features
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For detailed information on these features, see [references/command-reference.md](references/command-reference.md).
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**Xdebug:** Enable step debugging with `wp-env start --xdebug`. Configure your IDE for port 9003.
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**PHPUnit:** WordPress test files included. Run with `wp-env run tests-cli --env-cwd=wp-content/plugins/your-plugin phpunit`.
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**Composer:** Execute commands with `wp-env run cli --env-cwd=wp-content/plugins/your-plugin composer install`.
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## Best Practices
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### Directory Context
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- Run `wp-env start` from your plugin or theme directory for automatic mounting
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- Use `--env-cwd` when running commands that need to execute in specific directories
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- Use absolute paths when possible to avoid confusion
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### Development Workflow
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1. Start environment once per work session: `wp-env start`
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2. Make code changes - they're immediately reflected (no rebuild needed)
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3. Use `wp-env run cli wp` commands for WordPress operations
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4. Check logs when debugging: `wp-env logs`
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5. Stop when done: `wp-env stop`
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### Testing Workflow
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1. Use `tests-cli` and `tests-wordpress` for isolated testing
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2. Reset test database frequently: `wp-env clean tests`
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3. Keep test and development environments separate
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4. Use `wp-env clean all` before running full integration tests
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### Configuration Management
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- Keep `.wp-env.json` in version control for team consistency
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- Use `.wp-env.override.json` (gitignored) for local-only overrides
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- Document custom configurations in project README
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## Where Files Are Stored
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wp-env stores files in a home directory (defaults vary by platform):
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```bash
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# Get the install path for current project
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wp-env install-path
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# Default locations:
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# macOS/Windows: ~/.wp-env/$md5_of_project_path
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# Linux: ~/wp-env/$md5_of_project_path
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```
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Override with `WP_ENV_HOME` environment variable:
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```bash
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WP_ENV_HOME="./local-wp-env" wp-env start
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```
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## Additional Resources
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- **Command Reference:** [references/command-reference.md](references/command-reference.md) - Complete CLI documentation
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- **Configuration Guide:** [references/configuration-guide.md](references/configuration-guide.md) - All `.wp-env.json` options
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- **Troubleshooting:** [references/troubleshooting.md](references/troubleshooting.md) - Common issues and solutions
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External documentation:
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- [@wordpress/env npm package](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@wordpress/env)
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- [WordPress Developer Handbook - wp-env](https://developer.wordpress.org/block-editor/getting-started/devenv/get-started-with-wp-env/)
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- [Docker Desktop](https://docs.docker.com/desktop/)
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