Keep WordPress Plugins Up To Date
Have you seen that little balloon in your WordPress dashboard but didn’t know what it is? Keeping your WordPress blog up to date can seem like a never ending task, especially if you use a lot of plugins. It seems like WordPress is coming out with incremental updates almost every week anymore, with that comes plugin updates to keep up with those changes. The good news is that WordPress now has built-in automatic plugin upgrades.
Before I get into the ease of this little option available in the WordPress dashboard, I will warn some that your sites hosting account might keep you from using it. Without going into too much techno geek speak, some hosting accounts limit access to a certain setting that will not allow this option to work, some Host4Profit accounts might need file permissions changed or access to the temp folder set. Or you might need to make your WordPress plugins folder and all the folders within it writable, meaning that you need to change the permissions on them to 666 or 777 or in geek speak CHMOD them to 666 or 777.
To upgrade a plugin you need to have your hosting account’s FTP information ready, then in the WordPress dashboard click the Plugins menu. Find a plugin that needs upgraded by looking at the warning below it about an out of date plugin and click the light blue upgrade automatically link.

That should take you the the next screen that asks for the FTP information.

I know a lot of H4P people may use this guide so your settings for this are as follows:
yoursite.com (without the the http://www.) for the Hostname and the same username and password used to login to the hosting account. All others should use the same FTP information that your hosting account specifies and the Use SSL box should not need changed. Fill in the information and then click the Proceed button.
A few cautions should be mentioned here, one is if you modified a plugin by directly editing the files, those changes will be lost and need to be done again. Some plugins will not automatically reactivate and need manually activated. Some more advanced plugins may need configured again and you should always check the plugin’s settings and functionality after an upgrade. Some even more advanced plugins with multiple folders or that require files to be placed in directories other than the plugins directory will probably not work and need upgraded manually.
Keeping your WordPress blog up to date in small increments is a lot easier than it is to let it go for a long period of time. Believe me it’s a lot easier resolving issues with one plugin than it is to fix or find replacements for a bunch of them after you upgrade from WordPress version 1.5 to 2.6! Hopefully the integrated WordPress automatic upgrade option that is coming soon will work as well as the automatic plugin upgrade works!
Similar Posts:
- Finally Time To Upgrade WordPress
- WordPress Automatic Upgrade Coming In Next Version
- Upgrade WordPress Guide How To Upgrade WordPress
- Why Should I Upgrade To WordPress 2.3
- Should You Upgrade WordPress to 2.3.2
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Comments
Luckily, my hosting does not block anything. I can update it directly without problem.
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I can see that balloon but I think I can’t fix it. A few days back, I have installed Drupal and that has some option of cron jobs built-in. I received some warning from my host that I should remove Drupal or turn Off Cron Jobs. I think my host will not allow me with a sharing account and having 10 domains on it.
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Jeff,
Thanks for the info, I am going to check things first thing tomorrow.
Alan
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Oh, so THAT’s what that thing is! I was wondering! Thanks for filling me in!
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Its a great information for me.i will keep in mind during the work.Nice job.
Reply
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Drive-By comments will be deleted! Like "Thanks for sharing", "Nice post", or any other text that doesn't contribute to the discussion. If you ask a very specific question about your particular WordPress theme, it will probably be deleted. I can fix your WordPress site but for a price. If you ask a question like "Why don't my blog work right", it will be deleted. If you ask a question about your WordPress site without a leaving a link to it, it will be deleted. The point is to ask questions and or comment on the the actual content of the post, and to please use some common sense. All comments are moderated and will appear when approved. Thank you.