![]() ![]() When you start a site in LOCAL, it only took a few seconds for it to be accessible in the browser. But some APIs like Stripe payment requires the caller to be HTTPS to work. You might ask why do you need SSL support for a local site? ![]() In LOCAL you just click “Trust” and your site can now use HTTPS without safety warning from the browser. Just wow! Setting this up in WAMP is such a chore. Pro #2: Built-in SSL Support SSL Setting in LOCAL But with few clicks in LOCAL, you can have a site running. I’ve already seen a few updates for the program since I got it, so it seems like they’re continuing to improve it.Setting up a new WordPress site in WAMP wasn’t a problem for me because I’m used to it. I’m thinking I may recommend our whole dev team be on it, but we’ll see. QA likes that I can send them “preview” links of issues we’re fixing, and I like that it is easier to debug on mobile and my VMs. I can pretty much be up and running with a site in a few minutes. And for free too! It has really sped things up for me as well by setting the WP install defaults and then doing a pull down of a site with WP DB Migrate Pro. Since I do development on OSX and Windows (crazy, right?), I actually liked that I could use the same program in both places in the same way. I really think it has helped me a lot in my local development workflow versus my old setup (MAMP Pro). When I did, I decided to give Local a whirl, as it looked pretty good at that time, and I was looking into other setups. Send it to a client! Debug a mobile issue! Very cool.Įver since the the poll article, I had the (mis)fortune of moving to a new development machine. That’s a live-on-the-internet URL you can use to share your localhost. One click on the “Live Link” feature, and it fires up an ngrok URL for you. Live LinkĪs if that wasn’t enough, they tossed in one more really cool little feature. It’s also worth mentioning that if you don’t have an existing local setup you’re migrating from, but do have a production site, I highly recommend WP DB Migrate Pro for yanking down that production database in an extremely painless fashion. So I was able to really quickly export and import the databases where I needed them! I also used Sequel Pro when I was in that phase. Then for a bit, I switched over to Docker to manage my local WordPress stuff, which was fun and interesting but was ultimately wasn’t as easy as I wanted it to be. For a zillion years I used MAMP, and configured Sequel Pro to be my database manager. This was mighty handy for me as I was migrating from a couple of different setups. MigratingĪnother one-click button I love in Local by Flywheel is the one that jumps you right to Sequel Pro. That’s easy, just point the CodeKit browser refreshing URL at the Local by Flywheel URL. Combining with CodeKitįor all my simple mostly-solo projects, I’ve long been a fan of having CodeKit watch the project, so I preprocess all my CSS and JavaScript, optimize my images, and all that good task runner stuff. There is a one-click button right in Local by Flywheel to trust the certificate. You probably want to trust that local certificate though to make it even smoother.īut wait! Don’t follow my awkward and slightly complex instructions. Local by Flywheel doesn’t just make it easy, it automatically sets up HTTPS for you! And of course, it just works. We should be taking that another step further and be working locally over HTTPS, if our production sites are. With all the setup options Local by Flywheel offers, you can get your production and development versions of your site pretty close. The web is moving more and more toward all-HTTPS, which is fantastic. Just the information and controls you need! HTTPS (SSL) The super clean UI makes everything feel so easy and simple, despite it actually being complex and powerful. Surely what Local by Flywheel is doing under the hood is quite complicated, but the UI for the app isn’t at all. Just by picking a few options and giving the site a name, you’ve spun up a new WordPress install in a few seconds. ![]() Local by Flywheel spins up a local site for you with all the dependencies that WordPress needs. Running Multiple WordPress Installs (PHP, MySQL, Web Server) It does everything you want it to, well, with zero hassle, and nothing more. I heard about it from y’all when we did a poll not to long ago about local WordPress development. I’ve switched all my local WordPress development over to Local by Flywheel. ![]()
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