Tag: update.php

Enabling New Modules Via Update.php

Add CommentSourceTutorialsBookmark/Search this post with:Delicious DeliciousDigg DiggStumbleUpon StumbleUponFacebook FacebookGoogle GoogleYahoo YahooTechnorati Technorati16Wednesday, January 16, 2008By adminUPDATE: There’s a better way. I work with 3 other developers, all of whom have their own local sandbox of our site. Since we’re constantly adding new modules, I found a simple way to enable a new module via another

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Enabling New Modules Via Update.php

Add CommentSourceTutorialsBookmark/Search this post with:Delicious DeliciousDigg DiggStumbleUpon StumbleUponFacebook FacebookGoogle GoogleYahoo YahooTechnorati Technorati16Wednesday, January 16, 2008By adminUPDATE: There’s a better way. I work with 3 other developers, all of whom have their own local sandbox of our site. Since we’re constantly adding new modules, I found a simple way to enable a new module via another

Read More
Enabling/Installing New Modules via Update.php: The Complete Solution

Add CommentSourceTutorialsBookmark/Search this post with:Delicious DeliciousDigg DiggStumbleUpon StumbleUponFacebook FacebookGoogle GoogleYahoo YahooTechnorati Technorati18Friday, January 18, 2008By adminIn our last episode of enabling new modules via update.php, Steve McKenzie pointed me to a better method: module_enable(). A quick test found, however, that it didn’t run the install files, and didn’t rebuild the module files cache. So after

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Enabling/Installing New Modules via Update.php: The Complete Solution

Add CommentSourceTutorialsBookmark/Search this post with:Delicious DeliciousDigg DiggStumbleUpon StumbleUponFacebook FacebookGoogle GoogleYahoo YahooTechnorati Technorati18Friday, January 18, 2008By adminIn our last episode of enabling new modules via update.php, Steve McKenzie pointed me to a better method: module_enable(). A quick test found, however, that it didn’t run the install files, and didn’t rebuild the module files cache. So after

Read More