When you click on the install button, you’ll see the following page allowing to configure the usual installation parameters of WordPress:Ĭlick install after you’ve entered the required data.Īfter a short time, it’s done installing:Īnd you can start working with your local WordPress installation. There choose blog on the left hand side and then WordPress: Now in order to install an instance of WordPress, you need to go back to the AMPPS control center and click “Local Web” icon (in the lower left corner). When you then click on Software, you’ll see that the WordPress installation script is part of the package: This will open the administration page of AMPPS. You can also click on one of the other tabs to get access to configuration files or log files.Īfter starting Apache, you can click on the admin icon in the lower right corner. When you start the app, you’ll first see the control center. It can also update them all automatically (but you can turn it off). This is quite a lot but it does include 264 scripts to install software like WordPress, Joomla, Drupal, Typo3, phpBB, MediaWiki, SquirrelMail, Roundcube, Mantis Bug Tracker, osTicket, Zend Framework, CakePHP, phpMyAdmin, jQuery and Dojo. Installing it will take up 676.5 MB of your harddrive. Even though I have a DSL 16000 connection (and can thus download from other sites up to 1.8 MB/s), it took me about an hour until I was ready to install it: Right-click on it and then click on AMPPS Home. ![]() ![]() You’ll also be able to see the AMPPS icon on the system tray. There’s an option for stopping and restarting these services. It’s quite a new tool (version 1.0 was released in August 2011) but with quite frequent updates and it’s free ! Step 2: Once installed, you’ll be able to see the Softaculous AMPPS window, with Apache and MySQL already running. This is basically an alternative to WAMP, MAMP and XAMPP for Windows and Mac OS X. WordPress (WP, ) is a Content Management System (CMS) which is free and open-source ( more on open source software) and can be used with a MySQL or MariaDB database. ![]() AMPPS stands for Apache, Mysql, PHP, Perl, Python and Softaculous auto-installer. And just noticed another interesting AMP tool called AMPPS. After first using XAMPP, I moved to MAMP.
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