npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

medusa-plugin-wordpress

v0.6.0

Published

A Medusa plugin for WordPress integration. It enables you to use WordPress as a headless CMS or as a storefront for your Medusa shop.

Downloads

23

Readme

MedusaWP

MedusaWP is a powerful tool that seamlessly integrates your Medusa e-commerce store with WordPress, offering a range of features to simplify your e-commerce management. We also provide a rich set of Medusa-oriented functions for you to utilize within your WordPress theme.

You can connect to your existing Medusa store and effortlessly import its data into WordPress. You have full visibility into the sync progress and can easily troubleshoot any issues that may arise during the synchronization process. Data health checks ensure that your synced items are error-free and successfully imported into WordPress. Managing media assets is a breeze with the ability to import Medusa thumbnails directly into the WordPress Media Library. You can also manage and display Medusa data as custom post types within your WordPress site.

For a seamless shopping experience, the plugin automatically creates a cart for customers who land on your site. A country switcher functionality is also included, allowing cart region updates based on the selected country code.

When needed, you can remove all synced data and disconnect from Medusa effortlessly.

Unlock the full potential of your Medusa store with the MedusaWP plugin and streamline your e-commerce operations.

Features

  • Use WordPress as a headless CMS or as a storefront for the Medusa shop.
  • Connect to an existing Medusa store from WordPress and import its data into WordPress.
  • Synchronize your Medusa e-commerce data with WordPress.
  • Import Medusa thumbnails into the WordPress Media Library (either directly when syncing Medusa data or separately).
  • Provide an overview and troubleshooting for the sync progress.
  • Check the data health, including identifying any sync errors, partially synced items, or successfully synced data.
  • Manage and display Medusa data (products, product collections...) in WordPress as custom post types (CPT).
  • Automatically create a cart when the customer lands on the site for the first time (default country/region settings can be configured within the WordPress plugin settings).
  • Implement a country switcher that updates the cart region based on the given country code.
  • Remove all synced data.
  • Disconnect from Medusa.
  • Expose a rich set of functions available for you to use within your WordPress theme, including medusa-react utility functions for computing and formatting prices and amounts.

Prerequisites

How To Install

Medusa Plugin

  1. In the root of your Medusa backend, run the following command to install the medusa-plugin-wordpress plugin:
npm i medusa-plugin-wordpress
  1. Add the plugin to your medusa-config.js file at the end of the plugins array:
module.exports = {
  // ...
  plugins: [
    // ...
    {
      resolve: "medusa-plugin-wordpress",
      options: {
        // ...
      },
    },
  ],
  // ...
}
  1. Next, configure the medusa-plugin-wordpress plugin that you added in the previous step. For example:
const plugins = [
  // ...
  {
    resolve: `medusa-plugin-wordpress`,
    options: {
      sync_options: {
        attempts: 5,
        backoff: {
          type: 'exponential',
          delay: 2000
        }
      }
    },
  },
]

Configuration Options

The plugin can be configured with the following options:

(property) sync_options: {
    delay?: number | undefined;
    attempts: number;
    backoff?: {
        type: "fixed" | "exponential";
        delay: number;
    } | undefined;
}
  • sync_options - Sync options object.
    • delay - Delay time in milliseconds, default undefined.
    • attempts - Number of attempts, default 3.
    • backoff - Backoff options object.
      • type - Backoff type, either "fixed" or "exponential", default "exponential".
      • delay - Backoff delay time in milliseconds, default 2000.

WordPress Plugin

  1. In the root directory of your WordPress installation, run the following command to install the plugin using Composer:
composer require agilo/medusawp
  1. Log in to your WordPress admin dashboard using your administrator credentials.

  2. After successful installation, click the "Activate" button to activate the plugin.

  3. To finish the plugin setup, proceed to the How To Use steps.

How To Use

  1. Run the following command in the directory of the Medusa backend to run the backend:
npm run start
  1. After you have logged into your WordPress site, navigate to the MedusaWP plugin settings page, which can be found in the WordPress admin menu.

  2. Connect your Medusa e-commerce store and your WordPress instance. On the default MedusaWP plugin screen enter your Medusa shop URL and credentials - email and password and press "Connect" button.

[!NOTE] If necessary, you can always disconnect from your Medusa shop by opening a dropdown in the upper-right corner, pressing the "Disconnect" button, and confirming your decision.

  1. When the connection with Medusa is established, sync your Medusa e-commerce data with WordPress by clicking the "Sync" button. You can also choose to import Medusa thumbnails into the WordPress Media Library directly with the data sync (this may slightly slow down your data sync process), or you can import thumbnails separately later using the "Import" button.

[!NOTE] It is possible to remove all your synced Medusa data from your WordPress site at any time using the "Remove" button. We recommend that you backup your data before proceeding with this action.

  1. Once the data synchronization is complete, configure the default settings of the MedusaWP plugin to suit your needs. In the dropdown, you can select the default country, which will be used to automatically create a cart in the corresponding region when a customer lands on the site.

  2. Verify that the plugin is working as expected by visiting your website and using its features.

That's it! You have successfully installed and set up the MedusaWP plugin. Enjoy using it in your projects and on your WordPress website.

Contributing

We welcome contributions from the community to help make this project even better. Please feel free to open pull requests or issues. Thank you for considering contributing, and we look forward to collaborating with you!

Below you can find the plugin development guide that will help you get started with running MedusaWP in your local environment.

Plugin Development

Prerequisites

After you have installed the requirements, you will need to add a host entry for the project by appending the following line to your /etc/hosts file:

127.0.0.1    medusawp.test

Running Locally

Follow these step-by-step instructions to run the project locally:

  1. Fulfill everything mentioned in the prerequisites above
  2. git clone https://github.com/Agilo/medusawp.git - clone the repo
  3. cd medusawp - position into the project directory
  4. cp .env.example .env - set up docker-compose environment variables
  5. cp ./dev/medusa/.env.example ./dev/medusa/.env - set up Medusa environment variables
  6. npm i - install all dependencies
  7. npm run addcert -w wordpress - add a self-signed certificate for medusawp.test
  8. npm run build -w wordpress - build WordPress
  9. composer install -d ./wordpress-plugin - install Composer dependencies for the WordPress plugin
  10. docker-compose --profile wp --profile medusa up - start WordPress and Medusa Docker containers
  11. Open a new terminal tab
  12. npm run seed -w medusa - seed Medusa DB
  13. npm run migrate -w medusa - run Medusa migrations
  14. npm start - build the Medusa plugin and start the Medusa dev server and Medusa plugin watcher

WordPress is now available at https://medusawp.test and Medusa Admin dashboard at http://localhost:9000/app.

Default credentials for Medusa Admin are:

[email protected]
supersecret

Default credentials for WordPress are:

admin
admin

Available Commands

  • npm start - build the plugin and start the Medusa dev server and plugin watcher
  • npm run build -w medusa-plugin-wordpress - build the Medusa plugin
  • npm run watch -w medusa-plugin-wordpress - start the Medusa plugin watcher
  • npm run test -w medusa-plugin-wordpress - run Medusa plugin tests
  • npm run seed -w medusa - seed Medusa DB
  • npm run build -w medusa - build Medusa
  • npm run migrate -w medusa - run Medusa migrations
  • npm start -w medusa - start the Medusa development server
  • npm run addcert -w wordpress - add a self-signed certificate for medusawp.test
  • npm run build -w wordpress - build WordPress

Docker Services

Docker services are defined in docker-compose.yml file. There are 2 separate profiles defined in the file:

  • wp - WordPress
  • medusa - Medusa

Most of the time, you will want to run both profiles at the same time. But if you want to run only one of them, you can do so by running docker-compose --profile <profile> up. For example, to start only WordPress, you would run docker-compose --profile wp up.

WordPress
  • nginx - Nginx web server that serves WordPress on https://medusawp.test
  • php - PHP-FPM
  • db - MariaDB database server for WordPress available on localhost:3306, you can change credentials and port in .env file
  • phpmyadmin - phpMyAdmin available on http://localhost:8080
Medusa
  • postgres - PostgreSQL database server for Medusa available on localhost:5432, you can change credentials and port in .env and dev/medusa/.env files
  • pgadmin - pgAdmin available on http://localhost:5050
  • redis - Redis server for Medusa available on localhost:6379
  • admin - Medusa Admin available on http://localhost:9000

Additional Resources

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License.

Credits

MedusaWP is developed and maintained by AGILO. Huge thanks to all contributors.