Yes. That is the issue, you need to make sure when you set up wordpress on your site, you have your server running all the right versions, and that you meet the system requirements. I would also include making sure that you are not missing any of the necessary components for your installation of Wordpress. Sadly I have beem asked noumourus times, and it has ended up all too often that someone deleted a vital file through FTP when they actually intended to delete an image or what not.
Ant by the way. I am new to Wp-Testers. I have been working with wordpress for the past 2 years, and this is seems to be a great way to solve current Wordpress problems, and also work on future versions. Thanks, Grey Stockton (http://greystockton.tumblr.com) (http://twitter.com/greystockton/) On 10/29/2009, Austin Matzko <[email protected]> wrote: > On Thu, Oct 29, 2009 at 10:41 AM, Chris Jean <[email protected]> wrote: >> The problem was that the postmeta table had a modified schema in >> addition to a broken index. The MySQL version running was 3.1.22, which >> did have a bug that could cause failed inserts/updates due to a flaw in >> the indexes. This was patched in version 3.1.23. So, I'm unsure if the >> problem derived from the purely the version bug or if the schema >> modification affected it as well. > > For the benefit of anyone who comes across this thread (I'm sure > Nathan and Chris are well aware), the minimum version of MySQL > required for WordPress 2.8 and newer is 4.0: > <http://wordpress.org/about/requirements/> > _______________________________________________ > wp-testers mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.automattic.com/mailman/listinfo/wp-testers > -- Sent from my mobile device Thanks, Gray Stockton (\__/) (='.'=)This is Bunny. (")_(") Copy and paste Bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination. _______________________________________________ wp-testers mailing list [email protected] http://lists.automattic.com/mailman/listinfo/wp-testers
