How to Update WordPress Plugins Updated on August 16, 2021 by InMotion Hosting Contributor 3 Minutes, 10 Seconds to Read Learning how to update WordPress plugins is vitally important for website security and usability. Keeping your plugins up-to-date helps harden your website security — closing doors hackers could use to access your website. It also ensures a positive user experience for your website visitors, making sure they are interacting with the most recent and compatible software. Updates are rolled out constantly, which can make the task of updating plugins seem endless. When updating plugins after a large WordPress update and/or when newer versions of the plugins are released by the developers, you can use one bulk action or update plugins individually. Separate plugin updates are actually preferred by some website owners as it helps mitigate potential theme issues that could arise after updating a plugin. For example, if you update a plugin and then notice an area of your website is broken, you can simply disable the plugin to fix it. In relation, before you update WordPress plugins, we recommended you backup your database and your website files. This will allow you to easily restore your WordPress site to the previous configuration if plugin updates break your website. Continue reading to learn: How to Update WordPress Plugins ManuallyAutomatically Update Plugins Update WordPress Plugins Manually Using the steps below, you’ll be able to quickly update all of your WordPress plugins. Login to your WordPress dashboard.There are three areas you can navigate to for updating plugins. 1) By clicking on the circle shaped like two arrows in the top header of your dashboard. 2) By clicking Updates towards the top of the left sidebar menu. 3) By clicking Plugins further down in the left sidebar menu.If you click on the icon in the header or Updates in the left sidebar, you will be taken to a screen showing all updates available, both plugin and theme updates. To update your plugins, check Select All or select only the plugins you want to update. Then click Update Plugins. You will see a success message after the updates are complete.You can also update your theme in the above area following the same steps!If you click on Plugins further down in the left sidebar, you will be taken to a page showing a list of your plugins only. Similar to the above, select the plugins you want to update, select Update under the Bulk Actions dropdown, then click Apply. You can also click the update now link under the individual plugins to update them separately. You will see a success message after the updates are complete. Congratulations, you’ve updated your plugins! There are three areas you can navigate to for updating plugins.If you clicked on Updates, check Select All or select only the plugins you want to update. Then click Update Plugins.If you click on Plugins in the left sidebar, you can use the Bulk Action option to update all plugins. If you click on Plugins in the left sidebar, you can update plugins separately per the link under the respective plugin. Automatic Updates with Jetpack and WordPress 5.5 Release If you’d rather automate the update process, you’re in luck. You can easily “set it and forget” with the Jetpack auto-update feature. Once Jetpack is installed, you can enable the auto-updates for all or certain plugins for simpler website management. Also, as WordPress is a constantly evolving open-source software, automatic plugin updates will be built into the core as early as August 2020 with the WordPress 5.5 Release. Users can currently beta test the functionality via a plugin created by the contributors of the project. However, it seems that it will be a simple, seamless addition. Allowing you to determine which plugins will be updated automatically via the Plugins screen in the dashboard. Become a master of WordPress plugins! Protect, optimize, secure, and expand the functionality of your website easily with the help of WordPress plugins! Power Your Growth with Managed WordPress Unlock the full potential of your mission-critical WordPress site with scalable, purpose-built servers. Give your website the performance, security, and support it needs to succeed - so you can focus on growing your business. Scalable Cloud Servers Advanced Security Managed Updates Expert Support Managed WordPress Hosting Share this Article InMotion Hosting Contributor Content Writer InMotion Hosting contributors are highly knowledgeable individuals who create relevant content on new trends and troubleshooting techniques to help you achieve your online goals! More Articles by InMotion Hosting Related Articles W3 Total Cache – Guide to WordPress Caching Using Stackable for WordPress How to Add Social Media Icons and Social Media Buttons to WordPress Using Wordfence Login Security for 2FA Top Monitoring Plugins for WordPress How to Setup an Affiliate System in WordPress Google Web Stories Creates Beautiful Content for WordPress Websites WordPress comment spam prevention with Akismet How to Use WP 2FA for WordPress Using Twentig to Build Your WordPress Site
Hello TheBoatPeople, and thanks for your comment, It looks like you also asked this question about WordPress plugins getting tmp directory or permissions errors in our support center. I answered the question there, it seems to be related to you needing to set your PHP temporary upload directory. – Jacob
Edward P found a solution, but it works for only one site. i hope there is a way to FIX it so that this line of code doesn’t have to be inserted to each WP site directory. i have only current WP installs. i think Ed found the solution here: https://wordpress.org/support/topic/plugin-upgrades-fail-after-update-to-wp-35 /home/airera5/public_html/zzzzzzz.org/wp-config.php define(‘WP_TEMP_DIR’,’/home/xxxxx/tmp’); i can give you my sites but i’m not sure if i should post my primary account user id here?
i got this error on a diff plugin yesterday, which then i directly uploaded the plugin to the wp-content plugin directory and then activated it fine via the WP site back end. i thought it was only one time thing. now today a new plugin gets the same type of error. can you help me? (but to the same site i just tried to add new plugin Yoast Seo and it download into my site fine, what is going on?) thank you! Installing Plugin: NextGEN Gallery 2.0.31 Downloading install package from https://downloads.wordpress.org/plugin/nextgen-gallery.zip… Warning: touch() [function.touch]: Unable to create file /tmp/nextgen-gallery.tmp because No such file or directory in /home/xxxxxxx/public_html/zzzzz.org/wp-admin/includes/file.php on line 179 Warning: unlink(/tmp/nextgen-gallery.tmp) [function.unlink]: Operation not permitted in /home/xxxxxxx/public_html/zzzzz.org/wp-admin/includes/file.php on line 503 Download failed. Could not open handle for fopen() to /tmp/nextgen-gallery.tmp