Plesk

WP Toolkit – Updating WordPress Installations

To keep your website secure, you need to regularly update the WordPress
core, as well as any installed plugins and themes. You can do this
either automatically or manually:

For security reasons, we recommend that you configure autoupdates.

To update a WordPress installation manually:

  1. Go to WordPress. If your WordPress installation needs updating, you
    will see the corresponding messages in the “Status” section
    (for example, “Install plugin updates”).

  2. Click any message about available updates, wait for WP Toolkit to load
    the list of available updates, and then select the updates you want
    to install.

    Note: If an update of a WordPress core is available, you will see the
    “Restore Point” checkbox. Keep this checkbox selected to create a
    restore point you can use to roll back the update if something
    goes wrong.

  3. Click Update.

The selected updates will be applied.

Although WP Toolkit regularly checks for updates itself, you can also
check for updates at any time. To do so, click “Check updates”.

To configure autoupdates for a WordPress installation:

  1. Go to WordPress and choose the WordPress installation that you want
    to update automatically and then, on the installation card, click “Autoupdate settings”.

  2. Choose the desired autoupdate settings. You can configure
    autoupdates separately for WordPress core, plugins, and themes
    (for example, you can choose to enable autoupdates for plugins
    and themes, but not for WordPress core). Follow these
    recommendations:

    • Selecting “No” next to “Update WordPress automatically” turns off
      autoupdates of WordPress core. This is insecure.
    • If your website is publicly available (production) and you are
      concerned that applying updates automatically may break it, select
      “Yes, but only minor (security) updates”.
    • If your website is a non-public (staging) version of a WordPress
      website, select “Yes, all (minor and major) updates”. This will
      keep your staging website up-to-date and ensure that, should an
      update break something, it happens to the staging website and not
      to the production one.
  3. Click OK.

If you are concerned that WordPress autoupdates may break your
website, use Smart Updates. With Smart Updates,
WordPress installations are always updated safely without breaking your
website.