![]() ![]() However, the functionality of this file has greatly decreased over time, and the overall size of the file has decreased from 83kb to 3kb, so it doesn’t play as large of a role as it used to. This has remained true to the present day. However, with the release of the WordPress iPhone app, XML-RPC support was enabled by default, and there was no option to turn off the setting. In 2008, with version 2.6 of WordPress, there was an option to enable or disable XML-RPC. ![]() With the basic framework of XML-RPC in place, early apps used this same connection to allow people to log in to their WordPress sites from other devices. This connection was done through XML-RPC. The solution (at the time), was to create an offline blogging client, where you could compose your content, then connect to your blog to publish it. Instead of writing within the browser itself, most people would write offline, then copied and pasted their content onto the web. The implementation of XML-RPC goes back to the early days of WordPress before it even became WordPress.īack in the early days of the internet, when the connections were incredibly slow, the process of writing and publishing to the web was much more difficult and time-consuming. Why Was Xmlrpc.php Created and How Was It Used? The core features that xmlrpc.php enabled were allowing you to connect to your site via smartphone, implementing trackbacks and pingbacks from other sites, and some functions associated with the Jetpack plugin. You could use the remote access feature enabled by xmlrpc.php to do just that. Since WordPress isn’t a self-enclosed system and occasionally needs to communicate with other systems, this was sought to handle that job.įor example, let’s say you wanted to post to your site from your mobile device since your computer was nowhere nearby. ![]() XML-RPC is a feature of WordPress that enables data to be transmitted, with HTTP acting as the transport mechanism and XML as the encoding mechanism.
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