![]() I’m unsure if this impacts how long the image editor takes, but it’s easy enough to do and is worth a try. You might try increasing the allowed time for PHP processing. On shared hosting, the overload may have nothing to do with your account. This most commonly is due to overloaded servers. What has happened is the server’s image editor has taken too long to make scaled down versions of the image. It’s unrelated to the post-processing failure. We may argue if that’s a reasonable limit or not, but since we can alter it the argument is moot. This size is filterable through the ‘big_image_size_threshold’ filter, so themes and plugins can alter this up or down. The original is retained on the server but not used by WP. It’ll accept larger images, but they will be scaled down to that size and the scaled size will be registered as the WP “Full” size. The size limit WP imposes by default is 2560px square. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |