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Last updated on Dec 19, 2024

Knowing your WordPress ecosystem (and how it maps to the Drupal CMS)

For successful Drupal to WordPress migration, it’s important to understand the WordPress ecosystem and how it compares to the Drupal CMS.

Understand the nomenclature differences between WordPress and Drupal

Drupal and WordPress have different terminologies for their functionalities and front-end user elements. Here’s how Drupal’s components map to those from WordPress:

DrupalWordPress
NodesPost and Pages
Content typesCustom post types
TermsTag
VocabulariesCategories
Custom VocabulariesCustom Taxonomies
FieldsCustom Fields 
BlocksWidgets

A significant challenge that arises when migrating from Drupal to WordPress is restructuring content within the WordPress taxonomy.

Familiarizing yourself with the differences in terminologies will assist you in this process.

Comparing Drupal and WordPress user roles

When migrating from Drupal to WordPress, it’s important to consider how user roles and permissions will change.

Drupal has three main roles by default: Master Administrator, Logged-in, and Anonymous

WordPress offers a more detailed user roles by default:

Due to the differences in user roles, it’s crucial to carefully assign new roles during the migration process. This roles can be customized as per your business requirements.

Because of the differences in user roles, you must carefully assign new roles during the migration process. You can also customize these roles.


Contributor

Sourabh Kulkarni

Sourabh

Sourabh Kulkarni

Technical content writer