Advanced Custom Fields version 6.2.4 is now available.
This release includes a number of bug fixes and improvements, along with fixes for license activation when using ACF as a must-use plugin.
As a result of this bug fix release, the previously announced changes to requiring an active license to use ACF PRO features have been delayed until a future version.
👨‍💻 Please find the release notes below. For the latest ACF news, follow us on Twitter @wp_acf.
Must-Use Plugin Installs
After the release of ACF 6.2.3, we received reports from users that ACF was not activated despite having a license key defined in code, and the updates page was not visible. This is an issue for users who use the Bedrock framework or other methods of loading ACF as a must-use plugin.
ACF 6.2.4 fixes two issues for this type of installation. Firstly, the updates page is now visible by default for these types of installation.
Secondly, if you define your license key in code, ACF will now correctly activate your license for the site.
Changelog
Fix – Custom Post Types labels now match the WordPress 6.4 behavior for “Add New” labels
Fix – When exporting both post types and taxonomies as PHP, taxonomies will now appear before post types, matching the order ACF registers them. This resolves issues where taxonomy slugs will not work in post type permalinks
Fix – Advanced Settings for Taxonomies, Post Types or Options Pages now display with the correct top padding when toggled on
Fix – When a parent option page is set to “Redirect to Child Page”, the child page will now correctly show it’s parent setting
Fix – When activated as a must-use plugin, the ACF PRO “Updates” page is now visible. Use the existing show_updates setting to hide
Fix – When activated as a must-use plugin, ACF PRO licenses defined in code will now correctly activate sites
Fix – When show_updates is set or filtered to false, ACF PRO will now automatically still activate defined licenses
i18n – Maintenance and internal upstream messages from the ACF PRO activation server are now translatable
About the Author
Liam’s a veteran WordPress developer based in Bath, UK. He’s a fan of all things devops, gaming and coffee, but is still working on his espresso skills. Just don’t ask him to try latte art… the results are never good.
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