WordPress — Operations

Plugin auto-updates, config drift, multisite isolation — operational signals you should be watching.

Logystera WordPress plugin dropping events under load — what buffer drops mean and how to fix
You opened the Logystera dashboard for one of your WordPress entities and noticed something off. The request count is suspiciously round.…
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WordPress Log Monitoring: See What Your Site Actually Does
WordPress debug.log is not monitoring. It’s a file nobody reads. Real WordPress log monitoring means structured events, derived metrics, and automatic ale…
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WordPress PHP / core version changed unexpectedly — detecting environment drift
You log into your WordPress admin, click into Tools > Site Health, and the row that used to say PHP 8.1 now says PHP 8.2. Or you ran wp core version over SSH ex…
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WordPress plugin auto-updates that broke your site — how to detect them in time
You open your laptop at 8:47 AM and the support inbox is full. "Site is showing a white page." "Checkout is broken." "I get a 500 error on every page." You hit …
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WordPress plugin silently activated or deactivated — who did it and when
You open the WordPress admin and notice something is off. A plugin you do not remember installing is active. Or a security plugin you rely on — Wordfence, iThem…
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WordPress Silent PHP Errors: How to Find Errors Nobody Sees
Production WordPress sites suppress error display. That’s correct. But suppressing display is not the same as handling errors. Here’s how to find an…
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WordPress site slow for logged-in users only — detecting session floods and cache bypass
Your WordPress site is fast. Pingdom is green. The homepage TTFB is under 200ms. Then a customer support ticket comes in: "Site is unbearably slow." You log in …
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WordPress upload blocked — legitimate user or attack? How to tell
A user clicks Add Media, drags a file in, and WordPress throws: > Sorry, this file type is not permitted for security reasons.…
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WordPress Uptime vs Health: Why 99.9% Uptime Means Nothing
Your uptime monitor says 99.99%. Your contact form hasn’t delivered an email in 3 weeks. Both statements are true at the same time. Here’s why.…
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Monitoring for WordPress and Drupal sites. Install a plugin or module to catch silent failures — cron stalls, failed emails, login attacks, PHP errors — before users report them.
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