Saturday, 11 September 2010

Strictly System Checker - Wordpress Plugin

Updated Wordpress Plugin - Strictly System Check

Ensure your Wordpress site is up 24/7 and be kept informed when it isn't without even having to touch your server or install monitoring software with this Wordpress plugin I created.

I have just released version 1.0.2 which has some major new features including:

The option to check for fragmented indexes and to carry out an automated re-index using the OPTIMIZE command.

And most importantly I have migrated some of the key features that MySQL performance monitoring scripts such as MySQLReport use to the plugin so that you can now be kept informed of:
  • MySQL Database Uptime
  • No of connections made since last restart, connections per hour.
  • The no of aborted connections.
  • No of queries made since last restart, queries per hour.
  • The percentage of queries that are flagged as slow.
  • The number of joins being carried out without indexes.
  • The number of reads and writes.
You can find out more about this very useful plugin at my main site: www.strictly-software.com/plugins/strictly-system-check

It's a plugin I created out of necessity and one that has been 100% useful in keeping my site running and on those occasions it's not I get to know about it before anyone complains.

4 comments:

Unknown said...

I would like to use this pluginn, but it is not working: Fatal error: Call to undefined function ShowDebug() in /public/sites/www.glaantingel.nl/wp-content/plugins/strictly-tweetbot/strictly-tweetbot.class.php on line 1033

Cannot figure out what I am doing wrong here.

Rob Reid said...

Where are you downloading it from? I have just taken a look at the source code up on the wordpress SVN >> http://svn.wp-plugins.org/strictly-system-check/trunk/strictly-system-check.class.php

And I can see no mention of ShowDebug which is an old function I used for outputting debug. If you download the latest version from Wordpress it should work. Either that or rename the ShowDebug function to whatever it is I am using in that class (I think its something like ShowSysDebug)

That should fix it

Laurent said...

Sadly this plugin has not been updated since december 2010...

Rob Reid said...

Your point being?