MU Global Options Plugin

Plugin that uses options from main blog in other blogs.

Author:Keith P. Graham (profile at wordpress.org)
WordPress version required:3.0
WordPress version tested:3.0.5
Plugin version:0.8
Added to WordPress repository:02-11-2010
Last updated:16-11-2010
Warning! This plugin has not been updated in over 2 years. It may no longer be maintained or supported and may have compatibility issues when used with more recent versions of WordPress.
Rating, %:0
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Plugin URI:http://www.BlogsEye.com/
Total downloads:1 756
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Plugin that uses options from main blog in other blogs.

This allows all blogs on a network to use the options set on the Main Blog (blog #1). The WordPress administrator can check off which options are to be shared among blogs. Almost all the current options are listed by name. Once the options have been checked and the plugin updated then all other blogs will see the option value set in the main blog.

This is useful for networked blogs where some options do not change across the blogs.

The primary reason for this plugin is to let all blogs use the same WordPress API key, so that Akismet does not have to be configured on each blog, and it is not necessary to hack WordPress files to share Akismet.

The global options plugin also works with the All-in-one-SEO plugin, but the plugin will still show a red warning on the administration pages. This is because the this package checks options when it is loaded by WordPress and not when the admin panel is initialized. The plugin works, in spite of the warning.

There is a Read/Write check box that allows the other blogs to change change the global settings. This is useful for collecting global statistics, but is very dangerous if you allow your users access to the admin panel. Use it with extreme care or if you are the only user who has access to the admin panels on the blogs.

I have tested it with other plugins and it seems to work consistently with all of them, but I can't be sure that any one plugin will work.

I have changed some other WordPress options such as the permalink structure using this plugin and it works without problems, but be very careful changing any WordPress options that might be site specific, such as blog name.

The process of looking up an option on another blog is not trivial, but I did not notice much degradation in response time during testing. Large or busy installations my see a change in performance.

I consider this plugin to be potentially dangerous for the casual user. If you get in trouble uninstall the plugin from the main blog or delete the plugin from the plugins directory.