Scans a multisite or multi-network installation to identify all plugins that are active or not.
Author: | Curtiss Grymala (profile at wordpress.org) |
WordPress version required: | 3.8 |
WordPress version tested: | 4.9.5 |
Plugin version: | 1.0.2.1 |
Added to WordPress repository: | 10-05-2013 |
Last updated: | 03-04-2018
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.
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Rating, %: | 92 |
Rated by: | 14 |
Plugin URI: | |
Total downloads: | 19 123 |
Active installs: | 200+ |
Click to start download
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Screenshots
An example of the list of plugins that's generated by the plugin
FAQ
Installation Instructions
Standard Installation
- Upload
plugin-activation-status
folder to the /wp-content/plugins/
directory
- Network-activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in WordPress
MU-Plugins Installation
- Upload the
plugin-activation-status
folder to the /wp-content/mu-plugins/
directory (if that directory does not exist, you can create it)
- Move
plugin-activation-status.php
out of /wp-content/mu-plugins/plugin-activation-status/
and directly into /wp-content/mu-plugins/
Why don’t I see the new Plugins -> Active Plugins menu item?
That menu item will only appear in the Network Admin area for the primary (root/main) network. If you are running a multi-network installation and you activated the plugin on a network other than the first, you won’t see that menu item.
Will this work on a non-multisite installation?
No. If you need to see the activation status of plugins in a standard WP install, you can simply go to Plugins -> Installed Plugins in your admin area. This plugin is specifically developed for multisite and multi-network installs of WordPress, where it’s much more difficult to get a clear, accurate picture of which plugins are active and where they’re active.
Why do I see file paths at the bottom of the list of Active Plugins?
When a plugin is installed and activated, WordPress uses that file path as the indicator that the plugin has been activated, and stores that information in the database. If a plugin file is removed or renamed after it’s been activated on a site, WordPress doesn’t know that it has to remove that old path from the list of active plugins until you visit the Plugins page on each site where it was active.
To make a long story short (too late!), those are plugins that are still considered “active” by WordPress, but no longer exist in your /wp-content/plugins/
directory.
ChangeLog
1.0.2.1
- Adds i18n and l10n features
1.0.2
- Tested compatibility with WordPress 4.9.x
- Fixes undefined constant warning as pointed out by @chenryahts
- Fixes undefined index warning as pointed out by @cliffpaulick
- Begins adding compatibility with core implementation of multi-network (uses the
is_main_network()
function)
1.0
- Tested compatibility with WordPress 4.0
- Added link allowing you to delete inactive plugins
0.3
- Added new buttons allowing you to deactivate plugins on all sites/networks from within the list
- Tested with WP 3.8.2 to ensure everything still works
0.2
- Moved styles to their own style sheet
- Changed name of plugin to “Plugin Activation Status”
- Split plugin into separate files
0.1
- First beta release of “UMW Plugin Locator”