Repo for the Eco-Mode project: https://www.cloudfest.com/eco-mode-reduce-outgoing-network-traffic-of-your-wordpress-server
Run composer install
to generate the autoloader.
Run npm install
to install dependencies.
Run npm run start
to run the plugin dashboard settings.
Run composer cs
to check the CS of the entire codebase. Prefix this with a file path for a specific file.
Run composer fix-cs
to fix the automatically fixed CS of the entire codebase. Prefix this with a file path for a specific file.
Run composer test
to run the unit tests.
Run composer phpstan
to run PHPStan.
The plugin's goal is to be an opinionated actor that automatically reduces scheduled actions that contain external requests. That way, it can have a positive impact on the carbon footprint of a website out-of-the-box.
Current examples of such automatic reschedules:
- Reduces runs of the
wp_https_detection
scheduled action from twice per day to weekly, if the site is already on https. Otherwise, it reduces it to daily. - Reduces runs of the
wp_version_check
scheduled action from twice per day to weekly, if the site is already on an outdated version. - Disables completely the
wp_version_check
scheduled action, if the site has an activeDISALLOW_FILE_MODS
define.
But in order to maximize potential impact, the plugin also implements a public API for hosts, web owners, etc. to hook into and reschedule such requests even further themselves, according to their site's specific needs and requirements.
Public API
To reschedule a scheduled event, just call the following line, and replace 'daily' with your desired recurrence. This is an open API and can be used at will. This needs to be called prior to the actual register hook.
\EcoMode\EcoModeWP\Alter_Schedule::reschedule( 'action_name', 'daily' )
add_action(
'plugins_loaded',
function () {
\EcoMode\EcoModeWP\Alter_Schedule::reschedule( 'wp_https_detection', 'daily' );
},
0
);
The goal of this feature is to be able to provide hosts, web owners, etc. a public API to throttle specific external requests themselves, according to their site's specific needs and requirements:
add_filter(
'eco_mode_wp_throttled_requests',
function ( $throttledRequests ) {
$throttledRequests[] = new \EcoMode\EcoModeWP\Throttled_Request(
'https://some.spammy.plugin/ping',
MONTH_IN_SECONDS,
'GET'
);
return $throttledRequests;
}
);
We take an opinionated approach to disabling core features that most users aren't actually using. One of these is the News & Events Widget on the dashboard, which sends requests each day to pull in new data.
Public API
To reactivate the News & Events Widget, you can use the following filter:
add_filter( 'eco_mode_disable_wordpress_news_events_widget', '__return_false' );
In the plugin's admin setting page, the plugin has:
- a graph that helps provide information to web owners about the amount of scheduled external requests the website is currently saving
- a list of external requests whose frequency the web owner can tweak
Those frontend features are currently implemented, but hardcodedly so they don't carry any dynamic functionality yet.