Description
Some WordPress sites have problems with scheduled posts, where they don’t get published at the right time. Instead they appear as “missed schedule”. This plugin monitors scheduled posts, and makes sure that doesn’t happen.
Installation
- Upload the
scheduled-post-guardian
folder to your/wp-content/plugins/
directory - Activate the “Scheduled Post Guardian” plugin in your WordPress administration interface
- You’re done! The plugin has no UI and it’ll start working right away.
FAQ
-
How does it work?
-
On “shutdown” (after WP finishes a request), it checks a timer. If it has been 3 minutes since it last checked, it looks at all the scheduled posts, and runs them through a WordPress core function that either publishes them (if they should have gone out already), or re-schedules them, if their schedule has somehow gone away.
-
My post missed its schedule anyway!
-
Normally, the plugin checks every 3 minutes. So it’s possible the post might go out a few minutes late. I hope this isn’t the end of the world. It’s a tradeoff between this and checking all the time. Additionally, if a check determines that there are currently no scheduled posts, it won’t look again for 15 minutes. Most people schedule posts more than 15 minutes in the future.
-
Can I change those times?
-
Yes. There are filters:
scheduled_post_guardian_delay_minutes
andscheduled_post_guardian_stretch_delay_minutes
. Return a different number than 3 and 15 for those if you like.
Reviews
Contributors & Developers
“Scheduled Post Guardian” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.
ContributorsTranslate “Scheduled Post Guardian” into your language.
Interested in development?
Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.
Changelog
1.1.4
Bump WordPress supported version
1.1.0
- Cleaned up code, bumped PHP version requirement.
1.0.1
- Fix mistake in first version
1.0
- Initial version, commissioned by OffbeatBride.com