Rating: 5 stars
estoy ansioso por probarlo
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Great plugin. Please update compatibility data – it’s still working!
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Great example of simple, important functionality that you’d want in core really. Thanks so much for this. It’s been working fine for years on a couple of high demand multisite networks I run and still working great as of today.
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useful plugin, works fine
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Very useful for knowing what plugins or themes are being used when considering deleting them.
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This is an indispensable tool for MS admins, since WordPress core doesn’t include any tools for seeing which MS plugins are in use or by which sites.
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Thanks for it.
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Awesome plugin that should be part of wordpress itself when in multisite mode. Makes life as a network admin much easier.
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Brilliantly easy to use and very useful for identifying unactivated plugins.
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One thing which could make the plugin even more comfortable: List all sites of ALL networks on the plugins and themes page.
But anyhow – great simple useful!
Rating: 5 stars
This is the best way to know which plugins you use regularly and which ones you don’t across all sites.
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It was exactly what I was looking for, it should be part of the multisite core.
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Thanks for an useful plugin. Frankly a bit better than the almost identical MultiSite Administration Tools plugin.
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Great visibility of plugins installed and active across multi-site.
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This plugin is such a time saver.
Who can keep up with all the plugins you download? I can’t.
This plugin makes it SO EASY to know which plugins to remove.
A+!!
Rating: 5 stars
Thanks!
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Yes a Simple and very usefull plugin!
I use this to quickly see active plugins and which are no longer in use to consider removal.
Rating: 5 stars
Simple and very useful! Must-have for multi-site administrators.
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Easy way to keep track of what plugins are in use and where across a network of sites.
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Simple and very usefull plugin! It gives you the image of what’s going on in the network at a glance!
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just something so primitive you wonder why it wasnt included in the core implementation.
something that was otherwise a tedious task is a simple as it should have been in the first place. as a superadmin, just view the Plugins or Themes pages and see an added column in the table listing the sites using that plugin/theme.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Every once in a while a WordPress admin comes across a plugin that makes them wonder how they lived so long without it – this is one of those plugins.
I work for a large academic institution using WordPress, BuddyPress and Multisite to provide a social network that helps facilitate sharing and communication across faculty, student and administrator groups. The amount of plugins and themes in our install had become so large that we were beginning to have trouble maintaining them all. After reviewing and installing Network Plugin Auditor, it only took about 30 minutes to identify and remove the unused themes and plugins on an install with 3,627 users, 1,192 sites, 231 plugins and 264 themes.
At 363 lines of code in a single file, this plugin should be used as an example to all other plugin authors of how to properly write a WordPress plugin. It’s simple, powerful, does one job and does it well. I noticed only a slight degradation in page load time on the Network Plugins page, and that is mainly due to that fact that it doesn’t use pagination. All other pages augmented by this plugin show only enhanced features.
If you administer a large Multisite install with a growing number of themes and plugins, this plugin is a must have. It’s one of those plugins that makes you jealous that you didn’t think of it yourself.
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