Rating: 1 star
When a plugin update succeeds, but the new version causes a Fatal Error (like what recently happened with WP Crontrol version 1.13.x), you would expect Rollback Update Failure to roll back the offending plugin to the previous version, but alas! Rollback Update Failure isn’t immune to Fatal Errors.
What it needs is an external Cron process OUTSIDE of WordPress that monitors an update log for an update, followed by Fatal Errors in the PHP error log, and then does what Rollback Update Failure is supposed to do, otherwise WordPress is always going to be susceptible to idiot plugin developers that cause Fatal Errors with plugin updates.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
That is great! I have just one question! How many times this plugin could roll back a theme or a plugin update, can it roll back for example three steps back? Thank you for your answer in advance!
]]>Rating: 5 stars
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]]>Rating: 5 stars
OK!
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