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Our company has put out a Wordpress plugin that consumes our content api. Problem is, some of the content goes away. Sometimes for a time, sometimes forever. To be on the legal safe side we have to enforce that content that has been removed on our page has to be removed on the plugin users side, too.

We do this by checking with a cron job once a month and then setting the imported content to "draft" so that the owner of the site doesn't loose any content he might himself have added.

He can re-publish the content, but then it's his problem if there is some legal issue.

Anyway: how do I best inform the owner of the page that we set some of his pages to "draft"? I looked into admin notices, but those seem to be mainly for short and immediate messages like "Your settings have been saved".

What's a good way to inform the owner of the site "Okay, this has happened while you were gone, you might need to look into that"?

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  • Are you using a CLI or WP psuedo-cron? Mar 7, 2017 at 11:23
  • We use the WP pseudo-cron, that worked good enough for us.
    – Sorcy
    Mar 7, 2017 at 11:24

1 Answer 1

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I've done something similar flagging content ingestion issues. I would caution against sending emails from a cron unless it's in a digest form from a specified interval of time as you'll get email fatigue pretty quickly.

I created a queue of sorts in a separate post type that linked to the the flagged post or just raised a flag for an issue that had no post. From there, editors can resolve an issue (delete it) or mark it as expected (set to custom post_status of 'expected') so the issue does not keep recurring if rules are setup to catch other posts of like issue.

Though I'm not able to give you the codebase for the proprietary plugin, here are the steps I took:

1. Create a post type for content flags

2. Redirect new manual posts to edit.php and remove submenu item for adding posts

We only want cron to create these posts and not users.

add_action( 'init', 'redirect_new_flag_post' );
function redirect_new_flag_post (){
  global $pagenow;
  if( $pagenow === 'post-new.php' && isset( $_GET['post_type'] ) && $_GET['post_type'] === 'YOUR_POST_TYPE' ){
    wp_redirect( '/wp/wp-admin/edit.php?post_type=YOUR_POST_TYPE' );
    die();
  }
}
add_action( 'admin_menu', 'remove_flag_menu_items' );
function remove_menu_items (){
    remove_submenu_page( 'edit.php?post_type=YOUR_POST_TYPE', 'post-new.php?post_type=YOUR_POST_TYPE' );
}

3. Create custom columns for edit.php for your custom post type. Take a look at this post for more information.

  • Flagged Post Title
  • Flagged Post URL
  • Flagged by
  • Date
  • Actions (Mark as Resolved (Trash), Whitelist as Expected (Set to 'expected' post_status)) - I created buttons with associated AJAX calls

4. Add meta boxes to your custom post type

Flagged Post Information

  • Post Title
  • URL
  • Post Type
  • Date
  • Flagged by (which cron process)
  • Message - This can describe why the post was flagged
  • Raw Data (Entire object that was to be ingested)

Resolution Actions

  • I removed all WP post actions via CSS to only show my resolution actions
  • Mark as Resolved (Delete it)
  • Mark as Whitelisted (Set it to Private)

5. Create an admin notice on the flagged post

  • Check if you're on the correct post type
  • Check if a flag exists that points to that post
  • If so, create an error admin notice that warns the editor that there is a flag and link back to the content flag post for resolution.
  • Use the admin_notices hook to output your message

6. Create Flag model class

  • Add new flag - This can be called from your cron code
  • Resolve flag (delete)
  • Set expected (set post_status to 'expected')
  • Clear expected

You can create a class similar to this:

class Flags{
    public function add( $post_id, $title, $desc, $meta_data = array(), $flagger = 'cron' ){
        // Deduplicate flag
        // Insert flag
    }

    public function resolve( $post_id ){
        // Delete post via ID
    }

    public function save( $post_id ){
        // Set post_status to 'expected'
    }

    public function clear_saved( $post_id ){
        self::resolve( $post_id );
    }
}

7. Flag content from your cron script

Within your script, you can define a control structure to identify posts that should be flagged (i.e. post wasn't inserted properly, content is missing from the origin CMS, etc...). Those posts should get flagged using your Flag class:

Flags::add(
    $post_id,
    'Lorem Ipsum',
    'This is why this post is getting flagged',
    array( 'raw_data' => $content_object )
);

8. Create email digest

I would create separate cron script to query the latest content flags and send a digest to the administrator at intervals. It would be valuable to the administrator to receive a link to the issue, see the raw data, and be able to resolve the issues manually instead of trying to debug without any data.

9. Garbage Collection

This approach has worked will for us, but beware content flags can pile up quickly if you're ingesting a lot of data. You'll need to run a garbage collection script for old flags if you see that your admin is not resolving the issues. You might also need to identify patterns of too stringent of rules for adding content flags if they get ignored consistently.

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  • 1
    Thanks for your elaborate answer. We did something similar, but slighty less complicated for our case.
    – Sorcy
    Mar 15, 2017 at 16:35

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