Plugin info

Total downloads: 61,094
Active installs: 4,000
Total reviews: 7
Average rating: 4.4
Support threads opened: 0
Support threads resolved: 0 (0%)
Available in: 2 language(s)
Contributors: 2
Last updated: 11/28/2017 (2954 days ago)
Added to WordPress: 11/29/2011 (14 years old)
Minimum WordPress version: 3.2.0
Tested up to WordPress version: 3.5.2
Minimum PHP version: f

Maintenance & Compatibility

Maintenance score

Possibly abandoned • Last updated 2954 days ago • 7 reviews

22/100

Is Simple Login Lockdown abandoned?

Possibly abandoned (last update 2954 days ago).

Compatibility

Requires WordPress: 3.2.0
Tested up to: 3.5.2
Requires PHP: f

Similar & Alternatives

Explore plugins with similar tags, and compare key metrics like downloads, ratings, updates, support, and WP/PHP compatibility.

Loginizer
Rating 4.8/5 (1,013 reviews)Active installs 1,000,000
Security Optimizer – The All-In-One Protection Plugin
Rating 4.6/5 (149 reviews)Active installs 900,000
Limit Login Attempts
Rating 4.6/5 (202 reviews)Active installs 300,000
WP Ghost (Hide My WP Ghost) – Security & Firewall
Rating 4.5/5 (367 reviews)Active installs 100,000

Description

Simple login lock down is a way to protect your WordPress blog from brute force login attacks.

How it works:
1. An attacker attempts to login and fails
2. Simple Login Lockdown record that failed login
3. After a certain number of failed attemps (defaults to five), further attemps to access the wp-login.php page are blocked for a time (defaults to one hour).

If you happen to forget your password and make a failed login attemp yourself, the plugin will clear out the lockdown count data on successful login.

Note: This uses $_SERVER[‘REMOTE_ADDR’] directly. If you’re behind a proxy (load balancer, etc), it’s not going to work as expected. Eg. Several folks could be attempting logins at once, and all fail. As such, the plugin would pick up on all those requests coming from the same IP — the load balancer — and lock the login down. No good. If you’re using a load balancer or in some other situation where you’re behind a proxy, use this as an example and write your own. Or filter the IP as your desire using cd_sll_pre_ip.

Hooks

simple_login_lockdown_ip -- Alter the requesting IP address. Might be useful if you site is behind a proxy or load balancer.

simple_login_lockdown_allow_ip -- Allows you to "whitelist" an IP address. It first when a log attempt fails before the attempt count is incremented. Return true and no count will be taken for the IP.

simple_login_lockdown_should_die -- A filter that allows you to prevent the login page from `die`ing if a the requesting IP is temporarily blacklisted or the login limit has been reached.

simple_login_lockdown_count_reached -- Fires when the requesting IP has reached its count and will be added to the blacklist for your time limit.

simple_login_lockdown_attempt -- Fires when a login attempt is made but the requestin IP is blocked to to excessive requests.

simple_login_lockdown_response -- Change the HTTP response code of that gets sent when a blacklisted IP attempts to login.

simple_login_lockdown_time_values -- Allows you to alter values in the login lockdown time dropdown in the admin area.

Installation

Install via the WordPress admin or…

  1. Click on the big orange button that says download
  2. Unzip the file, and upload the simple-login-lockdown folder to your wp-content/plugins directory
  3. Login into your website and activate the plugin!

Frequently Asked Questions

Installation Instructions

Install via the WordPress admin or…

  1. Click on the big orange button that says download
  2. Unzip the file, and upload the simple-login-lockdown folder to your wp-content/plugins directory
  3. Login into your website and activate the plugin!

I got locked out, what do I do?

Simple answer: wait. The lockdown will clear in the time you specified, just visit the site again later.

If you absolutely need to get into your site right now, you can can do one of two things…
1. Fire up your FTP client and rename the simple-login-lockdown plugin folder
2. Login into your favorite database administration tool (probably PHPMyAdmin) and search for locked_down_ in the option_name column of the wp_options table. Delete the records you find — they should be “transients”.

Review feed

No reviews available

Screenshots

  1. The plugin options on the Privacy Settings page

    The plugin options on the Privacy Settings page

Changelog

1.1

  • Fixed a bug that caused lock down length to be much shorter than expected
  • Fixed some warnings in the admin area due to a non-existed class property

1.0

  • Refactored code
  • Added a ton of filters/actions

0.4

  • Added plugin options page

0.3

  • small bug fix

0.2

  • New function to get the IP address.
  • Added filter to IP for flexibility with proxies, etc.

0.1

  • Proof of concept
  • no options page