• Resolved angiefuz

    (@angiefuz)


    Apologie – ai have just installed Wordfence, am testing the free version for a client – I just got a warning, but is seems to be innocent – how do I know what to ignore?!

    ((37
    $wp_local_package = ‘en_GB’; added to the file))
    */

    35
    $required_mysql_version = ‘5.0’;
    35
    $required_mysql_version = ‘5.0’;

    36

    36

    37
    $wp_local_package = ‘en_GB’;

    https://ww.wp.xz.cn/plugins/wordfence/

Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • Plugin Author WFMattR

    (@wfmattr)

    Thank you for the report — this one is safe, so you can click the link that says “Ignore until the file changes” in the scan results.

    Any time you aren’t sure if a warning is bad or not, you can post it on this forum, and we will check it for you.

    This particular warning will be improved in a future version of Wordfence, as it only happens with the language-specific distributions of WordPress. For now, the same message may appear the next time a WordPress update is applied.

    -Matt R

    Thread Starter angiefuz

    (@angiefuz)

    Thanks Matt!!

    Am also ignoring that it alerts me logging in! Its looking great a great plug in so far!

    Plugin Author WFMattR

    (@wfmattr)

    Thanks for the feedback!

    The login alerts are generated by the option “Alert me when someone with administrator access signs in.” You can turn it off if you like, but it is on by default, so that if someone did ever break into the site as an admin, you should get an email to alert you to the problem.

    Since you’re building the site for a client, if you make them an admin user too, you would receive notices when they log in as well, so it depends on how close you want to keep tabs on the site.

    -Matt R

Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)

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