Hi Jozef,
That is a feature we offer. You can turn it on under Performance Setup->Cache Options->”The entire Falcon cache will be cleared when WordPress publishes a post you’ve scheduled to be published in future.”
http://docs.wordfence.com/en/Falcon_Cache#Clear_cache_when_a_scheduled_post_is_published
If you have it enabled and it is not working, let us know and we can investigate.
Thanks!
Brian
Thread Starter
Jozefs
(@jozefs)
Brian,
Thank you, but I did enable this option; I’ve now disabled, saved, enabled, saved it again. Maybe the option didn’t clear correctly when upgrading to the latest version. I’ll let you know if I encounter the problem again.
Best,
Jozef
Thread Starter
Jozefs
(@jozefs)
Hi Brian,
The problem remains. Is there anyway I can troubleshoot this?
Best,
Jozef
Thread Starter
Jozefs
(@jozefs)
Any ideas anyone? Thanks.
Jozef,
Have you upgraded to the latest version of Wordfence? There may be an issue with your current installation. You can export your settings, remove Wordfence and table data, perform a new install of Wordfence. Test with a clean install. You’ll have your exported settings as a backup.
https://support.wordfence.com/support/solutions/articles/1000010321-how-can-i-remove-all-wordfence-data-or-reset-wordfence-to-the-default-settings-
-Brian
Thread Starter
Jozefs
(@jozefs)
Okay, thanks, I’ll try this.
Hi Jozef and Brian.
My site was not clearing the cache automatically when updates were made. I followed part of Jozef’s suggestion (and updated to the latest version of WP, but I think that was a coincidence).
On the WordFence options page, I checked the option to delete WordFence data on deactivation. Then I exported my settings. I deactivated the plugin. Then I reactivated it (same files) and imported my settings. That seemed to do the trick.
Thought I’d share in case it helps.
-Jared
Great! Thanks for sharing Jared.
-Brian