Mark Maunder
Forum Replies Created
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No. If someone has the ability to run SQL on your site you’re already in trouble. They would just run ‘show tables’ and get a list of tables. The idea that a security plugin should hide your tables by changing the table prefix to somehow hackerproof your site is absurd.
Regards,
Mark.
You can check the box to add a comment to the cached pages.
Then open an incognito window in your browser so that you are not logged in and your login cookies are removed. Then visit your site, view page source, scroll to bottom and you should see some stats from Falcon.
Regards,
Mark.
Hi,
Please log a support ticket at http://support.wordfence.com where we’ll give you priority support as a paid customer and will be able to better track the issue for you.
Regards,
Mark.
Also please see this page in our docs which addresses your specific question:
Regards,
Mark.
A further update:
Please see this page in our documentation where we go into some detail on how to make sure Wordfence is compatible with WooThemes. The function we describe wordfence::doNotCache() will be included in Wordfence 5.1.1 which will be released within the next 48 hours.
Regards,
Mark.
Hi, I’ve posted an update to this question about WooCommerce and Wordfence compatibility here:
http://wordpress.org/support/topic/woocommerce-and-falcon?replies=11#post-5655402
Regards,
Mark.
Hi, just an update on this.
I’ve inspected WooCommerce’s source code. They have actually done a great job of already telling caching plugins what not to cache. They have an entire class devoted to it which you can find in their source code at:
includes/class-wc-cache-helper.php
We fully support and respect the constants they set when they tell us what we should not cache and I have tested this.
However if you have a situation where you’re including the contents of your customer’s shopping cart on every page, then you should disable caching whether you’re using Wordfence or some other caching plugin. The reason for this is because you’ve now made your site completely dynamic and it’s not possible for us to cache those pages because they change on a per-customer basis.
Remember that if only part of your site has dynamic content – like everything under /shopping/ then you can just add that URL as an exclusion to Falcon cache and everything will still work fine.
I love WooCommerce and the team has produced a great product, so we are now officially supporting WooCommerce alongside Wordfence. What this means is that:
1) Free Wordfence users can post quests here about Woo and Wordfence and expect a repsonse.
2) Paid customers can post priority support tickets with us asking questions regarding WooCommerce and Wordfence compatibility and we’ll give you a timely response as always.
Regards,
Mark.
Hi,
You can disable these alerts by signing into your site and unchecking the alert options.
Regards,
Mark.
Try and run another scan and tell me if you see this again.
Regards,
Mark.
Your host told you that your out of memory error was caused by an .htaccess rule? I recommend you find another host because they don’t know what they’re talking about.
Tell them to upgrade your memory because it’s too low to run your WordPress site.
Regards,
Mark.
We often get blamed for issues that aren’t related to us. Please check your web server error log. A common cause of this is database table corruption or where the Db is unavailable for some reason.
Regards,
Mark.
Please make sure that the firewall is enabled. Also let me know if you’re using any non-Wordfence caching plugins.
Regards,
Mark.
This is fixed in the next release which will go out within the next few days.
Regards,
Mark.
I’m not sure why Google isn’t reporting these – we are more accurate than Google and more real-time because we are reporting 404’s directly from your server.
Regards,
Mark.