• Resolved zepolo

    (@zepolo)


    The idea of ??this plugin is relevant. This can be very useful.

    In my opinion, it lacks a basic control when it comes to WebP.

    When you have a plugin that already performs this functionality, the performance plugin does not manage the fact that there is already a tool in place for WebP.

    If you don’t think about deactivating the feature, it’s a duplicate.

    Regarding the advice on the cache, this is not always suitable. The plugin advises me to use Redit by telling me that my host supports redit. But this is not the case.

    It tells me that a scheduled event failed but does not indicate which one.

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • @zepolo Thanks for getting in touch! We do have a GitHub issue to address the possible conflicts with other plugins that generate WebP images and plan to add that functionality in a future release. You can follow that issue for updates.

    Regarding the advice on the cache, this is not always suitable. The plugin advises me to use Redit by telling me that my host supports redit. But this is not the case.

    It tells me that a scheduled event failed but does not indicate which one.

    @zepolo Can you please tell me who your hosting provider is? We can do some testing there.

    I would also like to see tools such as Heartbeat Control, limiting the size of the uploaded file, as implemented in, for example, Imsanity, adding SMTP out of the box (for example
    FluentSMTP).

    @silasveta2012 Thanks for the idea! Can you please create a feature request issue in our GitHub repo with some more details on what you’re looking for and the use case?

    Thread Starter zepolo

    (@zepolo)

    My internet provider is: OVH Cloud.

    I take this opportunity to ask you a question because I am lost in the plugins that have the same functions.

    By default WP offers the section: Site Health Status. Performance Lab is added on it.

    But I saw that a plugin is also available with the same www.ads-software.com functions (Health Check & Troubleshooting).

    Should we also install this one or one replaces the other. is a duplicate? Is the same or not ?

    Thank you

    @zepolo I believe there are some features in the Health Check & Troubleshooting plugin that are not yet in WordPress core, but that question would best be asked on the Health Check & Troubleshooting plugin’s support forum. To clarify, the Performance Lab section in Health Check is part of the Performance Lab plugin, so if you uninstall Performance Lab, that section will no longer appear.

    My internet provider is: OVH Cloud.

    Thanks! I’ll check with our team on next steps here and get back to you soon.

    @zepolo Apologies for the delay in getting back to you! Please see my reply below.

    Regarding the advice on the cache, this is not always suitable. The plugin advises me to use Redit by telling me that my host supports redit. But this is not the case.

    It does look like OVHcloud offers Redis as an option, at least on some platforms: https://docs.ovh.com/us/en/web-paas/configuration-services/redis/. Your particular configuration may not offer it, but the plugin detected it as available on the provider as a whole. You can check with OVHcloud for more details.

    It tells me that a scheduled event failed but does not indicate which one.

    Any alerts regarding scheduled events would not be coming from the Performance Lab plugin. The reports in Site Health from Performance Lab are regarding WebP, autoloaded options, enqueued assets/scripts, and persistent object cache. The other reports in the Site Health screen can come from the core Site Health functionality or other plugins. You may want to post on the Fixing WordPress support forum for help with that.

    Let me know if you have any other questions!

    @zepolo I’m going to mark this topic as resolved, but if you have any other questions about the Performance Lab plugin, please do feel free to reopen and get in touch. Thanks!

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • The topic ‘This is not always relevant’ is closed to new replies.