SleekView Charts for Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall (GOTMLS)
SleekView Charts reads the gotmls_definitions and quarantine options that Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall writes, plus its brute-force log, and renders scan history, threat types and block volume as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards.
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Scan history and firewall hits both live in your database.
Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall by Eli Scheetz (GOTMLS) is the long-running scanner that walks the WordPress filesystem, checks file signatures against its definition pack and quarantines anything that matches. Its other half, the brute-force firewall, rejects login attempts that fail to provide a one-time secret key. Both halves write data into WordPress: scan results into options and quarantine entries, brute-force hits into a log.
SleekView Charts reads those stores directly. A Number card counts files scanned in the last scan run. A Pie splits the quarantine items by threat type so an admin can see whether the catches are mostly known patterns, suspicious eval blocks or recently added definitions. A Bar groups brute-force blocks by source IP. An Area trends scan completions and quarantines per week so a quiet site versus a compromised site becomes a visible shape.
The plugin still owns enforcement: scan logic, signature updates, quarantine actions, brute-force secret key checks. SleekView only renders the existing data so site owners and agency security leads have a measurable surface that does not require clicking through several Anti-Malware settings tabs.
Workflow
Turn GOTMLS data into a dashboard
Read scan and firewall stores
Compose the chart cards
Save and scope the dashboard
Share or export
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall data
Files scanned, last scan
Count
Quarantine by threat type
Count
group by threat_type
Brute-force hits per IP
Count
group by source_ip
Quarantines per week
Count
group by scan_date
Comparison
Default GOTMLS settings vs SleekView Charts
Default GOTMLS settings screens
- Scan results live in multi-tab settings screens, no aggregate dashboard
- Quarantine view is a list, no pie of threat-type mix
- Brute-force log is paginated, no IP-level distribution at a glance
- No weekly trend of quarantines to spot a slow-burn compromise
- No read-only sharing of malware posture outside WP admin
SleekView Charts
- KPI cards for last scan size and quarantine count
- Pie of quarantine threat types for a posture read
- Bar of top brute-force IPs for fast denylist decisions
- Area trend of quarantines per week as an early warning surface
- Filters carry between the table view and the chart cards on the same dataset
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall (GOTMLS)
Malware posture as a dashboard
Render scan history, quarantine entries and brute-force logs as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards. Security leads see the shape of the install, not a tabbed settings UI.
Filters span table and chart
Filter to a single threat type or a single IP and both the chart cards and the underlying quarantine table stay in sync on the same dataset.
Shareable incident timeline
Export the quarantine rows behind a card as CSV, or share the dashboard as a read-only URL. Post-mortems get a real timeline instead of pasted scan screenshots.
Audience
Who builds Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall charts dashboards with SleekView
Solo site owners
Watch a single KPI for last-scan size and the weekly quarantine area. A clean site stays predictable, a sudden jump is a prompt to investigate before things spread.
Agency security teams
Run a portfolio dashboard across client sites: KPI of files scanned, pie of threats, bar of brute-force IPs, area of quarantines. Each account gets a quarterly health snapshot anyone can read.
Incident responders
Pin a filtered dashboard for the affected site, scoped to the last 14 days. The quarantine pie and weekly trend become the timeline a post-mortem can reference directly.
The bigger picture
Why a scanner and firewall need a measurable surface
GOTMLS is the kind of plugin that gets installed during a panic and then never opens again. The scanner runs, the quarantine fills with a few false positives and a few real catches, the brute-force firewall quietly rejects thousands of login attempts a week. None of that activity is visible unless someone clicks through three settings tabs.
SleekView Charts changes the default. The scan history becomes a KPI. The quarantine becomes a pie.
The brute-force log becomes a bar of source IPs and an area trend that turns slow-burn compromises into a visible shape. A solo site owner gets a number to anchor on. An agency security lead turns a screenshot review into a live link a client can open.
An incident responder gets a real timeline instead of pieced-together log scrolls. Same plugin, same scans, same blocks, but a surface that respects how a security review actually works.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall (GOTMLS)
GOTMLS's scan-history options, its quarantine entries and its brute-force block log. Scan date, file count, threat type, source IP and block timestamp. Nothing else and no external services.
 No. Scan logic, signature updates, quarantine actions and brute-force key checks stay with GOTMLS. SleekView Charts only reads what the plugin already produced.
 Yes. Group by scan_date with an Area or Line card and a Count aggregation to see quarantines per week. A flat line is a clean site, a step change is a prompt to investigate.
 Yes. Group by source_ip on a Bar card to see which IPs are generating the most failed logins. Combine with a date filter to focus on a particular attack window.
 Yes. The dashboard can be scoped to a single site or run across every site in a network, pulling each site's GOTMLS data in turn. A network-wide malware posture audit becomes one dashboard.
 No. The plugin still owns scanning, quarantine actions and brute-force decisions. SleekView Charts gives that data a readable, shareable surface.
 No. Charts read scan history and quarantine entries inside the admin, on demand. They do not run during a scan and have no role in the brute-force request path.
 Yes. Any filtered set behind a chart card exports to CSV with the same columns the table view would show. Useful when handing a quarantine list to a developer for cleanup.
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