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✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount

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.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView Charts dashboard for Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall (GOTMLS)

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

1

Read scan and firewall stores

SleekView detects GOTMLS and registers its scan-history option, quarantine entries and brute-force log as data sources. Columns auto-detect, so scan_date, threat_type, file_path and block_date become first-class chart fields.
2

Compose the chart cards

Pick Number, Pie, Bar, Area or Line cards. Group by threat_type, scan_date, source_ip or file_path, and aggregate as Count over quarantines and Sum or Average over scan duration.
3

Save and scope the dashboard

Name it ("Malware posture", "Brute-force triage") and gate it by WordPress capability so site owners, agencies and incident responders each see the right slice.
4

Share or export

Send a client a read-only URL of the dashboard or export the quarantine set to CSV. Incident reports get a real timeline instead of pasted screenshots of the Anti-Malware settings.

Sample dashboard

Charts you can build from Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall data

Each card below reads scan history, quarantine entries or the brute-force log that GOTMLS already maintains. Mix them into a malware posture dashboard, an incident triage cockpit or a per-site agency review.
Number · Default

Files scanned, last scan

Single KPI from GOTMLS's scan history reflecting the file count walked on the most recent run. Anchors the dashboard with proof the scanner is actually executing.
Count
Pie · Donut text

Quarantine by threat type

Splits quarantine items across known signatures, suspicious eval, base64 patterns and the rest. Surfaces which class of threat dominates the catches at a glance.
Count group by threat_type
Bar · Horizontal

Brute-force hits per IP

Brute-force blocks grouped by source IP. Repeat offenders become candidates for a host-level denylist or a deeper investigation.
Count group by source_ip
Area · Gradient

Quarantines per week

Time series of quarantined files per week. A quiet site stays flat, a compromised site shows a step change, so the trend acts as an early warning.
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.

 

Pricing

More than 1000+
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