SleekView Charts for BackWPup
BackWPup records every job run with destination, duration, size, and outcome. SleekView Charts reads that history and turns it into the reliability dashboard the paginated log was never designed to be.
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Job runs as a reliability dashboard
BackWPup is one of the longest-running backup plugins in WordPress, with broad support for files, databases, and a long list of storage destinations (Amazon S3, FTP, Dropbox, Microsoft Azure, Rackspace, Amazon Glacier, and more). The plugin records each run in detail, but the default UI presents that history as a paginated log designed for occasional review rather than ongoing operations.
SleekView Charts reads BackWPup's job and log data and renders it as a configurable dashboard. Number cards show successful runs this month, jobs over an hour, and total size shipped. A donut splits the destination mix across configured providers. Bar cards rank outcomes per destination and break down job type (DB only, files only, full). Area cards trace duration over time so scheduling drift becomes visible weeks before someone misses a backup.
Every card reads the records BackWPup already writes, so the plugin still owns the schedule, the destinations, and the archives. The dashboard is a read on top, which is exactly the right shape for backup observability on a site that depends on BackWPup running quietly in the background.
Workflow
From BackWPup logs to a charts dashboard
Connect to BackWPup data
Switch to the Charts view
Pin the reliability dashboard
Share with operations
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from BackWPup data
Successful runs last 30 days
Count
Destination mix
Count
group by destination
Outcomes by destination
Count
group by destination
Duration trend
Average(duration_seconds)
group by last_run
Comparison
Default BackWPup reporting vs SleekView Charts
Default BackWPup screens
- Job and log screens are paginated with limited filters
- No success rate or failure rate at a glance
- No destination mix or job-type breakdown
- No duration or size trend over time
- Saved views and filtered exports are not standard
SleekView Charts
- Number cards for successful runs, jobs over an hour, total size shipped
- Donut for destination concentration across providers
- Stacked bar for outcomes broken down per destination
- Area chart for duration or size over time
- All cards filter together by destination, job type, or date range
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for BackWPup
Reliability on one screen
Replace the paginated log with a dashboard that answers reliability questions directly. Success rate, destination mix, and duration trend sit on a single screen instead of behind several pages of run records.
Schedule drift early
An area chart of average duration over the last 90 days exposes the slow regression notification emails never catch. The ten-minutes-a-week creep becomes visible weeks before the schedule misses.
DB and file jobs separable
Job type becomes a first-class filter on the dashboard, so DB-only runs and full runs are reportable independently. The two have different failure modes; treating them as one number hides the answer to both.
Audience
Who builds BackWPup charts dashboards with SleekView
High-stakes sites
Verifying backup health weekly is non-negotiable. The dashboard makes the audit a five-minute job because the answer is a saved view rather than a fresh investigation through paginated logs.
Agencies
Apply one Charts template across the whole portfolio for consistent backup reporting. Every retainer review opens the same dashboard shape with the same filters and the same KPI cards.
Internal IT
Surface backup metrics in WordPress so non-developers can confirm health without a separate tool. A green or red number card replaces a request for an engineer to investigate.
The bigger picture
Backups need ongoing review, charts make that review sustainable
Backup plugins fail in two characteristic ways: they fail loudly (one-time crash, easy to catch) or they fail quietly (slow drift, missed runs, partial uploads, expiring credentials). The loud failures are usually solved within a day; the quiet ones accumulate for weeks until someone needs a restore that is not there. The default BackWPup UI was designed in an era when occasional spot checks were enough, but the modern operational reality on serious WordPress sites involves scheduled reviews, comparisons across destinations, and visibility for non-developer stakeholders.
SleekView Charts treats BackWPup's job and log data as a first-class data source so the questions ops teams actually ask (which jobs are slipping, which destinations are flaky this month, when was our last successful Full to Amazon S3) become saved dashboard views rather than research projects. That converts backup management from a periodic crisis into a routine, which is the only sustainable mode for any site that depends on it.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for BackWPup
No. BackWPup runs the jobs, manages destinations, and writes the logs exactly as configured. SleekView Charts reads that data and renders aggregate views. Installing or removing the Charts view has no effect on backup behavior.
 No. Job triggers stay with BackWPup for safety. The Charts view focuses on visibility and audits; the right job can be identified quickly from the dashboard, then a click jumps to BackWPup's screen for the actual trigger.
 Yes. The charts read whatever metadata BackWPup records, regardless of destination. Amazon S3, FTP, Dropbox, Microsoft Azure, Rackspace Cloud Files, SugarSync, and Amazon Glacier all appear identically as filterable values.
 Yes. Per-site scope is respected. On multisite each site's BackWPup data is exposed in its own dashboard, or a network-wide view can roll up runs across blogs when backup health is a network-level concern.
 Yes. The job-type column makes DB-only, files-only, and full jobs first-class dimensions. Save a dashboard view for DB jobs, another for full backups, and operate on each separately according to its actual failure modes.
 Negligible. Chart aggregations are computed on demand against the existing indexes BackWPup maintains for its own screens, with results cached between renders. There are no background jobs, no scheduled exports, and no impact on backup runs.
 Yes. Each card supports CSV export of its underlying aggregation. Export the duration trend for a host capacity conversation or the destination donut for a quarterly portfolio audit.
 If you run BackWPup Pro, the additional metadata it records (encrypted backups, differential runs, premium destinations like Google Drive or Amazon Glacier APIs) appears as additional dimensions in the charts automatically. SleekView is plugin-agnostic and reads whatever BackWPup writes, free or Pro.
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