SleekView Charts for BlockCountry
SleekView Charts reads BlockCountry's log table plus the wp_options country list it maintains, and renders blocked hits, top source countries, blocked URLs and day-by-day cadence as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards inside WP admin.
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Geo-block data is already in your database. Read it like one.
BlockCountry by webence drops a country-level firewall onto WordPress. Admins pick which countries can hit the site, which countries can hit the admin and which can leave comments, and the plugin enforces the policy on every request against the bundled GeoIP database. The blocked attempts get written to a log table so admins can later see what was actually rejected.
SleekView Charts reads that same log table directly. A Number card counts blocked hits in the last 24 hours. A Pie splits the blocks by source country so the noisiest source becomes obvious at a glance. A Bar groups by requested URL so an admin can see whether the blocks are landing on wp-login, on the homepage or on a particular form endpoint. An Area trends blocked hits per day so an unusual spike is visible before it gets buried under newer log rows.
The plugin still owns the policy: which country list is active, whether admin paths are blocked, whether the geo lookup falls back. SleekView only surfaces the data BlockCountry already produces, turns it into a dashboard a non-technical site owner can read, and keeps WP-native filters between the chart view and the underlying log table.
Workflow
Turn BlockCountry's log table into a dashboard
Read the blocked log
Compose the chart cards
Save and scope the dashboard
Share with stakeholders
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from BlockCountry data
Blocked hits, last 24h
Count
Blocks by source country
Count
group by country_code
Top blocked URLs
Count
group by request_uri
Blocked hits per day
Count
group by block_date
Comparison
Default BlockCountry log screen vs SleekView Charts
Default BlockCountry log screen
- Log screen is a paginated list, no aggregate view of the block mix
- No visual split of which country is producing the most attempts
- No daily trend to spot a credential stuffing wave early
- Top blocked URLs require manual sorting through pages of rows
- No way to share a read-only block summary with a client or reviewer
SleekView Charts
- KPI card for blocked hits in any time window
- Pie split of source countries against your active block list
- Bar of the noisiest target URLs so login and form abuse are obvious
- Area trend of blocks per day to catch attack waves early
- Filters carry between the table view and the chart cards on the same log dataset
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for BlockCountry
Geo log as a dashboard
Render BlockCountry's blocked rows as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards. Site owners read the shape of geo-blocked traffic without scrolling through paginated log screens.
Filters span table and chart
Filter to a single country code, a single path or a single date range, and both the chart cards and the underlying triage table stay in sync on the same dataset.
Share a read-only snapshot
Send a security reviewer or a client a URL of the geo-block dashboard. Reports stop being screenshots and become a live, capability-gated view of what BlockCountry rejected.
Audience
Who builds BlockCountry charts dashboards with SleekView
Site owners
Watch a single KPI of blocked hits and a country pie to confirm the rules are working. Tune the country list when a particular region disappears from the chart for a normal user reason.
Agency security leads
Run a portfolio view across client sites: pie by country, bar by attacked URL, area by day. The shape of geo-blocked traffic becomes part of a quarterly client report instead of an internal-only chore.
Login hardening teams
Pin a filtered dashboard for request_uri = /wp-login.php and see exactly which countries account for the login abuse. Combine with a 2FA rollout dashboard for an end-to-end view.
The bigger picture
Why a country firewall needs a dashboard
BlockCountry's whole pitch is simple: most sites do not need traffic from most countries, so block the ones that only generate noise. The plugin does that job well, and quietly writes the rejected attempts into a log table that almost nobody looks at after the first week. A paginated log is hard to read at scale.
Twenty thousand rows is a lot of pages. SleekView Charts turns those same rows into a Number card, a country pie, a URL bar and a daily trend. A site owner gets one KPI to anchor on.
A security lead sees the country mix shift the day after a credential stuffing campaign starts. An agency turns a screenshot-driven quarterly review into a live link a client can open at any time. Same data BlockCountry already collects, but a surface that respects how a non-technical reader actually thinks.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for BlockCountry
Only BlockCountry's own log table plus the wp_options entries that define the active country lists. Country code, IP, requested URL, block reason and timestamp. No external GeoIP lookups beyond what BlockCountry already performs.
 No. The plugin still owns enforcement: which lists are active, which paths are scoped and how the GeoIP fallback works. SleekView Charts only reads what BlockCountry already logged, so the firewall behaviour itself is untouched.
 Yes. The dashboard can be scoped to a single site or run across every site in a network, pulling each site's BlockCountry log table in turn. A multisite-wide geo-block audit becomes one dashboard instead of a long click-through.
 Yes. Filter the dashboard to country_code = the ISO code you care about and the KPI, URL bar and daily trend all narrow to that country. Useful for justifying or un-blocking a region after a policy review.
 Yes. Group by block_date with an Area or Line card and a Count aggregation to see blocks per day or week. Spikes correlate with credential stuffing waves or list expansions, so the timeline is the early warning.
 No. The plugin still owns the country lists, the rules and the request-time enforcement. SleekView Charts is a reading surface for the data BlockCountry already produces, not a re-implementation of geo-blocking.
 No. The charts run inside the admin on demand and read the existing log table. They have no role in the request-time path BlockCountry uses, so visitor-facing performance is identical.
 Yes. Any filtered set behind a chart card exports to CSV with the same columns the table view would show. Security reviewers typically export the per-country or per-URL set as part of a quarterly tightening pass.
 Pricing
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