SleekView Charts for WP Limit Login Attempts
WP Limit Login Attempts stops brute-force logins and records failed attempts with IPs, usernames, and timestamps. SleekView Charts shapes that history into a configurable dashboard.
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Lockout history is too useful to leave in a paginated log
WP Limit Login Attempts keeps the login form narrow. Every failed attempt and lockout decision is captured: IP, user_login attempted, timestamp, and the gateway that took the hit. The native admin shows these as a paginated list, which is reasonable for one-off review and limited for any cross-attempt analysis.
SleekView reads the lockout dataset directly. Charts then group by IP, by attempted username, by gateway, and by date. A Number card counts lockouts today; a Pie shows gateway mix; a Bar ranks IPs by activity; an Area tracks lockouts per day across the audit window.
The plugin keeps owning the lockout decision and the captcha logic. SleekView only adds the aggregation layer, so trends, rankings, and KPIs become visible inside WordPress.
Workflow
From WP Limit Login Attempts logs to chart cards in four steps
Connect the lockout dataset
Pick the columns
Add chart cards
Save the dashboard
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from WP Limit Login Attempts data
Lockouts today
Count
Gateway mix
Count
group by gateway
Top source IPs
Count
group by ip
Lockouts per day
Count
group by timestamp
Comparison
Default WP Limit Login Attempts reporting vs SleekView Charts
Default WP Limit Login Attempts log screen
- The log screen paginates lockouts row by row.
- Top-IP rankings are not surfaced as a chart.
- Per-day or per-hour lockout trends need CSV exports.
- Gateway breakdowns between login form and XML-RPC have no chart.
- Compliance-friendly summaries require spreadsheets.
SleekView Charts
- Reads the WP Limit Login Attempts log table directly with no parser layer.
- IP, username, gateway, and timestamp all chartable as groupBy keys.
- Number, Pie, Bar, Area, Line, Radar, and Radial cards per dashboard.
- Aggregations cover count, sum, average, minimum, and maximum.
- Saved dashboards share one dataset with Table and Kanban views.
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for WP Limit Login Attempts
Daily brute-force snapshot
Number cards answer the morning question about lockout volume without opening the plugin's screens.
Attacker rankings
Horizontal bars of top IPs and usernames inform safelist and blocklist decisions with evidence.
Trend awareness
Area and Line cards over timestamp show whether attacks are background noise or a coordinated campaign.
Audience
Who builds WP Limit Login Attempts charts dashboards with SleekView
Site owners
One dashboard answers the morning 'are we still being hammered' question with KPIs and trend cards.
Maintenance agencies
Per-client dashboards report how WP Limit Login Attempts is performing during the billing period.
Compliance reviewers
Audit-window area chart of lockouts becomes the brute-force evidence in the security report.
The bigger picture
A lockout plugin earns its keep when its data is visible
WP Limit Login Attempts is a focused tool: count failures, lock the door, log the row. That focus is also why its admin presents the data row by row. Anyone wanting a top-IP ranking or a per-day trend has to either look line by line or export CSVs.
SleekView Charts removes the export step by reading the same lockout table the plugin already maintains and rendering chart cards the team configures per dashboard. The plugin keeps owning lockouts; the security team gets daily KPIs, attacker rankings, and trend lines in one screen, so the decision to tighten or loosen policy is made on real numbers.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for WP Limit Login Attempts
Yes. The core lockout log exists in both. Premium adds more metadata which becomes additional groupBy columns for the chart cards.
 No. Charts read the lockout table only at admin request time. The plugin's hot path for failure counting is untouched.
 Yes if the plugin records safelist matches in the same log. A reason filter breaks them out as a separate card.
 Yes if the plugin's GeoIP feature writes country into a column. The country column becomes a groupBy for Pie, Bar, and Radar cards.
 As long as the plugin keeps them in the database. The plugin's retention setting controls the dashboard's lookback window.
 No. WP Limit Login Attempts still owns enforcement, captchas, and policy. SleekView only adds aggregation.
 Yes. The dataset behind every chart is the same one Table view reads, so a CSV export is one click away.
 Yes per-site. Each site sees its own lockout table; charts are scoped to the site the user is currently administering.
 Pricing
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