WordPress Query Monitor Plugin Crosses 10,000 Downloads

The Query Monitor plugin was released by John Blackbourn in late November of 2013 and became an instant hit with WordPress developers. It’s racked up 25 five-star reviews on WordPress.org and today crossed the 10,000 download mark, which doesn’t even factor in the number of times the Github repo has been cloned.

reviews

Query Monitor is without a doubt the most comprehensive debugging plugin for WordPress, often replacing multiple plugins developers previously combined to try to get the same tools. Its features are too long to list, but suffice it to say that it offers a solid overview of database queries, hooks that are being fired, theme template information, HTTP Requests, Redirects and much more.

qm

If you use it on a community site, there’s a separate extension that will add bbPress and BuddyPress conditionals to Query Monitor’s output.

The plugin is updated quite often and the most recent 2.6.6 release adds more robust support for alternative database drivers (including mysqli in core). Nearly every topic in the plugin’s support queue is marked as resolved and John Blackbourn is very responsive to issues and questions on Github. It’s easy to see why Query Monitor has so quickly become a must-have debugging plugin for WordPress developers.

If you haven’t yet tried it, you can download Query Monitor from WordPress.org. Site admins and multisite super admins will have access to its output in the admin bar.

7

7 responses to “WordPress Query Monitor Plugin Crosses 10,000 Downloads”

  1. I’ve used it for a long time and attest to it’s awesomeness. Before QM I always installed and activated Debug Bar, now I install DebugBar but I don’t activate it unless I actually need it for something (rare). QM get’s me everything I normally need.

    Come to think of it though, we need some good blog posts about actually using it for all the various things it can help diagnose…

  2. To my untrained eye, Query Monitor looks like it provides a wealth of information. Unfortunately, I’m not 100% what I’m looking for when I look at QM’s output.

    For example:

    Page generation time: What’s a good time score to shoot for?
    Peak memory usage: What’s average? What’s good?
    Database query time: Am I slow? What’s fast look like?
    Database queries: How many is too many? How many is awesome?

    etc.

    It would be super helpful to see someone put together a basic “how to use Query Monitor” post to help people score and optimize their sites.

Leave a Reply to jb510 Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Newsletter

Subscribe Via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Discover more from WP Tavern

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading