restrict installation of specific paid plugins/themes for WordPress
There should be the possibility to limit access to WordPress plugins/themes per a service plan.
Released as “Blocklist” feature in WordPress Toolkit 5.6.0 https://docs.plesk.com/release-notes/obsidian/change-log/#wordpress-toolkit-5.6.0
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IG
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Anonymous commented
Ok, as this feature request was from a chat of my own, and not very well articulated here, I would like to clarify it now.
The idea is to be able to create sets that are available to customers based on their subscription plan. Perhaps a use case would be the best way to illustrate this.
I have a number of premium plugins that I provide to customers as part of their plans. The plugins they get are based on the plan they have.
So, I create set "A" with a set of say 5 premium plugins. Then I create set "B" with those 4 plugins, plus 5 additional plugins.
I want Basic members to use set "A" and not have access to set "B". Conversely, I want Advanced Members to use set "B" and not be able to access set "A". So users can only access the plugin/theme set that goes with their plan.
Of course, this does not block installation of any plugin. Users can still install any plugin whether free, or premium. Thye just need to provide their own license for premium products.
I hopw that clarifies things a bit. -
Anonymous commented
Ok, as this feature request was from a chat of my own, and not very well articulated here, I would like to clarify it now.
The idea is to be able to create sets that are available to customers based on their subscription plan. Perhaps a use case would be the best way to illustrate this.
I have a number of premium plugins that I provide to customers as part of their plans. The plugins they get are based on the plan they have.
So, I create set "A" with a set of say 5 premium plugins. Then I create set "B" with those 4 plugins, plus 5 additional plugins.
I want Basic members to use set "A" and not have access to set "B". Conversely, I want Advanced Members to use set "B" and not be able to access set "A". So users can only access the plugin/theme set that goes with their plan.
Of course, this does not block installation of any plugin. Users can still install any plugin whether free, or premium. They just need to provide their own license for premium products.
I hopw that clarifies things a bit.