Since the Members Plugin was Fked'up by MemberPress this is a Fork of the original Justin Tadlock plugin, I've changed the name so it doesn't update automatically to the MemberPress version
Members is a plugin that extends your control over your blog. It's a user, role, and capability management plugin that was created to make WordPress a more powerful CMS.
It puts you in control over permissions on your site by providing a user interface (UI) for WordPress' powerful role and cap system, which is traditionally only available to developers who know how to code this by hand.
- Role Manager: Allows you to edit, create, and delete roles as well as capabilities for these roles.
- Multiple User Roles: Give one, two, or even more roles to any user.
- Explicitly Deny Capabilities: Deny specific caps to specific user roles.
- Clone Roles: Build a new role by cloning an existing role.
- Content Permissions: Gives you control over which users (by role) have access to post content.
- Shortcodes: Shortcodes to control who has access to content.
- Widgets: A login form widget and users widget to show in your theme's sidebars.
- Private Site: You can make your site and its feed completely private if you want.
If you need professional plugin support from me, the plugin author, you can access the support forums at Theme Hybrid, which is a professional WordPress help/support site where I handle support for all my plugins and themes for a community of 75,000+ users (and growing).
This project is licensed under the GNU GPL, version 2 or later.
2009 – 2018 © Justin Tadlock.
This is the most important thing to understand with this plugin. It's so important that I took the time out of my day to write a complete tutorial on understanding this: Users, roles, and capabilities in WordPress. If you don't understand this concept, you won't understand what this plugin does. This is not a concept created by the plugin. This is how it's done in WordPress.
I highly recommend reading that blog post, but here's the short version:
- Users are people that have registered on your site. I'm sure you already knew that. In WordPress, users are assigned a specific role. This role defines what the user can/can't do.
- Roles are a way of grouping users. Each user on your site will have a specific role. Roles are a set of capabilities. It is important to note that roles are not hierarchical. For example, "Administrator" is not higher than "Subscriber" in WordPress. You could literally give the Subscriber role more capabilities than the Administrator role. It's very important that you grasp this concept.
- Capabilities give meaning to roles. It's a permissions system. They're a way of saying a role can do something or a role can't do something (e.g., Role A can
edit_posts
, Role B can'tactivate_plugins
, etc.).
This plugin is set up to have a components-based system. The reason for this is that I don't want to stick everyone with a bunch of features they don't need. There's no point in using the Role Manger feature if all you need is just a login widget and some shortcodes. So, it's a use-only-what-you-want system.
To activate certain features, look for the "Members" link under your "Settings" menu while in your WordPress admin. When on the new page, you'll be able to select the features you want to use.
I recommend at least activating Role Manager feature. It is at the heart of this plugin, and many other features will likely require its use in some form.
The Role Manager feature allows you to edit and add new roles as well as add and remove both default capabilities and custom capabilities from roles. It is an extremely powerful system.
Any changes you make to users and roles using this feature are permanent changes. What I mean by this is that if you deactivate or uninstall this plugin, the changes won't revert to their previous state. This plugin merely provides a user interface for you to make changes directly to your WordPress database. Please use this feature wisely.
This feature can be both a blessing and a curse, so I'm going to ask that you use it wisely. Use extreme caution when assigning new capabilities to roles. You wouldn't want to grant Average Joe the edit_plugins
capability, for example.
You can find the settings page for this feature under the "Users" menu. It will be labeled "Roles". When clicking on the menu item, you'll be take to a screen similar to the edit post/page screen, only it'll be for editing a role.
In the "Edit Capabilities" box on that screen, you simply have to tick the checkbox next to the capability you want to grant or deny.
Every capability can have one of three "states" for a role. The role can be granted, denied, or simply not have a capability.
- Granting a capability to a role means that users of that role will have permission to perform the given capability.
- Denying a capability means that the role's users are explicitly denied permission.
- A role that is neither granted nor denied a capability simply doesn't have that capability.
Note: When assigning multiple roles to a single user that have a conflicting capability (e.g., granted publish_posts
and denied published_posts
cap), it's best to enable the denied capabilities override via the Members Settings screen. This will consistently make sure that denied capabilities always overrule granted capabilities. With this setting disabled, WordPress will decide based on the last role given to the user, which can mean for extremely inconsistent behavior depending on the roles a user has.
Suppose the Super role is granted these capabilities:
edit_posts
Then, suppose the Duper role is granted these capabilities:
publish_posts
edit_products
Now, further suppose User A has the Super role because you want them to edit posts. However, you also want User A to be able to edit products so you assign them the Duper role. Suddenly, User A is granted the following capabilities:
edit_posts
publish_posts
edit_products
For whatever reason you don't ever want users with the Super role to be able to publish posts. Now you have a problem. One way to solve this is to create a third role with just the caps that you want and give that single role to User A. However, that becomes cumbersome on larger sites with many roles.
Instead, you could explicitly deny the publish posts capability to the Super role. When you do that, User A is only granted the following capabilities:
edit_posts
edit_products
And is denied the following capabilities:
publish_posts
You can assign a user more than one role by going to that edit user screen in the admin and locating the "Roles" section. There will be a checkbox for every role.
You can also multiple roles to a user from the add new user screen.
On the "Users" screen in the admin, you can bulk add or remove single roles from multiple users.
The Content Permissions feature adds an additional meta box on the post editing screen.
For any public post type (posts, pages, etc.), you'll see a "Content Permissions" meta box on the post editing screen. This meta box allows you to select which roles can view the content of the post/page. If no roles are selected, anyone can view the content. The post author, users that can edit the post, and any users of roles with the restrict_content
capability can always view the post, regardless of their role.
You can add a custom error message for individual posts. Otherwise, the error message will default to whatever you have set under the plugin settings.
Big important note: This feature only blocks the post content (that's what you write in the post editor), post excerpt, and post comments. It does not block anything else.
There are several shortcodes that you can use in your post editor or any shortcode-ready area..
The [members_access]
shortcode is for hiding content from particular roles and capabilities. You need to wrap your content when using this shortcode:
[members_access role="editor"]Hide this content from everyone but editors.[/members_access]
The plugin accepts the following parameters (mixing and matching won't work):
role
- A single or comma-separated list of roles.capability
- A single or comma-separated list of capabilities.user_name
- A single or comma-separated list of usernames.user_id
- A single or comma-separated list of user IDs.user_email
- A single or comma-separated list of user email addresses.
Parameters:
capability
: A capability that has been assigned to a role.role
: A user role from WordPress or one that you've created.operator
: Accepts!
to negate the role or capability.
Note that capability
and role
parameters aren't used in conjunction. The code first checks for the capability (if input) then checks for the role (if input).
To check for multiple capabilities or multiple roles, simply add a comma between each capability/role. For example, the following code checks for an editor or administrator:
[members_access role="administrator,editor"]Show this content to administrators or editors only.[/members_access]
To check that the user does not have a role:
[members_access role="administrator" operator="!"]Show this content to anyone who is not an administrator.[/members_access]
The [members_logged_in]
shortcode should be used to check if a user is currently logged into the site. If not, the content will be hidden.
[members_logged_in]This content is only shown to logged-in users.[/members_logged_in]
This shortcode has no parameters.
The [members_not_logged_in]
shortcode should be used to show content to users who are not logged into the site. If the user is logged in, the content will be hidden.
[members_not_logged_in]This content is only shown to logged-out visitors.[/members_not_logged_in]
The [members_login_form]
shortcode is used to show a login form on the page.
[members_login_form /]
This shortcode has no parameters.
The widgets component provides easy-to-use widgets for your site. They can be used in any WordPress widget area (provided by your theme). Currently, there's the Login Form and Users widgets.
The Login Form gives you a login form. It's a mixture of a text widget and login form. It can also show your avatar.
The Users widget allows you to list users in any widget area. It's based off the get_users()
function, so all of the parameters are the same.
The Private Site features makes sure that only logged-in users can see anything on your site. If a user visits your site and is not logged in, they are immediately redirected to your wp-login.php
(WordPress login) page.
You also have the option of disabling the viewing of feed content and setting an error message for feed items.
In plugins and your theme template files, you might sometimes need to check if the currently logged in user has permission to do something. We do this by using the WordPress function current_user_can()
. The basic format looks like this:
<?php if ( current_user_can( 'capability_name' ) ) echo 'This user can do something'; ?>
For a more practical situation, let's say you created a new capability called read_pages
. Well, you might want to hide the content within your page.php
template by adding this:
<?php if ( current_user_can( 'read_pages ' ) ) : ?>
<?php the_content(); ?>
<?php endif; ?>
Only users with a role that has the read_pages
capability will be able to see the content.
Before beginning, I want to note that you really shouldn't do this. It's better to check against capabilities. However, for those times when you need to break the rules, you can do so like:
if ( members_user_has_role( $user_id, $role ) )
Or, you can check against the current user:
if ( members_current_user_has_role( $role ) )
Some plugins and themes might rely on the old user level system in WordPress. These were deprecated in WordPress version 2.1 and should not be used at all. WordPress still has minimal legacy support for these, but I highly suggest contacting your theme/plugin author if user levels are being used.
By default, the levels aren't shown. They still exist, but are tucked away behind the scenes. While not recommended, if you need to control who has what level (levels are just capabilities), add this to your plugin or your theme's functions.php
:
add_filter( 'members_remove_old_levels', '__return_false' );
If you're a plugin developer with custom capabilities, beginning with version 2.0.0 of Members, you can register your capabilities with Members. Essentially, this allows users to see your capabilities in a nicely-formatted, human-readable form (e.g., Publish Posts
instead of publish_posts
). This also means that it can be translated so that it's easier to understand for users who do not read English.
add_action( 'members_register_caps', 'th_register_caps' );
function th_register_caps() {
members_register_cap(
'your_cap_name',
array(
'label' => __( 'Your Capability Label', 'example-textdomain' ),
'group' => 'example'
)
);
}
The group
argument is not required, but will allow you to assign the capability to a cap group.
Members groups capabilities so that users can more easily find them when editing roles. If your plugin has multiple capabilities, you should consider creating a custom cap group.
add_action( 'members_register_cap_groups', 'th_register_cap_groups' );
function th_register_cap_groups() {
members_register_cap_group(
'your_group_name',
array(
'label' => __( 'Your Group Label', 'example-textdomain' ),
'caps' => array(),
'icon' => 'dashicons-admin-generic',
'priority' => 10
)
);
}
The arguments for the array are:
label
- An internationalized text label for your group.caps
- An array of initial capabilities to add to your group.icon
- The name of one of core WP's dashicons or a custom class (would need to be styled by your plugin in this case).priority
- The priority of your group compared to other groups.10
is the default.
Note that custom post types are automatically registered as groups with Members. So, if you want to do something custom with that, you simply need to unregister the group before registering your own.
members_unregister_cap_group( "type-{$post_type}" );