Automatic Updates For Private And Commercial Plugins

Last updated on June 26, 2015.

Since time immemorial, only plugins hosted in the official WordPress.org plugin directory have supported automatic updates. Now, I’ve written a PHP library that you can use to add automatic update capabilities to any plugin. Public, private and commercial plugins alike – all can now enjoy the benefits of automatic update notifications and one-click upgrades.

The custom update checker integrates closely with the upgrade system already built into WordPress, producing a seamless user experience. Observe :

An upgrade notice for a privately hosted plugin.

An upgrade notice for a privately hosted plugin.

The version information window with placeholder data

The version information window with placeholder data

Download

License

This library is released under the MIT License and is distributed free of charge. If you find it useful, consider making a donation.

Quick-start Guide

This section describes the quickest way to get automatic updates working for your plugin. Here’s what you’ll need to do: create a metadata file for your plugin, host it somewhere publicly accessible, and tell the update checker where to find it.

Lets start with the metadata. Copy the JSON code below into a new file and replace the placeholder values with your plugin’s info.

{
    "name" : "My Cool Plugin",
    "slug" : "my-cool-plugin",
    "download_url" : "https://example.com/plugins/my-cool-plugin.zip",
    "version" : "2.0",
    "author" : "John Smith",
    "sections" : {
        "description" : "Plugin description here. Basic HTML allowed."
    }
}

(This is the minimum amount of data required to make automatic updates work. In most cases, you will probably want to add a couple more fields. See the metadata docs for a full list.)

Most of the fields should be pretty self-explanatory, with one possible exception – the “slug”. WordPress expects all plugins that support automatic updates to have a unique textual identifier called the “slug”. Normally, slugs are assigned by the official plugin directory. For a private/commercial plugin that’s hosted elsewhere you’ll have to make something up. If unsure, just use the plugin’s file name without the “.php” extension (my-cool-plugin/my-cool-plugin.php becomes my-cool-plugin).

Upload the metadata file you just created to your web server. It doesn’t matter where exactly you put the file or how you name it. The important thing is for its URL to be accessible from wherever someone might install your plugin.

Next, copy the “plugin-update-checker” directory from the client library archive to your plugin’s directory. Then fire up your favourite code editor and add the following lines to the top of your plugin file:

require 'plugin-update-checker/plugin-update-checker.php';
$MyUpdateChecker = PucFactory::buildUpdateChecker(
    'https://example.com/path/to/metadata.json',
    __FILE__,
    'your-chosen-slug'
);

If you followed my advice and used the plugin’s file name as the slug, you can omit the third parameter of the PucFactory::buildUpdateChecker() call.

Tip: Sometimes you’ll run into a situation where another active plugin is also using this update checker. As a result, there could be several different versions of the library loaded at the same time. The above code snippet will always give you the latest available version. This can be a problem if your plugin expects an older version and is not API-compatible with the latest version.

To use a specific version of the update checker (e.g. the one included with your plugin), instantiate the PluginUpdateChecker_x_y class directly. Replace x and y with the major and minor version numbers:

//Use version 2.0 of the update checker.
require 'plugin-update-checker/plugin-update-checker.php';
$MyUpdateChecker = new PluginUpdateChecker_2_0 (
    'https://example.com/path/to/metadata.json',
    __FILE__,
    'your-chosen-slug'
);

And that, believe it or not, is it.

The PluginUpdateChecker class will handle the rest. It’ll check the metadata file every 12 hours and, if it discovers that a new version has been released, twiddle the right bits in the undocumented WP API to make it show up as a standard upgrade notification in the “Plugins” tab. Assuming you’ve provided a valid download_url, users will be able to install the update with a single click.

Tip: When creating the ZIP file for an update, put all plugin files inside a directory. The directory name should match the plugin slug. Do not put the files at the root of the ZIP archive – it can cause subtle bugs and errors when someone ties to install the update.

The rest of this post will be devoted to a more in-depth discussion of the update checker class and the metadata format.

The PluginUpdateChecker class

This class is the core of the update checker. It’s also the only part of the updater that you should need to deal with unless you decide to  extend the library yourself.

Class constructor

All configuration settings should be specified by passing them to the PucFactory::buildUpdateChecker() factory method, or directly to the PluginUpdateChecker constructor. Both takes the following parameters:

  • $metadataUrl – The full URL of the plugin’s metadata file.
  • $pluginFile – The path to the plugin’s file. In most cases you can simply use the __FILE__ constant here.
  • $slug – The plugin’s ‘slug’. If not specified, the filename part of $pluginFile (sans “.php”) will be used as the slug.
  • $checkPeriod – How often to check for updates (in hours). Defaults to checking every 12 hours. Set to zero to disable automatic update checks.
  • $optionName – Where to store book-keeping info about updates. Defaults to “external_updates-$slug”.

checkForUpdates()

Manually trigger an update check. This is especially useful when you’ve disabled automatic checks by setting $checkPeriod (above) to zero. This method takes no parameters and returns nothing.

addQueryArgFilter($callback)

Register a callback for filtering query arguments. Whenever the update checker needs to retrieve the metadata file, it will first run each filter callback and attach the query arguments that they return to the metadata URL. This lets you pass arbitrary data to the server hosting the metadata. For example, commercial plugins could use it to implement some kind of authorization scheme where only users that have the right “key” get automatic updates.

The callback function will be passed an associative array of query arguments and should return a modified array. By default, the update checker will add these arguments to the metadata URL:

  • installed_version – set to the currently installed version of the plugin.
  • checking_for_updates – set to 1 if checking for updates, absent otherwise (i.e. when loading data for the “Plugin Information” box).

This method takes one parameter – the callback function.

addHttpRequestArgFilter($callback)

Register a callback for filtering the various options passed to the built-in helper function wp_remote_get that the update checker uses to periodically download plugin metadata. The callback function should take one argument – an associative array of arguments – and return a modified array or arguments. See the WP documentation on wp_remote_get for details about what arguments are available and how they work.

This method takes one parameter – the callback function.

addResultFilter($callback)

Register a callback for filtering plugin info retrieved from the metadata URL.

The callback function should take two arguments. If the metadata was retrieved successfully, the first argument passed will be an instance of PluginInfo (see the source for a description of this class). Otherwise, it will be NULL. The second argument will be the corresponding return value of wp_remote_get (see WP docs for details). The callback function should return a new or modified instance of PluginInfo or NULL.

This method takes one parameter – the callback function.

Metadata format

The automatic update system uses a JSON-based file format to describe plugins.  Essentially, the entire file is one big JSON-encoded object (AKA hash-table or associative array). Each field – or array key – represents a piece of information about the latest version of the plugin. The full description of all available fields is here.

For the sake of simplicity, both general metadata and update-related information are stored in the same file. If this is undesirable, you can replace the plain JSON file with a script that checks for the presence of the the “checking_for_updates” query parameter and emits just the update-related fields if its set to “1”.

Notes

Your plugin must be active for updates to work. The update checker is just another piece of PHP code loaded and run by your plugin, and it won’t be run if the plugin is inactive.

One consequence of this that may not be immediately obvious is that on a multisite installation updates will only show up if the plugin is active on the main site. This is because update notifications usually appear in the network admin, and only plugins active on the main site are loaded in that case. The main site of a WordPress network is the one that was created first and has the path “/” in the Sites -> All Sites list.

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496 Responses to “Automatic Updates For Private And Commercial Plugins”

  1. Jānis Elsts says:

    I don’t know, but take a look at the Plugin_Upgrader class in /wp-admin/includes/class-wp-upgrader.php. You might be able to figure something out.

  2. Jeff says:

    This is great man, thanks so much!
    Question is there a way that l can have wp-admin show a notification at the top of every page if an update for my plugin is available (kind’a like genesis theme does)?

  3. Jānis Elsts says:

    You can use the “admin_notices” or “all_admin_notices” actions to display a custom notice at the top of the admin. See this basic example and this more advanced one.

    You can retrieve update information by reading the “site_transient_update_plugins” transient. Something like this (not tested):

    $updates = get_transient('site_transient_update_plugins');
    $pluginFile = plugin_basename(__FILE__);
    if ( isset($updates->response[$pluginFile] ) {
        //An update is available.
    }
    
  4. Mark Bailey says:

    Hi,

    Thanks for this great system. It works beautifully, except that we are having one issue.

    The update notice doesn’t always show the correct new version number. For example, we start with version 1.2 of a test plugin. To test the update process, we change the new plugin to version 3.0, and change the metadata accordingly.

    WordPress shows that an update is available, but the notification says “See Version 2.0 details”. Why would it show version 2.0 instead of 3.0 (when the metadata file says 3.0)?

    Thanks,

    Mark

  5. Jānis Elsts says:

    Well, that “2.0” version number had to come from somewhere. Did you perhaps test with 2.0 instead of 3.0 first? The update checker might have cached the metadata somewhere.

  6. Jeff Rose says:

    Hey Jānis:

    I love this bit of code, it makes life so easy with plugin updates. Recently it has started throwing an error saying:

    Call to undefined function get_plugins()

    which is of course there (core WordPress) so it doesn’t make any sense. Any ideas why this is happening?

  7. Jānis Elsts says:

    That is especially strange since the library should automatically include the file that contains this core function – /wp-admin/includes/plugin.php – if the function is not defined (see line 188). The only way I can imagine it could fail is if the plugin.php was moved to a different location.

    Do you happen to have the full stack trace for that error?

  8. Jeff Rose says:

    With that comment, I realize you’ve updated the plugin! Which is awesome.

    So all I need to do is you, use the right version. LOL.

    Thanks for the reply.

  9. Milan says:

    Can we customize the plugin information box.
    Please reply me as soon as possible.

  10. Jānis Elsts says:

    You can customize its contents by editing the appropriate fields, such as “author”, “requires”, “tested” and so on. You can not, however, change its appearance and style.

  11. Kunal says:

    I am using tehclin library but with WP 3.3.2, the plugin details /plugin information is not getting populated. I have followed info.json format and can provide it for testing purposes.

    Please help!

  12. Kunal says:

    Sorry for the typos before!

    I am using the client library but with WP 3.3.2, the plugin details /plugin information is not getting populated. It comes as blank. I have followed info.json format and can provide it for testing purposes.

    clicking on “update automatically” does update the plugin and everything else seems to be working.

    Please help!

  13. Jānis Elsts says:

    Do you have error display turned off on your server? Turn it on and check the view information link again, maybe there’s a bug in the code that’s supposed to prepare the information for display.

  14. Ghost1227 says:

    I’m working on a much simpler update system at present for some of my commercial plugins, but I’ve run into a few issues. My script uses a custom function to display a notice when plugins can be updated, but does not allow automatic updating (intentionally). Problem is, I’m at a loss as the script tends to post the notice before the header is loaded, resulting in errors 🙁 My question… do you have any suggestions for me, and/or is your script capable of notifying when updates occur without allowing automatic updating. I’d like to be able to keep the actual updates to only people who have legitimately purchased through the site they are hosted on. Thanks!

  15. Jānis Elsts says:

    You can simply omit the download_url field from the metadata file and the script will display the update notification without the “update now” link. I use this approach myself in my commercial plugins.

  16. Ghost1227 says:

    That does work, and quite well… but one problem. While the ‘update now’ button in the details page doesn’t appear, the inline link on plugins.php does! Thoughts?

  17. Jānis Elsts says:

    That’s because it’s still using the cached metadata. Force an update check by calling checkForUpdates(), or just wait a few hours. The inline link should also disappear.

    In fact, it will probably have disappeared by the time you read this.

  18. Ghost1227 says:

    Actually, at the moment it’s not displaying anything… despite the current version being lower than the posted version. >_<

  19. Ghost1227 says:

    seems that state is always returning ‘undefined’

  20. Wayne McHugh says:

    Jānis, that is fabulous! It was so clean to incorporate. Classy piece of work!

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