GLOBUS Debug Control
Working with WP_DEBUG enabled often floods the screen with notices and deprecation warnings from third-party plugins and themes – things you neither wrote nor can fix. GLOBUS Debug Control lets you filter out the noise and focus on what actually matters.
All settings are available in Settings – GLOBUS Debug Control. The plugin provides eight tabs: Settings, WP_DEBUG, Error Log, Cron Tasks, Transients, Autoloaded, HTTP Log, and Constants. No code editing needed.
Settings tab
Choose which errors to see
Turn off specific PHP error types independently:
- Notices – informational messages that rarely indicate a real problem
- Deprecated – warnings about outdated functions, usually from third-party code
- Warnings – optional, keep them on if you are actively debugging
- Strict – PHP 7 strict standards messages (not applicable in PHP 8+)
Control error display
Three modes for showing errors on screen:
- Inherit – follows your
wp-config.phpsettings (default, non-intrusive) - On – always show errors, useful during active development
- Off – hide all errors from screen even if
WP_DEBUG_DISPLAYis on
Errors are always hidden automatically during AJAX requests, REST API calls, WP-Cron, and WP-CLI, so your API responses stay clean regardless of the display setting.
Error logging
Enable logging to capture errors in a file instead of (or in addition to) showing them on screen:
- Set a custom log file path (absolute or relative to
wp-content/) - Set a maximum log file size (1-100 MB); the file rotates automatically when the limit is reached
- Defaults to
wp-content/debug.logif no path is specified
Remove the php-error CSS class
When WordPress encounters a PHP error, it adds a php-error class to the <body> tag, which can break your page layout. This option removes it via both CSS and JavaScript so your front-end and admin look normal even in debug mode.
Early error interception (optional)
WordPress loads plugins in alphabetical order. If another plugin throws an error before GLOBUS Debug Control initialises, those errors will not be filtered. Enabling the MU-plugin dropin installs a small helper file into wp-content/mu-plugins/ that runs before any regular plugin, ensuring your filter settings apply from the very start of the request. The dropin is removed automatically when the plugin is deactivated or uninstalled.
WP_DEBUG tab
Toggle the five most important debug constants directly from the admin panel without editing wp-config.php:
WP_DEBUG– master debug switchWP_DEBUG_LOG– write errors to a log fileWP_DEBUG_DISPLAY– show errors on screenSCRIPT_DEBUG– use unminified core JS/CSSSAVEQUERIES– log all database queries
The plugin locates your wp-config.php automatically and patches it in place, adding the constant if it is missing or updating the existing value. Commented-out defines and block-comment sections are never touched. The current status of WP_DEBUG is always visible as a badge in the plugin header.
Error Log tab
Displays the contents of your debug.log file directly in the admin panel using a CodeMirror editor with line numbers. Lines are color-coded by severity: fatal/parse errors, warnings, notices/deprecations, and cron-related messages. The log is paginated (200 lines per page), supports live polling for new entries, and can be downloaded or cleared with one click. Large log files (over 2 MB) are read from the tail to keep memory usage low.
Cron Tasks tab
Lists all scheduled WordPress cron events with hook name, next run time, recurrence interval, and arguments. Summary cards show total events, overdue count, orphaned hooks, and duplicates. Overdue events are highlighted. You can run any event immediately or delete orphaned hooks directly from the table.
Transients tab
Displays database-stored WordPress transients from the options table with key name, data size, and expiration time. Transients stored in an external object cache (Redis, Memcached) are not shown. Expired transients are highlighted. You can delete individual transients or purge all expired ones in one click. Summary cards show total count, expired count, and total data size.
Autoloaded tab
Lists autoloaded options from wp_options sorted by data size (top 200). Shows the option name and value size. Summary cards display total autoloaded row count and total payload size with warnings when thresholds are exceeded (over 800 KB or over 100 rows). This is a read-only diagnostic view to help identify options that inflate every WordPress request.
HTTP Log tab
Captures outgoing WordPress HTTP API requests (wp_remote_get, wp_remote_post, etc.) via the http_api_debug hook. Capturing must be explicitly enabled and stores up to 100 entries (6-hour TTL). Each entry shows the request URL, HTTP method, status code, response time, and transport class. Useful for spotting slow or failing external API calls.
Constants tab
Displays all WordPress-related PHP constants defined at runtime, grouped by category: Debug, Performance, Security, Database, Auth and Salts, Paths, and Other WP_* constants. Sensitive values (database password, auth keys, salts) are automatically masked. This is a read-only reference view.