Blackhole for Bad Bots

ཞིབ་བརྗོད།

Add your own virtual black hole trap for bad bots.

Bye bye bad bots..

Bad bots are the worst. They do all sorts of nasty stuff and waste server resources. The Blackhole plugin helps to stop bad bots and save precious resources for legit visitors.

How does it work?

First the plugin adds a hidden trigger link to the footer of your pages. You then add a line to your robots.txt file that forbids all bots from following the hidden link. Bots that then ignore or disobey your robots rules will crawl the link and fall into the trap. Once trapped, bad bots are denied further access to your WordPress site.

I call it the “one-strike” rule: bots have one chance to obey your site’s robots.txt rule. Failure to comply results in immediate banishment. The best part is that the Blackhole only affects bad bots: human users never see the hidden link, and good bots obey the robots rules in the first place. Win-win! 🙂

Using a caching plugin? Check out the Installation notes for important info.

Features

  • Easy to set up
  • Squeaky clean code
  • Focused and modular
  • Lightweight, fast and flexible
  • Built with the WordPress API
  • Works with other security plugins
  • Easy to reset the list of bad bots
  • Easy to delete any bot from the list
  • Regularly updated and “future proof”
  • Blackhole link includes “nofollow” attribute
  • Plugin options configurable via settings screen
  • Works silently behind the scenes to protect your site
  • Whitelists all major search engines to never block
  • Focused on flexibility, performance, and security
  • Email alerts with WHOIS lookup for blocked bots
  • Complete inline documentation via the Help tab
  • Provides setting to whitelist any IP addresses
  • Customize the message displayed to bad bots 😉
  • One-click restore the plugin default options
  • Does NOT use or require any .htaccess rules

Blackhole for Bad Bots protects your site against bad bots, spammers, scrapers, scanners, and other automated threats.

Not using WordPress? Check out the standalone PHP version of Blackhole!

Check out Blackhole Pro and level up with advanced features!

Whitelist

By default, this plugin does NOT block any of the major search engines (user agents):

  • AOL.com
  • Baidu
  • Bingbot/MSN
  • DuckDuckGo
  • Googlebot
  • Teoma
  • Yahoo!
  • Yandex

These search engines (and all of their myriad variations) are whitelisted via user agent. So are a bunch of other “useful” bots. They always are allowed full access to your site, even if they disobey your robots.txt rules. This list can be customized in the plugin settings. For a complete list of whitelisted bots, visit the Help tab in the plugin settings (under “Whitelist Settings”).

Privacy

User Data: This plugin automatically blocks bad bots. When bad bots fall into the trap, their IP address, user agent, and other request data are stored in the WP database. No other user data is collected by this plugin. At any time, the administrator may delete all saved data via the plugin settings.

Services: This plugin does not connect to any third-party locations or services.

Cookies: This plugin does not set any cookies.

Credit: Header Image Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech.

Blackhole for Bad Bots is developed and maintained by Jeff Starr, 15-year WordPress developer and book author.

Support development

I develop and maintain this free plugin with love for the WordPress community. To show support, you can make a donation or purchase one of my books:

And/or purchase one of my premium WordPress plugins:

Links, tweets and likes also appreciated. Thank you! 🙂

གཏུབ་རེིས།

  • Blackhole Settings Screen (showing default options)
  • Blackhole Bad Bots Screen (showing some example bots)

སྒྲིག་འཇུག

Installing Blackhole for Bad Bots

  1. Upload the Blackhole plugin to your blog and activate
  2. Visit the Blackhole Settings and copy the Robots Rules
  3. Add the Robots Rules to your site’s robots.txt file (see note)*
  4. Configure the Blackhole Settings as desired and done

Note: For the robots.txt rules, there are two scenarios:

  1. Your site has a physical robots.txt file that you can see on the server. In this case, you need to add the required rules manually.
  2. OR, your site is using the dynamic/virtual WP-generated robots.txt file, and there is no physical robots.txt file on your server. In this case, the plugin adds the required rules automatically. You do not need to add anything manually.

For complete documentation, click the “Help” tab in the upper-right corner of the Blackhole settings screen. Help tab also available on the “Bad Bots” screen.

More info on installing WP plugins

Verify Blackhole is working properly

Using a caching plugin? Check out the section below called “Caching Plugins” for important info.

Caching Plugins

Blackhole works with any type of caching except for “page caching”. It is not yet compatible with page caching plugins/scripts. So if your site uses any sort of page caching, do not use this plugin. Thank you!

More details: There are many types of cache plugins. They provide all sorts of different caching mechanisms and features. All caching features work great with Blackhole except for “page caching”. With page caching, the required WP init hook may not be fired, which means that plugins like Blackhole are not able to log and ban requests dynamically. Fortunately, some of the most popular caching plugins provide settings that enable full compatibility with Blackhole. For a complete list, check out this article. Note: that article was written for Blackhole Pro, but the compatibility list and general info apply also to Blackhole (free version).

No robots.txt?

For the robots.txt file, there are two possible scenarios:

  1. You want to use your own physical robots.txt file that you can view and edit on the server. In this case, follow the steps below to create your site’s robots.txt file.
  2. OR, you want to use the dynamic/virtual WP-generated robots.txt file, such that there is no physical robots.txt file on your server. In this case, you don’t need to do anything, because WordPress automatically generates a robots.txt file when requested.

If you go with option #1, here are the steps to create a robots.txt file for your site:

  1. Add a blank plain-text file to the root directory of your site
  2. Name the text file robots.txt and upload to your server

Done. Now you can add the Blackhole rules provided on the plugin settings page. See the next section to learn more and validate your robots.txt file.

To view your robots.txt file, visit the following URL (replace example.com with your domain):

https://example.com/robots.txt

Tip: you can find a link to your site’s robots.txt file on the plugin settings page.

Robots Tools & Info

Here are some collected resources for working with robots.txt. See also the next section, “Testing Robots.txt” for more tools.

Lots more great resources on the web to learn about and validate your robots.txt file. Read up, it’s important for SEO.

Testing Robots.txt

To test that your site’s robots.txt rules are correct, you can use a free robots.txt checker. Google provides a robots checker inside of your Google account (i.e., must be logged in to Google). There are many other robots validators around online. Here are some examples:

Tons more robots tools available online, just search for something like “validate robots.txt” (without the quotes) to discover more.

Testing Blackhole

To test that the Blackhole trap is working, first remove your IP address(es) from the plugin setting, “Whitelist IPs”. Also make sure your browser is not included in the plugin setting, “Whitelist Bots” (for example, Chrome is whitelisted). OR instead of changing any plugin settings, you can use a proxy service and non-whitelisted browser (e.g., Brave or Opera) to perform the test.

After removing your IP address and user agent (or using a proxy service), view the source code of any web page on your site. Scroll down near the footer of the page until you locate a link that looks similar to the following:

<a rel="nofollow" style="display:none" href="https://example.com/?blackhole=1234567890" title="Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!">Name of Your Website</a>

Click the link (the href value) to view the Warning Message. After visiting the Warning Message, refresh the page to view the Access Denied message. And/or visit any other page on the front-end of your site to verify that you have been banned. But don’t worry, you will never be banned from the WP Admin Area or the WP Login Page. So simply log in and remove your IP address from the Bad Bots list to restore front-end access.

More information on how to verify Blackhole is working »

Why no bots?

If you’re not seeing any bad bots getting blocked, there are several things to keep in mind:

  • Make sure you’ve set up according to the docs above
  • New(er) websites may not get a lot of bad bot traffic
  • Sites with low traffic may not get a lot of bad bots
  • Check if you are using any other bot-blocking plugins
  • Not all websites (even popular ones) get tons of bots
  • Blackhole will not work if you have page caching on site
  • If in doubt, you can test if the plugin is working (see previous section above)

So keep those things in mind. In most cases it’s just a matter of time before some bad bots fall into the black hole.

Also note that the plugin provides two “whitelist” settings:

  • Whitelist Bots
  • Whitelist IPs

By default, certain things are automatically whitelisted when the plugin is activated. For example, your IP address is added to the whitelist IP setting. Also Chrome and other user agents are added to the whitelist user-agents setting. Just to keep in mind when testing plugin functionality.

Whitelisted Bots

Blackhole for Bad Bots is rigorously tested to ensure that the top search engine bots are NEVER BLOCKED. Any bots reporting a User Agent that contains any of the following strings will always have access to your site, even if they disobey robots.txt.

a6-indexer, adsbot-google, ahrefsbot, aolbuild, apis-google, baidu, bingbot, bingpreview, butterfly, cloudflare, chrome, duckduckgo, embedly, facebookexternalhit, facebot, google page speed, googlebot, ia_archiver, linkedinbot, mediapartners-google, msnbot, netcraftsurvey, outbrain, pinterest, quora, rogerbot, showyoubot, slackbot, slurp, sogou, teoma, tweetmemebot, twitterbot, uptimerobot, urlresolver, vkshare, w3c_validator, wordpress, wp rocket, yandex

Of course, this list is completely customizable via the plugin settings. Each added string is matched against the full user agent, so be careful. Learn more about user agents of the top search engines.

You can also whitelist bots by IP address. Visit the setting, “Whitelist IPs”, and enter the IP address (separate multiple IPs with commas). You can also whitelist entire ranges of IPs. In the same plugin setting, add something like this:

123.456.

That will allow all bots reporting any IP that begins with 123.456.. You can also whitelist IP addresses using CIDR notation. Check out the Help tab on the plugin settings page for details.

Customizing

Blackhole provides plenty of hooks for customizing and extending:

blackhole_options
blackhole_badbots
blackhole_get_options
blackhole_get_badbots
blackhole_log_data
blackhole_trigger
blackhole_vars
blackhole_log
blackhole_ip_keys
blackhole_alert_name
blackhole_alert_subject
blackhole_alert_message
blackhole_alert_headers
blackhole_needle
blackhole_message_default
blackhole_message_custom
blackhole_message_nothing
blackhole_ignore_loggedin
blackhole_ignore_backend
blackhole_ignore_login
blackhole_block_status
blackhole_block_protocol
blackhole_block_connection
blackhole_ip_filter
blackhole_validate_ip_log
blackhole_settings_contextual_help
blackhole_badbots_contextual_help

If you need a hook added, drop me a line, will be glad to hook it up 😉

Custom Warning Template

The Blackhole displays two types of messages:

  • Warning Message – Displayed when bots follow the blackhole trigger
  • Blocked Message – Displayed for all requests made by blocked bots

The Blocked Message may be customized via the plugin settings. The Warning Message may be customized by setting up a custom template:

  1. Copy blackhole-template.php from the plugin’s /inc/ directory
  2. Paste the file into your theme template, for example: /wp-content/my-awesome-theme/blackhole-template.php
  3. Customize any of the markup between “BEGIN TEMPLATE” and “END TEMPLATE”
  4. Upload to your server and done

If the custom template exists in your theme directory, the plugin automatically will use it to display the Warning Message. If the custom template does not exist in your theme directory, the plugin will fallback to the default warning message.

Tip: Instead of including the custom template in your theme, you can include via /wp-content/ directory, like: /wp-content/blackhole/blackhole-template.php

More options available in the Pro version »

Uninstalling

Blackhole for Bad Bots cleans up after itself. All plugin settings and the bad bot list will be removed from your database when the plugin is uninstalled via the Plugins screen. After uninstalling, don’t forget to remove the blackhole rules from your robots.txt file. It’s fine to leave them in place, it will not hurt anything, but they serve no purpose without the plugin installed.

More specifically, Blackhole adds only two things to the database: options and bot list. When the plugin is uninstalled/deleted via the Plugins screen, both of those items are removed automatically via the following lines in uninstall.php:

delete_option('bbb_options');
delete_option('bbb_badbots');

So after uninstalling the plugin and deleting the robots.txt rules, there will be no trace of Blackhole for Bad Bots on your site.

Like the plugin?

If you like Blackhole for Bad Bots, please take a moment to give a 5-star rating. It helps to keep development and support going strong. Thank you!

FAQ

Do you offer any other security plugins?

Yes, three of them:

Pro versions with more features available at Plugin Planet.

How is this plugin different than a firewall?

Blackhole uses its own “smart bot technology” that only blocks bots if they have demonstrated bad behavior. Firewalls typically are “static” and block requests based on a predefined set of patterns. That means that firewalls sometimes block legitimate visitors. Blackhole never blocks regular visitors, and only it blocks bots that disobey your site’s robots.txt rules. So the rate of false positives is close to zero.

The trigger link is not appearing in the source code?

In order for the plugin to add the trigger link to your pages, your theme must include the template tag, wp_footer(). This is a recommended tag for all WordPress themes, so your theme should include it. If not, you can either add it yourself or contact the theme developer and ask for help. Here is more information about wp_footer(). Once the footer tag is included, the plugin will be able to add the trigger link to your pages.

Will this block good bots like Google and Bing?

No. Never. All the major search engine bots are whitelisted and will never be blocked. Unless you remove them from the whitelist setting, which is not recommended.

I think the plugin is blocking Chrome, Firefox, etc.?

Impossible because the plugin never blocks by user agent. It only blocks by IP address. No other criteria are used to block anything.

How to add bots to the Blackhole manually?

Question: Is it possible to block some bots by just adding them to blocked list and deny them Access to my website?

Answer: Not possible with the free version, but the Pro version includes an easy way to add bots manually (via the Bad Bots Log).

How do I add other bots to the whitelist?

Visit the plugin settings and add to the list.

How do I reset the list of blocked bots?

Visit the plugin settings and click the button.

How do I delete the example/default bot from the log?

Not possible with the free version, but can do with the Pro version.

How can I disable the email alerts?

Visit the plugin settings and click the button.

Is there a standalone version of the Blackhole?

Yes. Visit Perishable Press to download a PHP-based version that does not require WordPress.

Is there a Pro version of Blackhole?

Yes, the Pro version is available at Plugin Planet.

Is Multisite supported?

Not yet, but it’s on the to-do list.

Which IP address are added by default?

Your server IP address and your local (home) IP address (or whichever IP you are using when the plugin is installed).

Can I manually include the blackhole link?

Yes, you can add the following code anywhere in your theme template:

<?php if (function_exists('blackhole_trigger')) blackhole_trigger(); ?>

Should whitelisted bots contain exact names?

Question: Should whitelisted bots contain exact names, or can I just use partial names?

Answer: You can use partial names or full names, depending on how specific you would like to be with blocking. If you look at the default whitelisted bot strings, you will see that they are just portions of the full user agent. So for example you can block all bots that include the string “whateverbot” by including that string in the whitelist setting. It makes it easier to block bots, but you have to be careful about false positives.

What about WordPress automatic (hidden) robots.txt?

By default, WordPress will automatically serve a hidden, “virtual” robots.txt file to anything that requests it. Once you add your own “real” robots.txt file, WordPress will stop generating the virtual one. So when it comes to WordPress and robots.txt, real trumps virtual. Blackhole Pro requires that you add some rules to an actual robots.txt file, but it does not create/add any robots rules or the robots.txt file for you. Check out the plugin’s Help tab for more infos.

Which WP caching plugins are compatible with Blackhole?

Check out the section on “Caching Plugins” in the plugin documentation

Does Blackhole clean up after itself?

Yes! As explained in the “Uninstalling” section in the plugin documentation, when Blackhole is uninstalled via the Plugins screen, it removes everything from the database. After uninstalling, don’t forget to remove the blackhole rules from your robots.txt file. Then there will be zero trace of the plugin on your site.

How to disable the hostname lookup?

By default, the plugin uses PHP’s gethostbyaddr() function to lookup the host name for blocked requests. This is fine on most servers but some may experience slight reduced performance. So for those who may need it, the following code snippet can be added to disable the host lookup:

function blackhole_enable_host_check() { return false; }
add_filter('blackhole_enable_host_check', 'blackhole_enable_host_check');

That code can be added via your theme (or child theme) functions.php, or add via custom plugin.

How to disable the error log entries?

By default the plugin adds an entry in the site error log for any invalid IP address. To disable this feature, add the following code snippet to your (child) theme’s functions file, or add via custom plugin:

function blackhole_validate_ip_log_custom($log, $ip) { return ''; }
add_filter('blackhole_validate_ip_log', 'blackhole_validate_ip_log_custom', 10, 2);

How to enable Blackhole protection on Login Page?

By default, Blackhole never blocks anything on the WP Login Page. This is to prevent new users from accidentally getting locked out of their site.

To change the default behavior, and add Blackhole protection to the Login Page, add the following code to theme or child theme’s functions.php, or add via custom plugin:

function blackhole_ignore_login($ignore) { return false; }
add_filter('blackhole_ignore_login', 'blackhole_ignore_login');

If you get locked out inadvertently, simply remove the code and the Login Page will be accessible once again.

How to prevent automatic robots.txt rules?

By default, Blackhole will automatically add the required rules to your site’s robots.txt file. This happens only when using WordPress’ auto-generated robots.txt file.

So if you would rather add the rules yourself, and not have Blackhole make any changes to robots.txt, simply add a physical robots.txt file instead of using the one that otherwise would be generated by WordPress. When an actual/physical robots.txt file exists in your site’s root directory, WordPress will not auto-generate one, and thus Blackhole will not add any rules or make any changes.

Got a question?

Send any questions or feedback via my contact form

གདེང་འཇོག

2024 ལོའི་ཟླ 11 ཚེས 30 ཉིན། 1 reply
Be aware, paid plugins are tricky – I have 10 paid licences that I used on some websites, but now I want to migrate them to new sites, but I can’t because it says – Your license key has reached its activation limit. Wow, really? I paid for a licence for ONE site, so I expect it to work on one site!
2024 ལོའི་ཟླ 9 ཚེས 23 ཉིན། 1 reply
Didn’t work in testing on latest WP + Nginx 1.14.1 when following the nofollow link. The logs should at least be viewable to the site admin, it’s just mean gatekeeping that.
2024 ལོའི་ཟླ 8 ཚེས 20 ཉིན།
The plugin does an amazing job. I have one “research-test-site” where I use a combination of plugins, that are not supported any longer. The result: the site is getting hacked (Malware injection) every 1-2 weeks. Then I restored the site and audited it again. Wordfence free didn’t do anything, well they correctly found the corrupted files but didn’t prevent anything. With Blackhole, the problem is fixed. I get 1-2 warnings per week, that a bad bot was blocked. Works great, thank you for your solution!
2024 ལོའི་ཟླ 7 ཚེས 18 ཉིན། 7 replies
Sorry, but you guys failed to block Amazon bot and Claudebot, these AI tools are killers. Since i set it up at 2am, I have over 50000 requests and it is 10 am.
2024 ལོའི་ཟླ 6 ཚེས 18 ཉིན། 3 replies
I added this to my site; when I tried to add Google Analytics, they scanned my site and then my URL was marked with phishing — this plugin was one of the culprits. I don’t believe this plugin itself has phishing content, but the way it’s coded into the website gives a red flag to Criminal IP because it’s a ‘hidden element.’ I’m getting this report with some other plugins too, but I just wanted to make everyone aware in case this ever happens to them.
གདེང་འཇོག 143 ཡོངས་སུ་ཀློག

བྱས་རྗེས་འཇོག་མཁན། & གསར་འབྱེད་པ།

“Blackhole for Bad Bots” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.

བྱས་རྗེས་འཇོག་མཁན།

“Blackhole for Bad Bots” has been translated into 5 locales. Thank you to the translators for their contributions.

ཁྱེད་ཀྱི་སྐད་ཡིག་ནང་ལ་ “Blackhole for Bad Bots” ཡིག་སྒྱུར་བྱོས།

Interested in development?

Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.

དག་བཅོས་ཉིན་ཐོ།

If you like Blackhole for Bad Bots, please take a moment to give a 5-star rating. It helps to keep development and support going strong. Thank you!

3.7.3 (2024/11/02)

  • Fixes bug with textdomain loading
  • Tests on WordPress 6.7

Full changelog @ https://plugin-planet.com/wp/changelog/blackhole-bad-bots.txt