Overview #
Member Logs give administrators a timeline of member activity across the directory. This is useful when you need to understand what changed, who changed it, and when something happened.
Huski Members now includes a dedicated Member Logs area, plus activity sections on user profiles.
Where to Find It #
Go to Huski Members > Member Logs. You may also see member activity on individual WordPress user profile screens.
What Gets Logged #
The logger can track activity such as login, logout, password change, profile update, plan change, charged for plan, and directory message received.
Log Table Columns #
- When: When the event happened.
- Member: Which member the event belongs to.
- Event: The type of activity.
- Actor: Who or what caused the activity.
- Details: A short summary of what happened.
Filtering Logs #
The Member Logs screen can filter by member, activity type, and dates. This helps you narrow the log when there is a lot of activity.
Good Uses for Logs #
- Checking whether a member updated their profile.
- Reviewing when a plan changed.
- Seeing recent login or password activity.
- Confirming directory messages were received.
- Supporting admin troubleshooting.
Best Practices #
- Use logs for context, not as the only source of truth.
- Filter before searching through a large activity list.
- Review logs when a member says something changed unexpectedly.
- Do not expose internal logs publicly.
Troubleshooting #
- No logs appear: Check whether event logging is available and whether activity has occurred.
- A filter returns nothing: Clear filters and try again.
- A member’s activity seems missing: Confirm the event type is one that the logger tracks.
- Dates look unexpected: Check site timezone and date filtering.
That’s it, dawg!
