#1Pass for WordPress [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/1Pass/1pass-for-wordpress.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/1Pass/1pass-for-wordpress) ##About 1Pass 1Pass is a button that lets you sell individual articles. This plugin makes it easy to add the button to your WordPress site. To use the plugin, you need a set of 1Pass API credentials. These are free. To get them, enter your email at 1pass.me/publisher-signup. ####Initial setup On activating the plugin, you'll find a new 1Pass section in your dashboard. Enter your 1Pass API keys. ####Enabling a post for 1Pass When you visit the 'Edit Post' screen you'll find an 'Available on 1Pass' block on the right. Tick that box to make the piece available on 1Pass. ##Using 1Pass to control access to your content If your content is currently free-to-air, you can use the 1Pass plugin to control access. Tick the 'Restrict your content with 1Pass' box on the settings page. Once this setting is checked, you can lock up a piece by ticking the 1Pass checkbox for that piece and adding the `[1pass]` shortcode into the body copy. This will result in the article being truncated at that point and the 1Pass button being injected. ##Other ####Logo The plugin provides a 1Pass logo for illustrating posts available on 1Pass: ####Restricting access This section applies only if you're using 1Pass to restrict access to your content. By default, all logged-out users will see articles truncated at `[1pass]`. If you'd like to change this rule, or add your own, use the `onepass_restrictions` hook. To remove the default behaviour: add_action( 'plugins_loaded', function() { remove_action( 'onepass_restrictions', 'onepass_reject_logged_out_users' ); }); Adding a new restrictions, for example to show 1Pass only to users with the role 'subscriber': add_action( 'onepass_restrictions', 'onepass_reject_subscribers' ); function onepass_reject_subscribers() { // returning true from this function will cause the button to show return current_user_can( 'subscriber' ); } ####Manually displaying the 1Pass button If you already have a paywall, you can display the button from your page template by placing the `` tag in `single.php` (or equivalent). The function `is_onepass()` will tell you whether or not the current post has the 1Pass box ticked. It optionally takes a `$post` object as an argument. An simple integration might look like this: if( is_onepass() ) { onepass(); } ##Support Email support@1pass.me. ##Development This plugin uses [Composer](https://getcomposer.org/) modules; if you wish to build and use plugin from GitHub, you need to first: - [install Composer locally](https://getcomposer.org/doc/00-intro.md) - fetch the runtime dependencies (using `composer install --no-dev`) ##System requirements PHP 5.4