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Mach5
FastStats Analyzer Configuration
Analyzer
And Specific Web Servers
An Optimal
IIS 4.0 Configuration
All About Apache Multiple
FileFormat
An Optimal Apache Configuration
Analyzer and Specific
Web Hosting Providers
How Do I Configure FastStats To
WorkWith Best Internet?
How Do I Configure FastStats To WorkWith
Pair Networks?
FastStats
Analyzer and IIS 4.0
FastStats
is compatible with any log file that contains a very bare minimum of data.
You should only read this web page if you are getting a FastStats error
or warning. The log file format described on this web page is the most
optimal you can get -- it contains the least amount of information that
will completely utilize all FastStats features.
The IIS 4.0 and 5.0
web servers allow you to pick and choose what information is put into
your log file. Follow these steps to properly configure IIS:
1. Select a Web or
FTP site, and click Properties.
2. On the Web
Site property sheet, select the Enable Logging check box.
3. Choose W3C
Extended Log File Format as the Active log format.
4. Click the
Properties button.
5. The Extended
Logging Properties dialog box appears. Click Extended Properties
(in some versions of IIS, this tab may be called Advanced Properties).
Make sure the following fields are selected. Any additional fields will
not affect the analysis process. The fields are: Date, Time,
Client IP Address, Method, URI Stem, HTTP Status,
Bytes Received, Bytes Sent, User Agent, Referrer.
6. Click Apply.
7. Click OK
until you have closed all dialog boxes. FastStats will now recognize your
log files.
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All
About Apache Multiple File Format
How
do I Tell If My Logs Are in Apache Multiple File Format
Most of the time,
all of the log file data is stored in one log file. There may be a new
log file for each day, but all of the information about each hit is generally
stored in the same file. Apache multiple file format, as the name implies,
stores log file data in multiple files:
1. access_log
- general information about the page requested, time of the request,
etc.
2. agent_log - information about the browser and operating system
used to request the file
3. referer_log - information about the pages that refer (i.e. link)
to your web site.
4. error_log - this log is not used. If you tell FastStats to parse
this log, it may crash!
Configuring
FastStats Analyzer to handle Apache Multiple File Format
Note:
if you host your own web site and can change the log file format, you
should read this document. Apache multiple
file format is not the best format around (there is duplicate information,
and you cannot run filters on an Apache multiple file format log).
Here is a short
explanation:
1. Go to the report
picker. This is the dialog that appears when FastStats starts up. Inside
FastStats, click Report: Switch to Report Picker.
2. Select the report
you want to edit. Click Edit Report.
3. Click the Apache
tab.
4. Place a check
in Apache multiple file format.
5. Click either Logs
(Local), Logs (FTP), or Logs (Web).
6. You should make
sure that FastStats is being told to analyze access_log (and only access_log).
FastStats will look for the corresponding referer_log and agent_log. A
common problem is to have a directory with access_log, agent_log, referer_log,
and possibly error_log. If you tell FastStats to analyze this entire directory,
it will give you an error and may even crash on the error_log file. You
should tell FastStats to only analyze access_log.
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Configuring
Apache
This
help topic is for people who host their own web site or are allowed to
configure their Apache log file format.
Apache lets you
specify a custom log file format in the "httpd.conf" configuration
file. Although there are a large number of log file formats you can specify,
FastStats only supports three of them. However, they are standard formats
and contain all of information you need to provide useful data about your
web site. Apache can be configured to place the log file information in
multiple log files (generally "access.log", "referer.log",
and "agent.log"). This is not the most convenient format, although
FastStats does support it.
The best format is
known as Combined Log File Format and looks like the following:
207.34.71.205 - -
[18/Jan/1998:00:02:22 -0500] "GET /index.html HTTP/1.0" 200
16384 "http://www.windows95.com/apps/encrypt-file.html" "Mozilla/2.0
(compatible; MSIE 3.02; Update a; AK; Windows 95)"
It is important to
note the referrer and browser information at the end is enclosed by quotation
marks. You can configure Apache to generate combined log files by editing
the "httpd.conf" file in the \Apache\conf\ directory. Find the
following lines in your .conf file (you may want to do a search
for the string "LogFormat"). You should change the log file
to read as follows:
# This defines a "nickname"
for the specified log file format.
# The nickname is "combined".
LogFormat "%h %l %u %t \"%r\"
%>s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-Agent}i\""
combined
<# Specify that we want
to store the combined log file in the location "logs/combined.log".
CustomLog logs/combined.log combined
Apache should now
generate FastStats-readable data in the combined.log file. The other two
log file formats are either inconvenient (Apache Multiple Log File Format)
or will produce reports that do not contain some very useful information
(Apache Common Information).
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How
Do I Configure FastStats Analyzer to Work With Best Internet?
This technical support
topic describes how to configure FastStats to automatically analyze and
download your log files from your account at Best Internet (www.best.com).
1. Make sure that
your web site is configured to generate log files. Best has a
web page on this topic.
2. Start FastStats.
3. Click Add Report
4. We will be downloading
the log files from the Best Internet FTP server, so choose The log
files are stored on a FTP site and click Next.
5. Best does not
store the log files in the Apache Multiple File Format. So leave the checkbox
empty and click Next.
6. FastStats will
download your log files from the Best FTP server. For FTP Site Name,
type the shell account address Best provided you. This will look like
ftpX.ba.best.com or fpage1.ba.best.com. In the Username and Password
fields, type your username and password.
7. Best stores its
log files in the public_html directory. The log files look like this:
httpd_access.x, where 'x' is generally a number from 1 to 30. If your
log files are compressed, they will have a .gz file extension. FastStats
will automatically recognize and decompress these .gz files. So select
Parse all logs that match this wildcard and type public_html/httpd_access.*
8. The rest of the
report should be relatively straightforward to configure. You can read
a walkthrough here.
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How Do
I Configure FastStats Analzyer to Work With Pair Networks?
This technical support
topic describes how to configure FastStats to automatically analyze and
download your log files from your account at Pair Networks (www.pair.com).
1. In order to get
the most out of FastStats (and any other log file analysis tool, for that
matter), you should configure your log files to generate Agent and Referrer
information. Pair has a
technical support document on this.
2. Start FastStats.
3. Click Add Report
4. We will be downloading
the log files from the Pair Networks FTP server, so choose The log
files are stored on a FTP site and click Next.
5. Pair does
not store the log files in the Apache Multiple File Format. So leave the
checkbox empty and click Next.
6. FastStats will
download your log files from the Pair FTP server. For FTP Site Name,
type the shell account address Pair provided you. This will look
like gao.pair.com or upsilon.pair.com. In the Username and Password
fields, type your username and password.
7. Pair stores its
log files in the www_logs directory. The log files look like this: www.date.
Pair will automatically compress your log files if they are greater than
a threshold (typically 100 kilbytes). Compressed log files have .gz
at the end of their filenames. FastStats will recognize and automatically
decompress any .gz files. Select Parse all logs that match this wildcard
and type www_logs/www*
8. The rest of the
report should be relatively straightforward to configure. You can read
a walkthrough here.
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