Readme for analog 6.0


Introduction

Analog is a program which analyses logfiles from WWW servers. It works on almost any operating system. It is designed to be fast and to produce accurate and attractive statistics: and combined with Report Magic, you can generate even prettier reports. It's free software.

Although analog is free software, its distribution and modification are covered by the terms of the GNU General Public License. You are not required to accept this licence, but nothing else gives you permission to modify or distribute the program. Analog comes with no warranty.

Although analog is free, if you like it, please consider making a donation towards its development. Thank you.

This Readme describes analog 6.0. For the latest version of analog, see the analog home page. For examples of the output see

This is a version of the Readme in one page. If you're reading it on line, you might prefer the version on several smaller pages. Beginners should start with the licence followed by the section on Starting to use analog. There is an index at the end of this document.

You might also find the How-To's helpful; these are descriptions by other authors of how to use analog for particular tasks.

Now you can go to


Starting to use analog

The only thing you need to run analog is to be able to read the logfiles which are produced by your web server. If you don't know what these logfiles are and where to find them, contact your internet service provider (ISP) or system administrator. Analog doesn't write the logfiles: it only reads them.

If you log in to your ISP's machine from your home machine, you have two options. If you have the right permissions, you can run analog on your ISP's machine. Otherwise, you can download (e.g., ftp) the logfiles from their machine to yours, and then run analog on your machine.

Once you've downloaded the right version of analog for your computer from the analog home page (or a mirror site), you need to know how to set it up and run it. This is very easy, but the instructions are slightly different depending which platform you're using.

If you can't manage to set up analog after reading the instructions, send a message to the analog-help mailing list.


Starting to use analog on a Mac

Here is the really short summary:
  1. Edit analog.cfg
  2. Run analog
  3. Read Report.html

When you download the Mac version of analog, it should unpack itself. (If it doesn't, you might have to run StuffIt Expander on it). You should then find in the analog directory a configuration file called analog.cfg and the analog application itself, as well as the Readme, the Licence and a couple of other files. When you double-click on the analog icon, it will run in its own window, and produce an output file called Report.html. (For help in interpreting the output, see What the results mean.) The window will then close if there weren't any warning messages, or stay open for you to read them if there were.
You can configure analog by putting commands in the configuration file, analog.cfg. Although this is less familiar to Mac users than pressing buttons etc., it's really much simpler and more flexible when you get used to it. One command you will need straight away is
LOGFILE logfilename    # to set where your logfile lives
The logfile must be stored locally -- analog won't use FTP or HTTP to fetch it from the internet. There's a sample logfile supplied with the program.

There are already some configuration commands to get you started in the configuration file, but there are lots of others available. You can find the most common ones in the section on basic commands later in the Readme, and you can read about all of them in the section on customising analog. There are also some sample configuration files in the examples folder.


Another way to start analog is to drag a logfile onto the analog icon, in which case analog will try to analyse it, or drag a configuration file onto the icon, in which case analog will use the commands in that configuration file. (Analog detects whether it's a configuration file or a logfile by whether it starts with "# " or not.) This enables you to create different reports without having two copies of the application.

There is another way to give options, via command line arguments. You'll see these mentioned in this Readme from time to time, but MacOS before MacOS X doesn't have a command line, so ignore these unless you've downloaded the Darwin version of analog.

If you want to compile your own version of analog (it's written in C), or just to read the source code, it's available from the analog home page. (It's the same source code for all versions).


Starting to use analog under Windows

This describes how to set up analog under Windows 95/NT or later. Windows 3.1 users will have to read the section on other platforms instead.

Here is the really short summary:

  1. Edit analog.cfg
  2. Run analog (a DOS window flashes up).
  3. Read Report.html

There's also a How-To written by Simon Handfield, which explains how to get started in more detail with lots of pictures.


When you've downloaded analog, and either you or your browser has unzipped it, you will find in the analog folder a configuration file called analog.cfg and the analog executable itself, as well as the Readme, the Licence and a couple of other files. There is no setup.exe: analog is already ready to run without one.

(Some unzip programs are broken, and do not create folders when they should. If you don't have a folder called lang inside the analog folder, create one and put all the files called *.lng and *.tab into it.)

There are two ways of running analog. You can either run it from Windows (by single-clicking or double-clicking on its icon, depending on your setup), or you can run it from the DOS command prompt (under Start-Programs). If you run it from Windows, it will create a DOS window to run in. When it's finished, it will produce an output file called Report.html and some graphics; and a file called errors.txt which contains any errors there might have been. The first time you run it, this will all happen almost instantly. This is not a bug. For help in interpreting the output, see What the results mean.


You can configure analog by putting commands in the configuration file, analog.cfg. Although this is less familiar to Windows users than pressing buttons etc., it's really much simpler and more flexible when you get used to it. You can edit analog.cfg using any plain text editor, for example Notepad. One command you will need straight away is
LOGFILE logfilename    # to set where your logfile lives
The logfile must be stored locally -- analog won't use FTP or HTTP to fetch it from the internet. There's a sample logfile supplied with the program.

There are already some configuration commands to get you started in the configuration file, but there are lots of others available. You can find the most common ones in the section on basic commands later in the Readme, and you can read about all of them in the section on customising analog. There are also some sample configuration files in the examples folder.

If you run analog from the DOS command prompt, there is another way to give options, via command line arguments, given on the command line after the program name. These are just shortcuts for configuration file commands. You can use the command line arguments if you run analog from a batch file too.

If you want to compile your own version of analog (it's written in C), or just to read the source code, it's available from the analog home page. (It's the same source code for all versions).


Starting to use analog on other platforms

Here is the really short summary:
  1. Edit anlghead.h and compile, if necessary
  2. Edit analog.cfg
  3. Run analog

Many platforms have a precompiled version of analog available. Before compiling analog, have a look at the analog home page to see if yours does.

If you're not using one of the platforms for which a precompiled version is available, you'll have to compile your own version from the source. But don't worry -- it's written in standard C throughout, so it will compile out of the box on most platforms. (The source code is the same for all platforms.)

First, change to the src/ directory.

Then look at the file anlghead.h, and see if there's anything you want to edit.

When you have done that, you need to compile the program. How to do that depends on which operating system you're using.


Compiling under Unix. First edit anlghead.h as described above. Then just type
make
within the src/ directory to compile the program. On most systems, that will be sufficient, and the compiled program should appear in the parent directory. If it fails to compile, have a look in the Makefile to see if there's anything that you need to change to suit your configuration, and try again. It says in that file what to do. In particular, Solaris 2 (SunOS 5+) users need to change the LIBS= line.

(Experts can pass some arguments in on the make command line instead of by editing anlghead.h: e.g.

make DEFS='-DLANGDIR=\"/usr/etc/apache/analog/lang/\"'
This is useful if you have a script to compile analog.)

If you haven't got gcc, you will need to change the compiler - try acc or cc instead.

Compiling under OpenVMS. You can find OpenVMS build scripts within the src/build directory. Unzip them within the src directory. Then to build Analog interactively from the command line, type

$ @ Build_Analog
or to submit the Build_Analog procedure to a batch queue, type
$ Submit /NoPrint /Keep Batch.com
The command procedure will use MMS (or MMK) if it is available, otherwise it will compile everything from raw command procedures.

Compiling under Acorn RiscOS. The Makefile can be found in the src/build directly, although at this point it has not been updated for version 5 of analog. You will have to make directories called C, H and O, and move the sources files into the appropriate directories: e.g., alias.c must be renamed C.alias. And you will find that there are some filenames in the header file anlghead.h that you want to change to fit into the RiscOS directory structure.

Compiling under OS/2. To compile analog for OS/2, you will need the EMX package. You should edit the Makefile to have OS=OS2 and LIBS=-lsocket. Then after editing anlghead.h and running Make, you need to run the command

EMXBIND -b ANALOG
to generate the analog.exe executable.
After you've compiled the program, leave the src/ directory and then just type
analog
to run the program. (Or ./analog if for some reason . isn't in your $PATH.)

You can configure analog by putting commands in the configuration file, which is called analog.cfg by default. Two commands you will need straight away are

LOGFILE logfilename      # to set where your logfile lives
OUTFILE outputfile.html  # to send the output to a file instead of the screen
The logfile must be stored locally -- analog won't use FTP or HTTP to fetch it from the internet. There's a sample logfile supplied with the program. For help in interpreting the output, see What the results mean.

There are already some configuration commands to get you started in the configuration file, but there are lots of others available. You can find the most common ones in the section on basic commands later in the Readme, and you can read about all of them in the section on customising analog. There are also some sample configuration files in the examples directory.

There is one other way to give options to analog, via command line arguments, given on the command line after the program name. These are just shortcuts for configuration file commands.


Customising analog

This is the bulk of the Readme. It tells you all the commands you can give to analog, and what they all do. First there's a list of which is as much as beginners need to read, until they want to do something which isn't listed there, or are curious to find out what they could do.

The following section is a technical (i.e., dull but important) one on the

Then there's documentation on all the configuration commands in the following categories. Analog has over 200 configuration commands and over 40 command line options, so sometimes these sections turn into lists of commands. But here's where you find out everything you can do with analog.

Later there's an index of all the commands and topics, and also a quick reference containing the syntax of all the commands and examples.


Basic commands

Here is a list of basic configuration commands to get you started with analog. These commands should be added to your configuration file, analog.cfg, as explained in the section on Starting to use analog. We'll see all the possible configuration commands in later sections. Or you can read a summary of the commands which control each report in the section on Analog's reports.
Analog reads logfiles produced by your web server, and produces an output file based on the data in them. So you need to know how to specify which logfile to read, and which file to send the output to. The relevant commands look like
LOGFILE my_logfile
OUTFILE output.html
where, of course, you should substitute the names of the files you want to use. The logfile must be stored locally -- analog won't use FTP or HTTP to fetch it from the internet, so you may have to fetch it yourself first. You can read several logfiles by giving several logfile commands, or by giving a comma-separated list, or by using wildcards in the logfile name. So, for example, if you use the commands
LOGFILE new1.log,old*.log
LOGFILE new2.log
analog will analyse the logfiles new1.log, new2.log, and all the old logfiles. Analog will recognise logfiles in several different formats. You can read more about this in the section on Choosing a logfile.
There are a couple of other commands you need to know right at the beginning, not because they're particularly important in themselves, but because the output will look silly if you don't know them. First, you need to know how to put your own organisation's name and URL at the top of the output. For this, you need two commands such as
HOSTNAME "Spam Widgets Inc."
HOSTURL http://www.spam-widgets.com/

If you have broken images in the output instead of graphs, you need to say in which directory on your server the images are stored. You do this by a command like

IMAGEDIR /analog/images/
(This is just put in the <img> tags in the output page, so it's the URL of a directory, not the name of the directory on your disk. The images are distributed with the program - you will have to move them to whichever directory you choose.)
Next you will want to know how to turn individual reports on and off. Analog can produce up to 44 different reports if your web server has been configured to record the necessary data in your logfiles, but here are the most important ones. Try them and see what happens. You can turn each report on with an ON command, or off with an OFF command. You can also use the commands ALL ON and ALL OFF to turn all reports on or off.
MONTHLY ON       # one line for each month
WEEKLY ON        # one line for each week
DAILYREP ON      # one line for each day
DAILYSUM ON      # one line for each day of the week
HOURLYREP ON     # one line for each hour of the day
GENERAL ON       # the General Summary at the top
REQUEST ON       # which files were requested
FAILURE ON       # which files were not found
DIRECTORY ON     # Directory Report
HOST ON          # which computers requested files
ORGANISATION ON  # which organisations they were from
DOMAIN ON        # which countries they were in
REFERRER ON      # where people followed links from
FAILREF ON       # where people followed broken links from
SEARCHQUERY ON   # the phrases and words they used...
SEARCHWORD ON    # ...to find you from search engines
BROWSERSUM ON    # which browser types people were using
OSREP ON         # and which operating systems
FILETYPE ON      # types of file requested
SIZE ON          # sizes of files requested
STATUS ON        # number of each type of success and failure
The full list of reports is in the section on Configuring the output. Some reports, for example the Referrer, Browser and Operating System Reports, will only appear if your web server has been configured to record the necessary data in its logfiles.

You can configure lots of other things about each report, such as how many rows are listed, which columns are included, and how the reports are sorted. For example, the command

REQINCLUDE pages
tells analog only to list pages, rather than all files, in the Request Report, and
REQFLOOR 10r
tells analog to include in the Request Report all files with at least 10 requests. You can read a summary of all the reports and the commands which control them in the section on Analog's reports.
You can have the output in several different languages, by using a LANGUAGE command. For example, the command
LANGUAGE FRENCH
will give you the output in French. The available languages at the moment include ARMENIAN, BASQUE, BULGARIAN, CATALAN, SIMP-CHINESE (GB2312), TRAD-CHINESE (Big5), CZECH, DANISH, DUTCH, ENGLISH, US-ENGLISH, FINNISH, FRENCH, GERMAN, HUNGARIAN, INDONESIAN, ITALIAN, JAPANESE, KOREAN, LATVIAN, NORWEGIAN (Bokmål), NYNORSK, POLISH, PORTUGUESE, BR-PORTUGUESE, RUSSIAN, SERBIAN, SLOVAK, SLOVENE, SPANISH, SWEDISH, TURKISH and UKRAINIAN.

The following languages were available for previous versions of analog, but have not yet been translated for version 5: BOSNIAN, CROATIAN, GREEK, ICELANDIC, LITHUANIAN and ROMANIAN. As and when they are translated, they will be added to the analog home page. See the section on Configuring the output for how to download, or even translate, new languages.


Two other common things you might want to do are to alias files or hosts (for example, to tell analog that two different filenames are really the same file), or to include or exclude certain files, hosts or dates (to ignore accesses from your site, for example, or to do an analysis only of a certain subdirectory or a certain time period). For these, see the later sections on Aliases and Inclusions and exclusions.

As I said, these are only a few of the commands available. To find out about all the commands, you'll have to read the remaining sections of the Readme, starting with a short section on the syntax of configuration commands.


Syntax of configuration commands

This section describes how analog finds configuration commands, and what the syntax of a configuration file should be. The syntax of individual commands is given in the Quick reference section later.
When analog starts up, it first reads options from configuration files and the command line (assuming that you are running analog from an operating system with a command line). Defaults for many of these options will have already been set in the files anlghead.h and anlghea2.h at the time the program was compiled. So if you compile your own version of analog, rather than downloading a pre-compiled executable, you can also set some options in those files before compiling. Those options are all documented there.
The first file which analog reads is the default configuration file, normally called analog.cfg. You can stop this file being read by specifying the option -G on the command line. Then the command line arguments are read, in the order in which they appear. Finally, the mandatory configuration file is read, if you specified one when you compiled the program. This is a configuration file which cannot be overridden by the user: if it is not found, analog exits immediately. This allows a system administrator to prevent users analysing certain files or producing certain reports, for example. However, note that the only certain way to prevent users analysing things is to deny them access to the logfile. Otherwise there is nothing to stop them analysing the logfile using another copy of analog or another program.
You can include another configuration file by a command like
CONFIGFILE other.cfg
The commands in the other configuration file are read immediately, in order. The program then continues reading the first configuration file where it left off. Note that reading in several configuration files does not produce several output pages, but a single output page based on all the options.

You can also include another configuration file from the command line by using a command like +gother.cfg. (Note that there is no space between +g and the filename; this is true of all command line arguments.) But note that reading an alternative configuration file does not stop the default configuration file (usually analog.cfg) being read as well. To do that you have to specify -G as well as the +g command. This is because if you want several different configurations, it's most convenient to put all the common options in analog.cfg, and options specific to each configuration in a separate file. Then the +g command line option will read both those files.

If the name of a configuration file given in a CONFIGFILE command doesn't include a directory, it will be looked for wherever analog expects to find its configuration files. (This location is a compile-time option.) For example, in the Windows version it would be in the same folder as the analog executable. This applies to the default and mandatory configuration files as well. But configuration files given with +g are relative to the current directory at the time you run the program.

In the Mac version, you can start up a program with a particular configuration file instead of the default one by dragging the configuration file onto the analog icon. The file must start with "# ".

You can also specify any configuration command on the command line even if it doesn't have a command line abbreviation, by use of the +C command. (NB The C must be upper case.) For example, +C"UNCOMPRESS *.gz gzcat" will include that command.


Here are the syntax rules for configuration commands. A configuration file contains several commands, normally on separate lines; any text after a hash (#) on a line is ignored as a comment. Configuration commands can be continued across lines by using a backslash as the last character on the line (but can't then have comments until the end of all the lines; also the total length can't be more than 254 characters). Each command consists of the command name followed by one or two arguments. An argument to a command may optionally be placed in single or double quotes or parentheses, and it must be if the argument contains a hash or a space, or if the last character of the last argument is a backslash. So, for example, here are some valid configuration commands.
DAILYSUM   OFF   # We don't want a Daily Summary
DAILYREP  "ON"   # We want a full Daily Report instead 
HOSTNAME (Spam Widgets Inc.)  # Spaces, so quotes or brackets needed
LOGFILE logfile1.log,\
logfile2.log     # This line and the previous one are one command
Generally later commands override earlier ones if you can have only one of that thing (e.g., for the OUTFILE), or supplement them if you can have several (e.g., for the LOGFILE, because you can read several logfiles). Apart from that, the order of commands doesn't matter, except that LOGFORMAT and LOGTIMEOFFSET commands must come earlier in the same configuration file than the LOGFILE to which they refer.
If all the options seem a bit confusing, just run
analog -settings [other options]
from the command line, or include SETTINGS ON in the configuration commands. Then instead of running normally, analog will just tell you what the values of all the variables will be, based on the defaults in anlghead.h and anlghea2.h, the configuration commands, and the command line options. If you're on Unix or Windows, remember that you can send the output to a file with
analog -settings > file
Also, analog -version will just give the version number.

Choosing a logfile

The basic command for selecting a logfile is
LOGFILE logfilename
or just to put the logfile name on the command line without any arguments, e.g., analog logfilename. In the Mac version, you can also analyse a particular single logfile by dragging it onto the analog icon. All logfiles must be within your computer's file system (on disk, or at least mounted under Unix, or on a mapped drive under NT) -- analog won't use FTP or HTTP to fetch them from the internet.

A - sign or the word stdin is interpreted as standard input: this is useful on Unix systems for constructing pipes. There is also an optional second argument to the LOGFILE command which is explained below.

You can have several LOGFILE commands. You can include wildcards in the logfile name (but not necessarily in the directory name: this is system-dependent), and you can use a list of logfiles separated by commas (without spaces). So the following commands would tell analog to read logfile1, c:\logs\logfile2, and all files ending in .log:

LOGFILE logfile1,*.log
LOGFILE c:\logs\logfile2
Or if you were on a Mac, you might use something like
LOGFILE "Hard Drive:Internet Applications:Analog:Logs:*"
You can also use the special command
LOGFILE none
to erase the list of logfiles specified so far.

If the name of a logfile in a LOGFILE command doesn't include a directory, it will be looked for wherever analog expects to find logfiles. (This location is built in when the program is compiled.) For example, on Windows it would be in the same folder as the analog executable. But logfile names given on the command line are within the current directory.

You can also include the date in the LOGFILE name, by using the following codes.

%D  date of month
%m  month name, in English
%M  month number
%y  two-digit year
%Y  four-digit year
%H  hour
%n  minute
%w  day of week, in English
So for example,
LOGFILE access_log%Y%M.log
will look for the logfile access_log200109.log, if it's September 2001. The date used is actually the TO date if one was specified, and otherwise the time of the start of the program. So for example, you can look at all of last month's logfiles with the commands
TO -00-0131                   # to end of last month
LOGFILE access_log%Y%M??.log  # finds access_log200108??.log in Sep 2001

The LOGFILE commands are cumulative, except that any logfiles on the command line or in configuration files specified on the command line override any in the default configuration file or configuration files loaded from there, and are themselves overridden by any in the mandatory configuration file or configuration files loaded from there. Usually you don't need to worry about this, and it will do what you expect! (Actually I should have said "logfiles or cache files" -- but we'll get on to that later).


Analog knows about several different types of logfile. By default it will attempt to see if your logfile is of one of the types it knows about, based on the first line. The types it can usually diagnose are the common log format, the NCSA combined format, referrer log and browser log, the W3 extended log format, the Microsoft IIS format, the Netscape format, the WebSTAR format, the WebSite format and the MacHTTP format. Examples of all these formats are given at the end of this section. If you have debugging on, analog will report what type of logfile it thinks yours is.

If your logfile is not in one of the standard formats, you will probably still be OK, because it is possible to tell analog about other formats using a LOGFORMAT command. This is explained in the next section. But most users don't ever need to know about this because they have logfiles in a standard format. So the best thing to do is just to try analysing your logfile and see if analog will understand it. If it does, you don't need to worry about LOGFORMATs.

If analog can't understand your logfile, it will warn you that it can't detect the format, or possibly that it found a lot of corrupt lines. There are basically five reasons why this might happen:

  1. Many people try and use a LOGFORMAT command when they don't need one. Always try without one first.
  2. Some log formats are not very well designed and analog can't analyse them reliably. In this case it will give up, usually with a helpful message, rather than risk doing a bad job. For example, you might get "Logfile with ambiguous dates" or "Time without date." In this case you should read the notes on all the built-in formats below where some common problems with those formats are described.
  3. Since analog tries to deduce the format based on the first line of the logfile, it could just be that the first line is corrupt. In this case, you could tell analog the format, or you could just fix the first line.
  4. For the same reason, if the format changes midway through the log, analog will count the remaining lines as corrupt. In this case, you will find that your output page contains a partial analysis but with a large number of corrupt lines too. You will need to give analog two LOGFORMAT commands to tell it about the two different formats.
  5. Finally, some logfiles really aren't in one of the standard formats. In this case you will need to read the next section and learn how to tell analog about your format.
If you can't see what's wrong with your logfile, you can specify DEBUG ON, and analog will report where each line was corrupt.
There is also an optional second argument to the LOGFILE command, which specifies a prefix to add to all the filenames in that logfile. This is useful if you've got several different servers or virtual hosts, when the same filename may occur on each of the servers. For example,
LOGFILE mydomain.log http://www.mydomain.com
would translate a filename /file.html in mydomain.log to http://www.mydomain.com/file.html. (If you only have logfiles from one server, and you just want the prefix so that you can host the output on a different server, then you probably want the BASEURL command instead.)

Note that because this actually changes the name of the file, any FILEINCLUDE, FILEEXCLUDE or FILEALIAS command will have to refer to the new name, including the prefix.

If you are using this command to combine logfiles from several different virtual hosts, then the Virtual Host Report doesn't tell you about the different virtual hosts. The virtual host name has just become part of the filename. So you want to look in the Directory Report instead. (And you will probably want to use the SUBDIR command as well.)

If the logfile contains the name of the virtual host on each line, then the argument can contain a %v, and the name of the virtual host will be inserted at that point. If %v is included and the logfile line doesn't have a virtual host, then that line will be marked as corrupt.


It is often convenient to store logfiles compressed to save disk space. Analog will automatically read logfiles compressed using gzip, zip or bzip2. But if you have logfiles compressed using some other program, analog can still read them provided that you use an UNCOMPRESS command to say how to uncompress them.

You need to supply the types of file that you want to uncompress in a comma-separated list, together with the name of a command that will uncompress the files to standard output (rather than to a file). For example, on Unix you might use

UNCOMPRESS *.Z "/usr/bin/uncompress -c"
whereas on Windows NT, you might use
UNCOMPRESS *.Z ("c:\Program Files\uncompress\uncompress" -c)

If analog determines that a logfile which it's uncompressing isn't wanted for the analysis, a "broken pipe" error can be reported. This is produced by the uncompressing command and is out of analog's control, but it's harmless.

(Hint: There's nothing to stop you using the UNCOMPRESS command for other types of preprocessing, for example DNS resolution.)


Logfile formats

Here is a summary of the various logfile formats which analog knows about. To illustrate them, I have used the same (fictional) request as it might be recorded in the different formats.

The common logfile format is written by most servers. Its lines look like

jay.bird.com - fred [25/Dec/1998:17:45:35 +0000]
"GET /~sret1/ HTTP/1.0" 200 1243
(except all on one line). Some versions of Microsoft software have a buggy version of this with an extra quote mark before the HTTP like this:
jay.bird.com - fred [25/Dec/1998:17:45:35 +0000]
"GET /~sret1/ "HTTP/1.0" 200 1243
Analog will understand these, but (as with any two formats) it will reject lines if the format changes half way through.
The NCSA referrer log looks like
[25/Dec/1998:17:45:35] http://www.site.com/ -> /~sret1/
and the browser (or agent) log looks like
[25/Dec/1998:17:45:35] Mozilla/2.0 (X11; I; HP-UX A.09.05)
In the referrer log, the date can be omitted.
The NCSA combined log is the same as the common log, except that it has the referrer and browser on the end in quotes, like this:
jay.bird.com - fred [25/Dec/1998:17:45:35 +0000] "GET /~sret1/ HTTP/1.0"
200 1243 "http://www.site.com/" "Mozilla/2.0 (X11; I; HP-UX A.09.05)"
(except all one line). If you are using the Apache server, you can generate this with the mod_log_config module, using the Apache command
LogFormat "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-Agent}i\""
It is usually better to use the combined log than separate logs, because it stores more information in less space.
The Microsoft IIS logfile looks like
192.64.25.41, -, 25/12/98, 17:45:35, W3SVC1, HOST1, 192.16.225.10,
2178, 303, 1243, 200, 0, GET, /~sret1/, -,
(except all on one line; and sometimes with four-digit years). However, the format is extremely badly designed, in that the date follows local conventions: in other words, in North America the above example would have the date 12/25/98 instead. Analog will diagnose which form the logfile is in if possible: but if both the date and the month are at most 12, there is no way to tell which format it is. In this case, it will advise you to use the command LOGFORMAT MICROSOFT-NA for North American date format, or LOGFORMAT MICROSOFT-INT for international date format. In some countries, the date will not be in either of these formats, in which case you need to write your own LOGFORMAT command, based on the examples in the next section.

There are also various third-party extensions to the Microsoft format to include, for example, the browser and referrer. But they all do it in different ways, so analog can't automatically diagnose them, and again, you need to write a LOGFORMAT command for them.


The WebSite format looks like
12/25/98 17:45:35  jay.bird.com  host1  Server  fred  GET  /~sret1/
http://www.site.com/    Mozilla/2.0 (X11; I; HP-UX A.09.05)  200  1243  2178
(except all on one line, and with the fields separated by tabs). It suffers from the same problem with ambiguous dates as the IIS logfile (above), so again you might have to use LOGFORMAT WEBSITE-NA or LOGFORMAT WEBSITE-INT, or even have to write your own LOGFORMAT command.
The MacHTTP format looks like
12/25/98  17:45:35   OK    jay.bird.com  /~sret1/  1243
with the fields separated by tabs.
The W3 extended log, the Netscape log, and the WebSTAR log can be recognised because they must include at or near the top a line telling analog what format to expect on subsequent lines. (They may also contain later lines changing the format). If the header line is missing, analog won't be able to interpret the subsequent lines and so won't be able to analyse the logfile. In this case, you will have to either replace the missing header or use a LOGFORMAT command to tell analog your format.

If analog finds that the header line is corrupt, it will usually tell you what was wrong with it. The most common problem is that you're not allowed the time without the date or vice versa -- in particular, having the date just at the top of the logfile is not sufficient; you must have it on each line. By default, Microsoft servers produce extended logs with the date only at the top. But if the date changes during the logfile, the server doesn't then write a new date line. This means that missing days or corrupt entries can make analog get a day out in either direction, with no way to rescue or even recognise the situation!

For this reason analog knows that it can't analyse such logfiles safely, so instead it insists that the date should be on every line. There are some programs on the helper applications page to put the date on each line. If you already have such a logfile you might want to use one of these programs, but they have to assume that the date doesn't change during the logfile, so it would be much safer to tell your server to log the date on every line in future.

The extended log is described at http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-logfile.html. Its header line looks like

#Fields: date time cs-uri
In the rest of the logfile, the fields can be separated by spaces or tabs. Remember the logfile must contain the date as well as the time on every line -- see above.

There is also Microsoft's attempt at the extended format -- unfortunately they didn't read the spec., so they didn't enclose the browser and referrer in quotes, they replaced spaces in the browser name with +'s, and they put the time taken to serve the request in milliseconds instead of seconds. And there is WebSTAR's attempt which is very nearly right except that they erroneously used the CS-HOST field as the client hostname instead of the server hostname. Analog will understand all of these versions.

Extended logs always record the time in GMT, so you will probably need to use a LOGTIMEOFFSET command to convert to your local timezone.

The WebSTAR format is described at http://www.starnine.com/webstar/docs/ws4manual.3f.html. It has a header line like

!!LOG_FORMAT DATE TIME RESULT URL BYTES_SENT HOSTNAME
In the rest of the logfile, the fields are separated by tabs. The WebSTAR server also records the time in GMT, so again you will probably need to use a LOGTIMEOFFSET command to convert to your local timezone. Some other Mac servers also use the WebSTAR format, or something looking like it. Analog will understand these too.

Finally, the Netscape header line looks like

format=%Ses->client.ip% [%SYSDATE%] "%Req->reqpb.clf-request%"
%Req->srvhdrs.clf-status% %Req->srvhdrs.content-length%

Log formats

This section is about how to tell analog the format of your logfile. Most people don't need to do this because analog can detect the format automatically -- try it first and see, because you will save yourself a lot of trouble! But if you do need to specify the log format explicitly, here is how to do it.

The basic command to specify a log format looks like

LOGFORMAT format
-- we'll discuss what the formats can be in a minute. Or if you are using the Apache server, you will probably find it more convenient to use
APACHELOGFORMAT apacheformat
instead.

The LOGFORMAT and APACHELOGFORMAT commands only apply to logfiles specified with a LOGFILE command later in the same configuration file. So you must put the LOGFORMAT above the LOGFILE to which it refers. If you declare your logfiles on the command line, or drag them onto the app on the Mac, you must use DEFAULTLOGFORMAT or APACHEDEFAULTLOGFORMAT instead. This is so that different logfiles can have different formats, like this:

LOGFILE log0
LOGFORMAT format1
LOGFILE log1
LOGFORMAT format2
LOGFILE log2
LOGFILE log3
In this example, log1 is in format1, log2 and log3 are in format2, and log0 isn't in either format -- analog will try and detect which format it's in.
The APACHELOGFORMAT command is followed by the LogFormat from your Apache httpd.conf file. For example, if your httpd.conf contained the following lines:
LogFormat "%h %l %u %t %v \"%r\" %>s %b" myformat
CustomLog /var/log/apache/access.log myformat
then your analog.cfg should contain
APACHELOGFORMAT (%h %l %u %t %v \"%r\" %>s %b)
LOGFILE /var/log/apache/access.log
(Use parentheses instead of quotes round the argument if the argument already contains quotes.) Analog understands all Apache log formats, with the exception that it won't parse Apache's "%...{format}t" construction for customised times: if you have this construction, you will have to use ordinary LOGFORMAT instead. (This is because "%...{format}t" is sometimes localised.)
The possible formats for use with the LOGFORMAT command are of two types. First there are some symbolic words, and then there are log format strings. We'll look at the words first.

There are format words for all the built-in formats analog knows about. You might need one of these words if your logfile is in a standard format, but analog can't detect which format it's in for some reason; for example, maybe the first line is corrupt; or maybe analog can't tell whether you're using North American or international dates. So for example

LOGFORMAT COMMON
will select common format; you can also have COMBINED, REFERRER, BROWSER, EXTENDED, MICROSOFT-NA (North American date format), MICROSOFT-INT (international date format), WEBSITE-NA, WEBSITE-INT, MS-EXTENDED (Microsoft's attempt at extended format), WEBSTAR-EXTENDED (WebSTAR's version of extended format), MS-COMMON (a buggy version of common format in some versions of Microsoft software), NETSCAPE, WEBSTAR or MACHTTP. All these formats were defined at the end of the previous section. You can also use the special word AUTO to return to automatic detection.

If your logfile is not in one of the recognised formats, you can tell analog about your format using a log format string. You only ever need this if your logfile has lines which are not in one of the standard formats. (And even if it isn't in a standard format, if you're using the Apache web server, you will find APACHELOGFORMAT easier.)

The format string consists of a template for the logfile line, with the various fields and special characters replaced by codes as follows. Please note that these codes are case sensitive -- for example, %b is completely different from %B!

%S
host (the client hostname, or address of the computer making the request)
%s
numerical IP address of client (if recorded in a separate field; used when %S is empty)
%r
file requested
%q
query string (part of filename after ?, if recorded in a separate field)
%B
browser
%A
browser with +'s instead of spaces
%f
referrer
%u
user (tip: a cookie or session id can usefully be defined as %u too)
%v
virtual host (the server hostname, also called the virtual domain)
%d
day of the month
%m
month in digits
%M
month, three letter English abbreviation
%y
year, last two digits
%Y
year, four digits
%Z
year, two or four digits (less efficient)
%h
hour of the day
%n
minute of the hour
%a
a or A for am, or p or P for pm, if %h is in the 12-hour clock. (So to match "am" you need %am and to match "AM" you need %aM)
%U
"Unix time" (seconds since beginning of 1970, GMT). If it includes decimals, use %U.%j
%b
number of bytes transferred
%t
processing time in seconds
%T
processing time in milliseconds
%D
processing time in microseconds
%c
HTTP status code
%C
code words used instead of HTTP status code in some servers -- only used internally
%j
junk: ignore this field (field can be empty too)
%w
white space: spaces or tabs
%W
optional white space
%%
% sign
\n
new line
\t
tab stop
\\
single backslash
So for example, the common log format, which looks like
jay.bird.com - fred [25/Dec/1998:17:45:35 +0000]
"GET /~sret1/ HTTP/1.0" 200 1243
(except all on one line) could be represented by the LOGFORMAT command
LOGFORMAT (%S - %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j %j] "%j %r %j" %c %b)
In other words, it's just the sample line but with the hostname replaced by %S, the username by %u etc. (The parentheses are needed because the argument contains spaces.) Or take another example: if you had lines which looked like
Fri 25/12/98 5:45pm, /~sret1/, jay.bird.com, 200, 1243,
http://www.site.com, Mozilla/2.0 (X11; I; HP-UX A.09.05)
(all on one line again), you could use the format
LOGFORMAT (%j %d/%m/%y %h:%n%am, %r, %S, %c, %b, %f, %B)
Remember: if you have trouble writing a LOGFORMAT string, you can turn debugging on, and analog will report where each line was corrupt. If you still have trouble, you can write to the analog-help mailing list.
A logfile can sometimes have lines in several different formats. So you can specify several LOGFORMAT commands in a row, and they will all apply to the next logfile. This is also useful if the format of your logfile changes half way through. So in this example:
LOGFORMAT COMMON
LOGFORMAT COMBINED
LOGFILE log1
LOGFORMAT (%j %d/%m/%y %h:%n%am, %r, %S, %c, %b, %f, %B)
LOGFILE log2
LOGFILE log3
log1 has lines in both common and combined format, whereas log2 and log3 have lines just in the format in the previous example.

If you specify several formats, analog tries to match each line to the first format first, then if that fails the next, and so on, so the order of the formats is important. Usually you want to specify the most common one first, to minimise the time spent trying to match lines to inappropriate formats.


I suggested above that any logfile which doesn't have a LOGFORMAT command earlier in the same configuration file, or is specified on the command line, is auto-detected. But this isn't quite true. Actually such logfiles get a special format called the default log format. The default format starts off as auto-detection, but you can change it if you want with the DEFAULTLOGFORMAT command. This command works exactly the same as the LOGFORMAT command -- it understands the same formats, and if you have several DEFAULTLOGFORMAT commands, they accumulate in the same way. The difference is that they don't need to be put in any particular place. (There is also APACHEDEFAULTLOGFORMAT, which has the same effect but uses the Apache LogFormat strings.)

So let's go back to the first example:

LOGFILE log0
LOGFORMAT format1
LOGFILE log1
LOGFORMAT format2
LOGFILE log2
LOGFILE log3
Here log0 actually gets the default log format. If there are no DEFAULTLOGFORMAT commands, the default will be auto-detection. But if there are DEFAULTLOGFORMAT commands, even in another configuration file, that will be the format of log0.

The times you need to use the DEFAULTLOGFORMAT instead of the LOGFORMAT are if you want to change the format of logfiles which aren't given in a LOGFILE command -- for example, ones specified on the command line, or dragged onto the program icon on a Mac, or compiled in.


A couple more technical details and tips about LOGFORMAT commands.

The "Unix time", %U, is always recorded in GMT. So you will probably need to use a LOGTIMEOFFSET command to convert to your local timezone. Also, it's just the integer part of the time, so if you have decimals you will have to use %U.%j .

The log formats which analog can handle are those which are known as instantaneously decipherable: in practice, this means that the character which terminates a string can never occur in the string. So for example, in common format, which looks like

LOGFORMAT (%S - %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j %j] "%j %r %j" %c %b)
if the hostname ever contained a space, the line would be marked as corrupt, because analog terminates the host at the first space, not at the first occurrence of space-dash-space, and then the rest of the line wouldn't match. Of course, hostnames should never contain spaces, so this shouldn't be a problem. There are a couple of other restrictions: if there is any date or time information, then the year, month, date, hour and minute must all be present: and the same information may not occur twice in the format (so you can't have both %m and %M, for example, because these both represent the month; make one of them a %j to have it ignored).

Sometimes you need to read one of the fields in a logfile, but not analyse it. For example, if you have a separate common log and referrer log, the referrer log might look like

http://guide-p.infoseek.com/Titles -> /~sret1/analog/
But the requests for /~sret1/analog/ would already have been counted when reading the main logfile, so you don't want to count them again now. You get round this by specifying a * in that item in the format string, like this:
LOGFORMAT (%f -> %*r)

A tip: sometimes it is more efficient to specify two or more adjacent fields to ignore with a single %j, as long as the whole group ends with a recognisable character. So common format is more efficiently specified as

LOGFORMAT (%S - %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%j %r %j" %c %b)
-- in the date and time [25/Dec/1998:17:45:35 +0000], the seconds and the timezone can be ignored with a single %j, extending until the close-bracket.

Another tip: %j can also be used to ignore whole lines, rather than just fields analog doesn't use. For example, the extended log format ignores lines beginning with # by using

LOGFORMAT #%j
and the Microsoft format ignores lines corresponding to FTP requests with
LOGFORMAT (%*S, %*u, %m/%d/%y, %h:%n:%j, %j)
If those formats had not been used, the lines would have been incorrectly marked as corrupt.
Finally, both for reference and as examples, here is a list of all the fixed formats that analog understands, together with the example lines from the previous section and their built-in definitions (split over two lines where necessary).
Common format, LOGFORMAT COMMON
jay.bird.com - fred [25/Dec/1998:17:45:35 +0000]
      "GET /~sret1/ HTTP/1.0" 200 1243
LOGFORMAT (%S %j %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%j%w%r%wHTTP%j" %c %b)
LOGFORMAT (%S %j %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%j%w%r" %c %b)
LOGFORMAT (%S %j %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%r" %c %b)
Microsoft common format, LOGFORMAT MS-COMMON
jay.bird.com - fred [25/Dec/1998:17:45:35 +0000]
      "GET /~sret1/ "HTTP/1.0" 200 1243
LOGFORMAT (%S %j %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%j%w%r%w"HTTP%j" %c %b)
LOGFORMAT (%S %j %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%j%w%r" %c %b)
LOGFORMAT (%S %j %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%r" %c %b)
Combined log, LOGFORMAT COMBINED
jay.bird.com - fred [25/Dec/1998:17:45:35 +0000] "GET /~sret1/ HTTP/1.0" 200
      1243 "http://www.site.com/" "Mozilla/2.0 (X11; I; HP-UX A.09.05)"
LOGFORMAT (%S %j %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%j%w%r%wHTTP%j" %c %b "%f" "%B")
LOGFORMAT (%S %j %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%j%w%r" %c %b "%f" "%B")
LOGFORMAT (%S %j %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] "%r" %c %b "%f" "%B")
Referrer log, LOGFORMAT REFERRER
[25/Dec/1998:17:45:35] http://www.site.com/ -> /~sret1/
or http://www.site.com/ -> /~sret1/
LOGFORMAT ([%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] %f -> %*r)
LOGFORMAT (%f -> %*r)
Browser log, LOGFORMAT BROWSER
[25/Dec/1998:17:45:35] Mozilla/2.0 (X11; I; HP-UX A.09.05)
LOGFORMAT ([%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j] %B)
Microsoft log, North American dates, LOGFORMAT MICROSOFT-NA
192.64.25.41, -, 12/25/98, 17:45:35, W3SVC1, HOST1, 192.16.225.10,
      2178, 303, 1243, 200, 0, GET, /~sret1/, -,
192.64.25.41, -, 12/25/2001, 17:45:35, W3SVC1, HOST1, 192.16.225.10,
      2178, 303, 1243, 200, 0, GET, /~sret1/, -,
LOGFORMAT (%S, %u, %m/%d/%Z, %h:%n:%j, W3SVC%j, %j, %v,
      %T, %j, %b, %c, %j, %j, %r, %q,)
LOGFORMAT (%*S, %*u, %m/%d/%Z, %h:%n:%j, %j)
Microsoft log, international dates, LOGFORMAT MICROSOFT-INT
192.64.25.41, -, 25/12/98, 17:45:35, W3SVC1, HOST1, 192.16.225.10,
      2178, 303, 1243, 200, 0, GET, /~sret1/, -,
192.64.25.41, -, 25/12/2001, 17:45:35, W3SVC1, HOST1, 192.16.225.10,
      2178, 303, 1243, 200, 0, GET, /~sret1/, -,
LOGFORMAT (%S, %u, %d/%m/%Z, %h:%n:%j, W3SVC%j, %j, %v,
      %T, %j, %b, %c, %j, %j, %r, %q,)
LOGFORMAT (%*S, %*u, %d/%m/%Z, %h:%n:%j, %j)
WebSite log, North American dates, LOGFORMAT WEBSITE-NA
12/25/98 17:45:35  jay.bird.com  host1  Server  fred  GET  /~sret1/
   http://www.site.com/    Mozilla/2.0 (X11; I; HP-UX A.09.05)  200  1243  2178
LOGFORMAT (%m/%d/%y %h:%n:%j\t%S\t%v\t%j\t%u\t%j\t%r\t%f\t%j\t%B\t%c\t%b\t%T)
WebSite log, international dates, LOGFORMAT WEBSITE-INT
25/12/98 17:45:35  jay.bird.com  host1  Server  fred  GET  /~sret1/
   http://www.site.com/    Mozilla/2.0 (X11; I; HP-UX A.09.05)  200  1243  2178
LOGFORMAT (%d/%m/%y %h:%n:%j\t%S\t%v\t%j\t%u\t%j\t%r\t%f\t%j\t%B\t%c\t%b\t%T)
MacHTTP format, LOGFORMAT MACHTTP
12/25/98  17:45:35   OK    jay.bird.com  /~sret1/  1243
LOGFORMAT (%m/%d/%y\t%h:%n:%j \t%C%w%S\t%r\t%b)
The extended log, Netscape log and WebSTAR log don't have any built-in formats: analog constructs their formats from their header lines.

Aliases

After analog has read each logfile entry, it then applies aliases to each of the items. First, if you have a case insensitive filesystem, analog converts the filename to lower case. Usually analog assumes that Unix and BeOS filesystems are case sensitive and other systems are case insensitive. You might want to override its choice, if, for example, you have transferred files from one machine to another, so as to use the convention on the original machine. You can do this by the commands
CASE INSENSITIVE
CASE SENSITIVE
There are similar commands for usernames, if your logfile records these. By default, usernames are always case insensitive, but you can specify
USERCASE SENSITIVE
to override this.
Next it applies built-in aliases to each item. For example, it knows that %7E in a filename or referrer is equivalent to ~ and translates it accordingly. It also strips off the directory suffix from any filenames which have it. This suffix is normally index.html, but you can specify another one instead with a command such as
DIRSUFFIX default.htm
(You can only have one DIRSUFFIX.) There are other built-in aliases for other items: for example, hostnames are converted to lower case at this point.
After this, it applies user-specified aliases to each item. These aliases are useful if, for example, you know that two filenames correspond to the same file, or if you want to translate local hostnames to their internet equivalents. You specify aliases by commands like
FILEALIAS /football.html /soccer.html
HOSTALIAS lion lion.statslab.cam.ac.uk
There is also the special command FILEALIAS none, which cancels any other file aliases which might have been specified.

The alias commands for the other items are called BROWALIAS, REFALIAS, USERALIAS and VHOSTALIAS. Only one alias is ever applied to any item. So after

FILEALIAS /football.html /soccer.html
FILEALIAS /soccer.html /brazil.html
the file /soccer.html would get translated to /brazil.html, but /football.html would only get translated to /soccer.html and would not see the second alias.

You can also use wildcards in ALIAS commands: ? matches any one character and * matches any number of characters (including none). And on the right-hand side, you can use $1, $2 etc. to represent the parts of the original name matched by the *'s. As a special abbreviation, if there is exactly one * on the left-hand side, then a * on the right-hand side can be used to represent $1. So, for example,

FILEALIAS /*/football/* /soccer/
would translate /sport/football/rules.html to just /soccer/, but either of
FILEALIAS /*/football/* /$1/soccer/$2         # or
FILEALIAS /sport/football/* /sport/soccer/*
would translate /sport/football/rules.html to /sport/soccer/rules.html.

You can use $$ to get an actual $ on the right-hand side. Or you can prefix the right-hand side with "PLAIN:" to treat any $'s and *'s on the right-hand side literally. For example

FILEALIAS /*/football/* PLAIN:/$1/soccer/$2
would translate /sport/football/rules.html to exactly /$1/soccer/$2

Analog's *'s are un-greedy: if there are two possible ways of matching, the part of the expression on the left matches as little as possible. This is more often what you want. But it contrasts with Perl's regular expressions, for example. (Oh, two consecutive *'s are completely useless, but if you try it they are collapsed into one before counting the $1, $2, etc.)

The behaviour of FILEALIAS and REFALIAS can be slightly unintuitive if the file has search arguments.

A warning to Unix users: if you put an ALIAS command on the command line with +C, the shell may try and expand $1 etc., which is not what you want. To stop the shell doing this, put the command in single quotes instead of double quotes.


There is another set of alias commands, called output aliases. They don't alias items, but individual lines from particular reports (and they never combine lines, even if two lines end up with the same name). For example, the command
TYPEALIAS .txt ".txt (Plain text files)"
would provide an explanation of that line in the File Type Report.

There can be some confusion between some normal alias and output alias commands. For example, what is the difference between FILEALIAS and REQALIAS? In fact, there are several differences because of the different things the aliases are doing. FILEALIAS applies to the files themselves, but REQALIAS only applies to the lines in the Request Report. This means that FILEALIAS also affects the other reports which use the filenames, such as the Directory Report, whereas REQALIAS only affects the Request Report.

Another difference is that REQALIAS applies separately to each line of the Request Report. This means that if two separate files translate to the same thing in a FILEALIAS command, they will become one file for all the reports. But if you were to use the same REQALIAS command, they would still be two files, and would still be listed on separate lines in the Request Report, but with the same name.

So in summary, when should you use each command? FILEALIAS should be used if a single file has two different names; i.e., if your web server returns the same file for two different URLs. REQALIAS, on the other hand, would typically be used to annotate or clarify the Request Report. Sometimes it's useful to use both; first combine some files with FILEALIAS, and then annotate them in the Request Report with REQALIAS.

The full list of output aliases is REQALIAS, REDIRALIAS, FAILALIAS, TYPEALIAS, DIRALIAS, HOSTREPALIAS, REDIRHOSTALIAS, FAILHOSTALIAS, DOMALIAS, ORGALIAS, REFREPALIAS, REFSITEALIAS, REDIRREFALIAS, FAILREFALIAS, BROWREPALIAS, BROWSUMALIAS, OSALIAS, VHOSTREPALIAS, REDIRVHOSTREPALIAS, FAILVHOSTREPALIAS, USERREPALIAS, REDIRUSERALIAS and FAILUSERALIAS.

There is one known bug with the output aliases. The report is sorted before the alias is applied. This means that if the SORTBY for the report is set to ALPHABETICAL, then the report will not be sorted correctly.


You can also use regular expressions in the ALIAS commands. Sorry, I'm not going to teach you how to use regular expressions here if you don't already know: if you're on Unix try typing man perlre or man regex or man grep. There are lots of implementations of regular expressions. The ones which analog uses are Perl-syntax regular expressions. In general, these are a superset of the extended regular expressions used by Unix egrep or GNU grep -E.

You include regular expressions in an ALIAS command by prefixing the left-hand side of the alias with "REGEXP:". Or you can specify a case-insensitive match, like Perl m//i or Unix egrep -i, by using "REGEXPI:". (It's automatically case-insensitive for many items, such as hostnames, or filenames if you have specified CASE INSENSITIVE.)

On the right-hand side of the alias you can use $1, $2 etc. to represent the first, second etc. bracketed expression on the left-hand side, counting in order of the left brackets. (Again, you can't put $1, $2 etc. on the command line unless you put them in single quotes.)

Regular expressions match if they match just part of the string. If you want them to have to match the whole of the string, you have to anchor them to the ends of the string with ^ and $.

For example,

REQALIAS REGEXP:^(/~(.+?)/.*) "[$2] $1"
would translate
/~sret1/backgammon/rules.html
to
[sret1] /~sret1/backgammon/rules.html
in the Request Report. Or
HOSTALIAS REGEXP:^([^.]*)$ $1.mycompany.com
would add .mycompany.com to all hostnames not containing a dot. (See the FAQ for a discussion about whether this is a good idea.)

Regular expressions are greedy: if there are two possible ways of matching, the part of the expression on the left matches as much as possible.


Inclusions and exclusions

After aliasing each item, analog decides whether that item is wanted or not. The whole line is only counted if all the items are wanted. Whether an item is wanted or not is determined by INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands specified by the user. These commands can be used to exclude requests from your local users, for example, or to analyse only files in a subdirectory. For example
HOSTEXCLUDE mycomputer.myisp.com
would exclude all requests by that computer from the statistics. (To exclude lines just from one specific report, see below.)

The rule for determining whether an item is included or excluded is as follows. All the INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands for that item are considered one by one in order, and the item is included or excluded according to the last command it matched. Items which don't match any of the INCLUDE or EXCLUDE commands are included if the first command was an exclusion, and excluded if the first command was an inclusion. For example, the configuration

FILEINCLUDE /~sret1/*
FILEEXCLUDE /~sret1/backgammon/*,/~sret1/analog/*
FILEINCLUDE /~sret1/backgammon/*.gif
would instruct the program to examine only my files, excluding my backgammon and analog files, but including gifs in my backgammon directory. On the other hand,
FILEEXCLUDE /~sret1/*/img/*
would analyse all files, except for images in my various directories. (If you get confused with all the inclusions and exclusions, remember that you can always use SETTINGS ON to see what the options you have specified represent.) Note that inclusions and exclusions can contain any number of wildcards, and can be lists separated by commas (but no spaces).

The full list of these commands is HOSTINCLUDE and HOSTEXCLUDE; FILEINCLUDE and FILEEXCLUDE; BROWINCLUDE and BROWEXCLUDE; REFINCLUDE and REFEXCLUDE; USERINCLUDE and USEREXCLUDE; VHOSTINCLUDE and VHOSTEXCLUDE; and STATUSINCLUDE and STATUSEXCLUDE.


Some notes on these commands.

Because the inclusions and exclusions take place after the aliasing, the name you must use is the aliased name. (In the absence of output alias commands, this is the name of the item in the output.)

Sometimes a line doesn't contain a particular sort of item, either because there is no field reserved for it on the line, or because the browser didn't send it for that request, or because it was present but corrupt. You can include or exclude these lines by making a special blank entry in the INCLUDE or EXCLUDE command. For example,

USERINCLUDE jim
USERINCLUDE ""
would include lines from user jim and lines without any user specified.

The behaviour of REQINCLUDE and REFINCLUDE can be slightly unintuitive if the file has search arguments.

You can also use regular expressions for the inclusions and exclusions by prefixing the expression with "REGEXP:" or "REGEXPI:". I've already described this at length in the context of aliases, so you can look there for all the details. A regular expression must be on a line on its own, not within a comma-separated list.


With HOSTINCLUDE and HOSTEXCLUDE, you have to use numerical addresses if your web server records numerical addresses in the logfile, or names if it records names (or if you're resolving the numerical addresses with analog's DNS resolution). For numerical addresses, you can use some special formats, like this:
HOSTINCLUDE 131.111.20.18      # simple IP address
HOSTINCLUDE 131.111.20.*       # wildcard
HOSTINCLUDE 131.111.20         # the same meaning
HOSTINCLUDE 131.111.20-23      # a range of class C addresses
HOSTINCLUDE 131.111.20.18/23   # subnet mask

The STATUSINCLUDE and STATUSEXCLUDE commands are slightly different from the rest. They work on HTTP status codes. (These codes are defined in the HTTP spec, and viewable in the Status Code Report. But if you don't already know about them, you really don't want to use these commands anyway!) The arguments to the commands are a comma-separated list of ranges. One end of the range can be blank, meaning from the first, or to the last, status code. For example
STATUSINCLUDE 200-206,304,500-
would mean only look at lines with status codes 200-206, 304 or 500-599.

Some people want to exclude status code 304 (Not Modified) to stop those requests appearing in the Request Report. But there is a better solution. By default, analog counts code 304 as a successful request, because it assumes that the cached version of the document is then presented to the user. But you can count it as a redirected request with the command

304ISSUCCESS OFF
For most people this is the wrong option, because code 304 is really the same as code 200 to the user. So again, if you don't understand this, stick with the default.
There is also one other pair of commands which belongs in this category, namely the FROM and TO commands. These specify a time period to restrict the analysis to. The simplest usage of these commands is FROM yyMMdd or FROM yyMMdd:hhmm, where yy represents the last two digits of the year (analog assumes that the year is between 1970 and 2069), MM represents the month, dd is the date, hh the hour, and mm the minute. So, for example, to analyse only requests from 1st July 1999 to 1pm on 15th June 2000 I would use the configuration
FROM 990701
TO   000615:1300
Alternatively, each of the components can be preceded by + or - to represent time relative to the time at which the program was invoked. In this case, the date can have more than 2 digits. This allows constructions like
FROM -01-00+01   # from tomorrow last year
TO -00-0131  # to the end of last month (OK even if last month
             # didn't have 31 days)
FROM -00-00-112
TO   -00-00-01  # statistics for the last 16 weeks
FROM -00-00-00:-06+01  # statistics for the last 6 hours
There are command line abbreviations +F and +T for the FROM and TO commands; for example, +T-00-00-01:1800 looks at statistics until 6pm yesterday. -F and -T turn off the from and to, as do FROM OFF and TO OFF.
There are also INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands for most of the reports. Unlike the INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands discussed above, these don't exclude logfile lines but individual lines from particular reports.

So, for example, the command

REFREPEXCLUDE http://your.site.com/*
would exclude your internal referrers from the Referrer Report. However, it would not exclude them from the Failed Referrer Report, the Referring Site Report, etc. (you need to use FAILREFEXCLUDE, REFSITEEXCLUDE etc. for that); nor would it prevent other analysis of logfile lines with those referrers, as REFEXCLUDE would.

The full list of these commands is REQINCLUDE and REQEXCLUDE; REDIRINCLUDE and REDIREXCLUDE; FAILINCLUDE and FAILEXCLUDE; TYPEINCLUDE and TYPEEXCLUDE; DIRINCLUDE and DIREXCLUDE; HOSTREPINCLUDE and HOSTREPEXCLUDE; REDIRHOSTINCLUDE and REDIRHOSTEXCLUDE; FAILHOSTINCLUDE and FAILHOSTEXCLUDE; DOMINCLUDE and DOMEXCLUDE; ORGINCLUDE and ORGEXCLUDE; REFREPINCLUDE and REFREPEXCLUDE; REFSITEINCLUDE and REFSITEEXCLUDE; SEARCHQUERYINCLUDE and SEARCHQUERYEXCLUDE; SEARCHWORDINCLUDE and SEARCHWORDEXCLUDE; INTSEARCHQUERYINCLUDE and INTSEARCHQUERYEXCLUDE; INTSEARCHWORDINCLUDE and INTSEARCHWORDEXCLUDE; REDIRREFINCLUDE and REDIRREFEXCLUDE; FAILREFINCLUDE and FAILREFEXCLUDE; BROWSUMINCLUDE and BROWSUMEXCLUDE; BROWREPINCLUDE and BROWREPEXCLUDE; OSINCLUDE and OSEXCLUDE; VHOSTREPINCLUDE and VHOSTREPEXCLUDE; REDIRVHOSTREPINCLUDE and REDIRVHOSTREPEXCLUDE; FAILVHOSTREPINCLUDE and FAILVHOSTREPEXCLUDE; USERREPINCLUDE and USERREPEXCLUDE; REDIRUSERREPINCLUDE and REDIRUSERREPEXCLUDE; and FAILUSERINCLUDE and FAILUSEREXCLUDE.

The inclusion or exclusion applies to the unaliased name, if you are doing any output aliases. (This contrasts with the behaviour of normal INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands, which apply to the aliased name.)

All directory names end in slashes, so DIRINCLUDE and DIREXCLUDE, and REFSITEINCLUDE and REFSITEEXCLUDE, implicitly add a trailing slash even if you don't give one. This sometimes catches people out in the following situation.

REFSITEEXCLUDE http://my.host.com/*     # probably not what you want
means not to list subdirectories of the referring site http://my.host.com/, but to keep the site itself in the list. To exclude the site completely, just use
REFSITEEXCLUDE http://my.host.com/

You can also use the symbolic word pages in suitable INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands; one very common command is

REQINCLUDE pages
to include only pages in the Request Report.
There are some miscellaneous INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands which I'll describe now. First, analog determines which files should count as pages (and thus which requests count as page requests) using an INCLUDE/EXCLUDE pair called PAGEINCLUDE and PAGEEXCLUDE. By default, (case insensitive) *.html and *.htm, and directories (*/) count as pages. But you change the list by commands like
PAGEINCLUDE *.asp
PAGEEXCLUDE /sret1.html
I.e., *.asp are pages, but /sret1.html isn't. (If the file has search arguments, the PAGEINCLUDE and PAGEEXCLUDE are reckoned just on the part of the filename before the question mark.)
In some of the reports, analog can link to the files which it's listing. You can specify exactly which files are linked to with the LINKINCLUDE family of commands. For example,
REQLINKINCLUDE pages,*.pdf
would link to pages and PDF files in the Request Report. The full set of these commands is REQLINKINCLUDE and REQLINKEXCLUDE (Request Report), REDIRLINKINCLUDE and REDIRLINKEXCLUDE (Redirection Report), FAILLINKINCLUDE and FAILLINKEXCLUDE (Failure Report), REFLINKINCLUDE and REFLINKEXCLUDE (Referrer Report), REDIRREFLINKINCLUDE and REDIRREFLINKEXCLUDE (Redirected Referrer Report), and FAILREFLINKINCLUDE and FAILREFLINKEXCLUDE (Failed Referrer Report). Note that the target of the links is also affected by the BASEURL command.
Finally, there is a pair of commands called ROBOTINCLUDE and ROBOTEXCLUDE, which determine which browsers count as "robots" in the Operating System Report. For example,
ROBOTINCLUDE Googlebot/*

There is one final set of INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands to include or exclude the search arguments at the end of URLs. But there are some slightly complicated issues surrounding those, so they deserve a new section.

Search arguments

Sometimes a URL contains arguments after a question mark. For example, the URL
/cgi-bin/script.pl?x=1&y=2
runs the /cgi-bin/script.pl program with arguments x=1 and y=2. (Sometimes the server records these arguments in a separate field in the logfile, but if so you can use the %q field in the LOGFORMAT command, and analog will translate the filename to the above format).

You can tell analog either to read or to ignore the arguments using the commands ARGSINCLUDE and ARGSEXCLUDE which we'll discuss in a minute. But by default, all arguments are read, and as this is usually what you want, you don't usually need those commands.

You don't always see the arguments in the reports, even if they're being read, because analog doesn't show them if there aren't enough of them. In order to see them, you have to set the corresponding ARGSFLOOR parameter low enough.

Also note that within a report, the search arguments are listed immediately under the file to which they refer. This temporarily interrupts the normal order of the files. It may be clearer if you turn the N column on.


Assuming that the arguments are being read, analog treats the file /cgi-bin/script.pl?x=1&y=2 as a different file from /cgi-bin/script.pl (or from /cgi-bin/script.pl?y=2&x=1 for that matter). It doesn't look like that in the Request Report because you see a grand total for /cgi-bin/script.pl with all its different arguments. But it matters if you want to do inclusions and exclusions or aliases on the file.

The reason is that, for example, the command

FILEINCLUDE /cgi-bin/script.pl
doesn't match the file /cgi-bin/script.pl?x=1&y=2. To match that, you would have to use something like
FILEINCLUDE /cgi-bin/script.pl*
instead. Similarly
FILEALIAS /cgi-bin/script.pl /script.pl
will change /cgi-bin/script.pl itself, but not /cgi-bin/script.pl?x=1&y=2. You might want to use something like
FILEALIAS /cgi-bin/script.pl?* /script.pl?$1
as well. (However, PAGEINCLUDE and PAGEEXCLUDE always refer to the part of the filename before the question mark.)

Conversely, because in the Request Report files with arguments are only included if their parent file is included, you can't just

REQINCLUDE /cgi-bin/script.pl?*x=1*
or you will end up with nothing listed. You have to
REQINCLUDE /cgi-bin/script.pl
as well.
The alternative is to tell analog not to read the search arguments. There are commands called ARGSINCLUDE and ARGSEXCLUDE, and REFARGSINCLUDE and REFARGSEXCLUDE, to do this. They work the same as the other INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands which we discussed in the previous section. So, for example, if the command
ARGSEXCLUDE /cgi-bin/script.pl
were given, analog would ignore the arguments to that file, and so read /cgi-bin/script.pl?x=1&y=2 as just /cgi-bin/script.pl. On the other hand, if
ARGSINCLUDE /cgi-bin/script.pl
were specified, analog would read the arguments, and so treat /cgi-bin/script.pl?x=1&y=2 as a different file from /cgi-bin/script.pl. REFARGSINCLUDE and REFARGSEXCLUDE are the same for referrers.

Technical note: the check for whether the arguments should be included happens before the filename has been subject to either built-in or user-specified aliases. So you have to use the unaliased name, exactly as it occurs in the logfile. For example, ARGSINCLUDE /~sret1/script.pl won't match /%7Esret1/script.pl even though they are really the same file. It also means that you can't use "pages" in the ARGSINCLUDE or ARGSEXCLUDE command, because we don't know whether a file is a page until after it's been aliased.


There are related commands called SEARCHENGINE and INTSEARCHENGINE. If you have referrers with search arguments, usually from search engines, you can tell analog which field corresponds to the search term. It uses this information to compile the Search Query Report and the Search Word Report. For example, consider the referrer
http://www.altavista.com/cgi-bin/query?pg=q&kl=XX&q=carrot+cake
The search term is in the field q= so the appropriate SEARCHENGINE command is
SEARCHENGINE http://www.altavista.com/cgi-bin/query q
(or even better
SEARCHENGINE http://*altavista.*/* q
to allow for all their mirror sites in different countries.)

The command INTSEARCHENGINE is the same for search engines, or other scripts which take arguments, within your site. For example, you might have requests for files like

/cgi-bin/search?trm=chocolate+cake
in which case you would specify
INTSEARCHENGINE /cgi-bin/search trm
and (assuming you haven't done an ARGSEXCLUDE for that file) "chocolate cake" would then appear in your Internal Search Query Report.

Sometimes a search engine has two or more possible fields for the search term. In that case you can list all of them separated by commas, like this:

SEARCHENGINE http://*webcrawler.*/* search,searchText

The rest of this section is a bit technical, and you usually don't need to worry about it. On a first reading, you probably want to skip it.

I said previously that %7E in a URL is automatically converted to ~, etc. In fact this is only done to the ASCII-printable characters %20-%7E, because these are the only characters that are the same in every character set. (In fact, even that isn't true. Experts might want to know that ?, &, ; and = aren't converted either, to distinguish them from query-string delimiters: an encoded ?, &, ; or = is one that is not intended to be a delimiter. Also % isn't converted, to avoid confusing %25nm with %nm.)

But in the Search Query Report and Search Word Report it is useful to be able to convert non-ASCII characters too, so that you can see the actual words people typed, rather than get the %nm codes in place of all accented letters. So in these reports analog also converts characters %A0-%FF (if you are using an ISO-8859-* character set) or %80-%FF (for most other character sets).

However, there are reasons why you might not want this feature, and you can turn it off with the command

SEARCHCHARCONVERT OFF
These reasons include:
  1. The character set in which the query was submitted to the search engine may not be the same as that in which the page reached was written, or that in which the analog output page is being written. So converting to the character set of the analog output page may give garbage anyway. This is particularly a problem with languages, such as Russian, which have two or more characters sets in common use. It is also a problem for sites which host resources in many languages.
  2. Not all of the character positions correspond to printable characters in every character set. Analog knows that %80-%9F are non-printable in the ISO-8859-* character sets, but apart from that it converts everything in %80-%FF. So you may end up with non-printable characters in your output.
SEARCHCHARCONVERT is always turned off if the output is in ASCII; and it defaults to off if the output is in a multibyte character set because it doesn't work well in that case.

Configuring the output

So far we have mainly discussed commands which control how analog reads the logfiles. We now get on to commands for configuring the output.
First, you can change the style of the output using the OUTPUT command. There are seven possible output styles, called XHTML, HTML, PLAIN, ASCII, XML, LATEX and COMPUTER.

XHTML is the default. It produces web pages in XHTML 1.0. HTML produces web pages in HTML 2.0.

PLAIN produces plain text files, and ASCII is the same as PLAIN except that it uses all ASCII characters (no accents etc.) if possible. (This is because some applications don't understand accented characters).

LATEX produces LaTeX code which can be turned into PDF if you have the pdflatex command installed. (If you want to use the ordinary latex command, specify PDFLATEX OFF.) It's only available with certain European languages (US-ASCII, ISO-8859-1 and ISO-8859-2 character sets). Yes, I know it gives overfull hboxes sometimes.

COMPUTER is a special format suitable for reading by a computer (useful for reading into a spreadsheet, or post-processing with a graphics package, for example). There is a separate section about this format later.

XML produces an XML output which is an alternative format for post-processing. The DTD for the XML output is distributed with the program. You can find more information about the XML style, and an example of a post-processing program, at http://timian.jessen.ch/.

As well as a command like

OUTPUT PLAIN
you can also select PLAIN style with the command line argument +a, and XHTML with the command line argument -a.

You can also specify OUTPUT NONE for no output, if you are producing a cache file.


Next, you can change the language of the output. There are two ways to do this. The usual way is to use the LANGUAGE command. For example, the command
LANGUAGE FRENCH
will give you the output in French. The available languages at the moment are ARMENIAN, BASQUE, BULGARIAN (Windows-1251), BULGARIAN-MIK (MIK-16), CATALAN, SIMP-CHINESE (GB2312), TRAD-CHINESE (Big5), CZECH (ISO Latin 2), CZECH-1250 (Windows-1250), DANISH, DUTCH, ENGLISH, US-ENGLISH, FINNISH, FRENCH, GERMAN, HUNGARIAN, INDONESIAN, ITALIAN, JAPANESE-EUC (EUC-JP), JAPANESE-JIS (ISO-2022-JP), JAPANESE-SJIS (SJIS), JAPANESE-UTF (UTF-8), KOREAN, LATVIAN, NORWEGIAN (Bokmål), NYNORSK, POLISH, PORTUGUESE, BR-PORTUGUESE, RUSSIAN (KOI8-R), RUSSIAN-1251 (Windows-1251), SERBIAN, SLOVAK (ISO Latin 2), SLOVAK-1250 (Windows-1250), SLOVENE (ISO Latin 2), SLOVENE-1250 (Windows-1250), SPANISH, SWEDISH, SWEDISH-ALT (alternative translation avoiding Anglicisms), TURKISH and UKRAINIAN.

The following languages were available for previous versions of analog, but have not yet been translated for version 5: BOSNIAN, CROATIAN, GREEK, ICELANDIC, LITHUANIAN and ROMANIAN. As and when they are translated, they will be added to the analog home page. If you want to translate any of them (or any other language), I would be delighted! See below.

The other way to specify a language is to use the LANGFILE command. This is useful if you want to download a new language from the analog home page, or if you want to translate one yourself, or even if you want to change some words or phrases or the way the dates and times are formatted in the output. The LANGFILE command tells analog in which file to find the various words and phrases for a new language. For example, the command

LANGFILE guarani.lng   # or
LANGFILE /usr/etc/httpd/analog/lang/guarani.lng
would read from that file. If the name of the file doesn't include a directory, it will be looked for wherever analog normally expects to find its language files.

Some languages also have domains files or report descriptions files available. These are normally selected automatically by the LANGUAGE command. But you can tell analog to use different ones with the DOMAINSFILE and DESCFILE commands. Also, some languages have translations of the form interface or configuration file.

If you want to translate another language, I would be delighted! Do contact me first to make sure that no-one else is already translating the same language. The file README.txt in the language directory, and the English language file, contain some brief instructions for translating new languages.

Equally, if you find any mistakes in the output in different languages, please do let me know because I'm not able to check them all myself!


You can change which file the output goes to with a command like
OUTFILE stats.htm
or with a command line argument like +Ostats.htm. If you use the filename - or stdout, the output will go to standard output, which is normally the screen, but Unix users might like to redirect it to another file or even into a pipe. You can also use an absolute path name, like
OUTFILE /usr/bin/httpd/htdocs/stats.html  # Unix
OUTFILE "Hard Disk:Server Apps:WebSTAR:Analog:Report.html" # Mac
If the name of the OUTFILE doesn't include a directory, it will be put wherever analog expects to put its output files. (This location is built in when the program is compiled.) For example, on Windows it would be in the same folder as the analog executable. But if you use the +O command line argument, the file is within the current directory.

You can include date codes in the OUTFILE in exactly the same way as for the LOGFILE. So for example,

OUTFILE stats%y%M%D.html
will produce filenames like stats990501.html. As with the LOGFILE, the date used is the TO date if one was specified, and otherwise the time of the start of the program.
Next, you need to know how to turn the different reports on and off. There are 44 different reports which analog can produce, if your web server has been configured to record the necessary data in the logfiles. Each one has a short name, and a code letter or number, as follows. (Note that the code letters are case sensitive: Z is quite different from z, for example).
x  GENERAL         General Summary
1  YEARLY          Yearly Report
Q  QUARTERLY       Quarterly Report
m  MONTHLY         Monthly Report
W  WEEKLY          Weekly Report
D  DAILYREP        Daily Report
d  DAILYSUM        Daily Summary
H  HOURLYREP       Hourly Report
h  HOURLYSUM       Hourly Summary
w  WEEKHOUR        Hour of the Week Summary
4  QUARTERREP      Quarter-Hour Report
6  QUARTERSUM      Quarter-Hour Summary
5  FIVEREP         Five-Minute Report
7  FIVESUM         Five-Minute Summary
S  HOST            Host Report
l  REDIRHOST       Host Redirection Report
L  FAILHOST        Host Failure Report
Z  ORGANISATION    Organisation Report
o  DOMAIN          Domain Report
r  REQUEST         Request Report
i  DIRECTORY       Directory Report
t  FILETYPE        File Type Report
z  SIZE            File Size Report
P  PROCTIME        Processing Time Report
E  REDIR           Redirection Report
I  FAILURE         Failure Report
f  REFERRER        Referrer Report
s  REFSITE         Referring Site Report
N  SEARCHQUERY     Search Query Report
n  SEARCHWORD      Search Word Report
Y  INTSEARCHQUERY  Internal Search Query Report
y  INTSEARCHWORD   Internal Search Word Report
k  REDIRREF        Redirected Referrer Report
K  FAILREF         Failed Referrer Report
B  BROWSERREP      Browser Report
b  BROWSERSUM      Browser Summary
p  OSREP           Operating System Report
v  VHOST           Virtual Host Report
R  REDIRVHOST      Virtual Host Redirection Report
M  FAILVHOST       Virtual Host Failure Report
u  USER            User Report
j  REDIRUSER       User Redirection Report
J  FAILUSER        User Failure Report
c  STATUS          Status Code Report
For details on what the various reports mean, and a summary of the commands which control them, see the section on Analog's reports.

You can turn each report on or off with configuration commands like

FIVEREP OFF
REFSITE ON
or by using command line arguments like -5 and +s. You can also turn all reports except the General Summary on or off with the commands ALL ON and ALL OFF, or with the command line arguments +A and -A.
You can turn the descriptions of each report off with the command
DESCRIPTIONS OFF
Even if DESCRIPTIONS is ON, the descriptions will only appear if analog can find a report descriptions file in your language, or if you specify one using the DESCFILE command: for example,
DESCFILE descriptions.txt
If the name of the descriptions file doesn't include a directory, it will be looked for wherever analog normally expects to find its language files.

You can turn the "Go To" lines in the output off with the command

GOTOS OFF
GOTOS ON turns them on again, and GOTOS FEW puts the "Go To" lines just at the top and bottom. GOTOS OFF can be abbreviated with the -X command line argument, and GOTOS ON with +X.

You can turn off the "Program started at" line at the top of the output, and the "Running Time" line at the bottom, with the command

RUNTIME OFF
and turn them on again with RUNTIME ON.

The figures in parentheses in the General Summary are for the last seven days: either the seven days before the TO time, or if no TO time is given, the seven days before the time of the program start. The figures for the last seven days are normally included if some, but not all, of the requests fall in those seven days; but you can turn them off by means of the command

LASTSEVEN OFF
Of course LASTSEVEN ON turns them on again.

You can change the order of the reports by means of the REPORTORDER command. You should list the code letters for all possible reports in the order you want them. Non-alphanumeric characters are ignored and so can be used as separators. For example,

REPORTORDER x-1QmdDhHw4567W-cPz-ritEIYy-SlLZo-sNnfKk-ujJ-vMR-bBp

You can turn the lines in General Summary on and off individually using the GENSUMLINES command. The default is
GENSUMLINES ALL
meaning all available lines. (You always only get the ones relevant to your logfile though.) You can turn lines off using a command like
GENSUMLINES -KL
(to turn off lines K & L) and turn them on again with a command like
GENSUMLINES +K
You can specify the exact set of lines to include with a command like
GENSUMLINES CDFGHM
You now just need to know which lines have which code letters, which is given in the following table.
 
Successful requests (always listed)
B
Average successful requests per day
C
Logfile lines without status code
D
Successful requests for pages
E
Average successful requests for pages per day
F
Failed requests
G
Redirected requests
H
Requests with informational status code
I
Distinct files requested
J
Distinct hosts served
K
Corrupt logfile lines
L
Unwanted logfile entries
M
Data transferred
N
Average data transferred per day

There is a command called IMAGEDIR which tells analog where the various images used to make the output page should live. It should be a URL, not the actual location on your disk, and it should include the final slash. For example, you could have
IMAGEDIR img/   # relative URL: within the same directory as the output
IMAGEDIR /img/  # off the root directory of your server
IMAGEDIR http://www.myother.server.com/img/  # on another server
Some people are confused about the IMAGEDIR. It's just put in the <img> tags in the output. You can see its effect if you look at the HTML source of the output page.

You can use gif images instead of png's for the bar charts by specifying

PNGIMAGES OFF
PNGIMAGES doesn't affect the pie charts, which are always png's: but see the JPEGCHARTS command for something similar.
There are four commands which affect the top line of the output. First, the LOGO and LOGOURL commands allow you to replace the analog logo with another image (for example, your organisation's logo). You can say
LOGO picture.gif  # for this file
LOGO /images/picture2.gif  # a different file
LOGO none         # for no logo
The logo is assumed to be inside the IMAGEDIR unless it starts with a slash, or contains ://

The LOGOURL command specifies a URL to link the logo to. If you change the LOGO, you probably want to change the LOGOURL as well. For example,

LOGOURL http://www.mycompany.com/
LOGOURL none   # for no link
The LOGOURL command only works with the XHTML output style, not HTML 2.0.

There are commands HOSTNAME and HOSTURL which affect the name and link at the end of the title line. For example, I might specify

HOSTNAME "Stephen Turner"
HOSTURL  http://homepage.ntlworld.com/adelie/stephen/
to generate the title "Web Server Statistics for Stephen Turner". Again, you can use none as the HOSTURL to specify no link. Analog will normally translate characters in the hostname to HTML if necessary. So to include literal HTML, such as accented characters, in the output you need to precede them by a backslash, like this:
HOSTNAME "M\&uuml;ller & S\&ouml;hne"

There are commands called HEADERFILE and FOOTERFILE. These let you specify files to be inserted near the top and bottom of your output. You can also specify
HEADERFILE none
to cancel a previously-specified header file. Again, if the name of the HEADERFILE or FOOTERFILE doesn't include a directory, analog will assume a directory, specified when the program was compiled.
There is a command called STYLESHEET to specify the URL of a style sheet for the output. This allows you to change the colours etc. (See http://www.w3.org/Style/css/ for how to write a style sheet.) For example,
STYLESHEET /housestyle.css
STYLESHEET none   # to cancel it
In the XHTML output style, if you specify a style sheet, it will replace the default one, so you might prefer to use the default one as a base -- you can find it in the directory examples/css, along with some other style sheets contributed by users.

There is a command CSSPREFIX to add a prefix to all the CSS class names used in the XHTML output style. This is useful to avoid clashes with other style sheets: the disadvantage is that it will make your output longer. For example,

CSSPREFIX anlg
CSSPREFIX none    # to cancel it
Of course, if you use your own style sheet, you will have to add the CSSPREFIX to all the class names in the style sheet.
There are three related commands called SEPCHAR, REPSEPCHAR and DECPOINT. These specify single characters to be used as the thousands separator in numbers, the thousands separator within the columns in the reports, and the decimal point. Normally, these will be set automatically for the language you choose, but you can change them if you want. For example, a French user might choose
SEPCHAR " "
REPSEPCHAR none
DECPOINT ,
to make "three thousand and a quarter" look like "3 000,25" in text and "3000,25" in the reports.

There is a command called RAWBYTES. Specify RAWBYTES ON if you want the exact number of bytes to be listed, or RAWBYTES OFF if you want the number of kilobytes or Megabytes as appropriate to be listed instead.

If RAWBYTES is OFF (which is the default), then you can use the BYTESDP command to specify how many decimal places you want the bytes rounded to. The default is 2, which will display numbers like "91.26 kilobytes".


There are commands called HTMLPAGEWIDTH, PLAINPAGEWIDTH and LATEXPLAINWIDTH which specify the width of the page. Which one is used depends on whethere the output style is HTML/XHTML, PLAIN/ASCII, or LATEX. The output is not guaranteed to fit in this width, but analog will take notice of it when choosing the width of the time graphs, when sorting the Host Report alphabetically, when drawing horizontal rules, and when writing some bits of text.
There is a command called NOROBOTS which stops robots which obey the robots META tag from indexing your output page or following its links. Normally this is set to ON but you can specify NOROBOTS OFF if you don't mind robots finding your other pages this way. Note that you will stop far more robots if you also put your stats page in your robots.txt file; on the other hand, this file has to be kept up to date by the server administrator.
Sometimes your server is not in the same timezone as you, or at least records the times in its logfiles in a different timezone (for example GMT). So that you can get your statistics in your local time, there is a command called LOGTIMEOFFSET to change the time by a certain number of minutes. As with the LOGFORMAT command, this only affects logfiles which come later in the same configuration file.

You have to be careful using this command. Because of daylight savings time in operation in different parts of the world at different times, analog cannot attempt to convert between different timezones. So it's your responsibility to set the right offset for different times of year. For example, if you were in Chicago, but your server was recording time in GMT, you would need to specify two different time offsets, one of minus five hours for summer and one of minus six hours for winter. You would need to split your logfiles in the right places and then run commands like

LOGTIMEOFFSET -300
LOGFILE summer*.log
LOGTIMEOFFSET -360
LOGFILE winter*.log

There is also a related command called TIMEOFFSET. This tells analog how much to offset the time of the computer on which it is running (rather than the computer running the server), to get your local time.


In the following sections we shall look at some commands for configuring the output of particular reports, under the following headings: Time reports, Other reports and Hierarchical reports.

Time reports

This section is about commands which control the appearance of the time reports. There are thirteen such reports, which show the pattern of usage over time. Eight of them (the ones with "Report" in their name) show the usage at specific times, whilst the other five (the "Summaries") show the total (not average) activity at particular times of day and week over the whole time period of the report.

By the way, in the following lists, don't get confused between the commands for the Quarterly Report (which begin with QUARTERLY) and those for the Quarter-Hour Report and Quarter-Hour Summary (with begin with QUARTERREP and QUARTERSUM respectively).


Each time report can contain columns listing the requests, requests for pages, and bytes transferred at that time, using the following code letters.
R
Number of requests
r
Percentage of the requests
P
Number of page requests
p
Percentage of the page requests
B
Number of bytes transferred
b
Percentage of the bytes
Which columns appear in which reports is controlled by various COLS commands. For example, the command
HOURSUMCOLS Pb
tells analog to include the number of page requests and percentage of the bytes, in that order, as the columns for the Hourly Summary. The full list of these COLS commands is YEARCOLS, QUARTERLYCOLS, MONTHCOLS, WEEKCOLS, DAYREPCOLS, DAYSUMCOLS, HOURREPCOLS, HOURSUMCOLS, WEEKHOURCOLS, QUARTERREPCOLS, QUARTERSUMCOLS, FIVEREPCOLS and FIVESUMCOLS. There is also a TIMECOLS command, which specifies that all the time reports are to have the specified columns.
Similarly, analog can plot the bar charts in the time reports according to the number of requests, number of page requests, or number of bytes. This is controlled by the GRAPH family of commands. So, for example,
DAYREPGRAPH P
tells analog to plot the bar charts in the Daily Report by the number of page requests. This also controls how analog decides which is the busiest time period in the bottom line of the report. Using a lower case letter tells analog to plot the bar charts with ASCII characters instead of the normal red bars. (This produces shorter output, and it is how they appear anyway in PLAIN and ASCII output styles, or when viewed with a non-graphical browser.) So, for example,
DAYREPGRAPH b
would plot the Daily Report by bytes, without using the graphics. The full list of GRAPH commands is YEARGRAPH, QUARTERLYGRAPH, MONTHGRAPH, WEEKGRAPH, DAYREPGRAPH, DAYSUMGRAPH, HOURREPGRAPH, HOURSUMGRAPH, WEEKHOURGRAPH, QUARTERREPGRAPH, QUARTERSUMGRAPH, FIVEREPGRAPH and FIVESUMGRAPH. There's also an ALLGRAPH command to set all of them simultaneously.
There are various possible graphics available for the graphs, controlled by the BARSTYLE command, as follows. (They will all look the same if you have a non-graphical browser.)

BARSTYLE a  +++++++++++
BARSTYLE b  +++++++++++
BARSTYLE c  +++++++++++
BARSTYLE d  +++++++++++
BARSTYLE e  +++++++++++
BARSTYLE f  +++++++++++
BARSTYLE g  +++++++++++
BARSTYLE h  +++++++++++
BARSTYLE i  +++++++++++
BARSTYLE j  +++++++++++
The default style is b.
You can plot the graphs either forwards in time (starting from the earliest date) or backwards (starting from the latest date). Use commands like
MONTHBACK ON  # Monthly Report backwards
WEEKBACK OFF  # Weekly Report forwards
The full list of BACK commands is YEARBACK, QUARTERLYBACK, MONTHBACK, WEEKBACK, DAYREPBACK, HOURREPBACK, QUARTERREPBACK and FIVEREPBACK. It tends to be confusing to mix directions (and analog will warn you if you attempt it) so usually you want to use the ALLBACK command which will set all of them at once.
For the more detailed time reports, you usually only want to list the last few time periods. (Every five minutes for the last three years?? I think not.) So analog provides some ROWS commands to let you specify how many rows you want in the time reports. For example
QUARTERREPROWS 96  # only the last day's worth
MONTHROWS 0        # 0 means no restriction: show all time
The full list of ROWS commands is YEARROWS, QUARTERLYROWS, MONTHROWS, WEEKROWS, DAYREPROWS, HOURREPROWS, QUARTERREPROWS and FIVEREPROWS. Even if a ROWS command is given, the line at the bottom of the report will still show the busiest time period ever, not just the busiest one in that many rows.
The character which is used for plotting the graphs in PLAIN and ASCII styles or on a non-graphical browser is specified by means of the MARKCHAR command. For example,
MARKCHAR =
tells analog to use the equals sign.

There is a parameter called MINGRAPHWIDTH which sets the minimum nominal size of the graphs. For example, if you set

MINGRAPHWIDTH 10
then the graph will be allowed to be up to 10 characters wide, even if that would exceed the PAGEWIDTH.

There is one more command which affects the time reports. You can specify which day should be counted as the first day of the week. This affects the layout of the Daily Report, Daily Summary, Weekly Report and Hour of the Week Summary. For example, our local student newspaper publishes a new edition on the web every Friday, so they like to specify WEEKBEGINSON FRIDAY for their reports.

In the next section, we'll look at commands relating to the non-time reports.


Other reports

This section deals with the non-time reports. There are quite a lot of commands which control these reports, although we've seen some of them already.

First, these reports have COLS commands, just like the time reports. (See the section on Time reports for how to use these commands.) But for these reports, several additional columns are available. Here is the full list of columns for the non-time reports

R
Number of requests
r
Percentage of the requests
S
Number of requests in the last 7 days
s
Percentage of the requests in the last 7 days
P
Number of page requests
p
Percentage of the page requests
Q
Number of page requests in the last 7 days
q
Percentage of the page requests in the last 7 days
B
Number of bytes transferred
b
Percentage of the bytes
C
Number of bytes transferred in the last 7 days
c
Percentage of the bytes in the last 7 days
d
Date of last access
D
Date and time of last access
e
Date of first access
E
Date and time of first access
N
The number of the item in the list
So, for example,
REQCOLS NRSD
counts the files in the Request Report, listing the number of requests for each, the number of requests for each in the last 7 days, and the time when each was last requested. The full list of COLS commands for non-time reports is HOSTCOLS, REDIRHOSTCOLS, FAILHOSTCOLS, ORGCOLS, DOMCOLS, REQCOLS, DIRCOLS, TYPECOLS, SIZECOLS, PROCTIMECOLS, REDIRCOLS, FAILCOLS, REFCOLS, REFSITECOLS, SEARCHQUERYCOLS, SEARCHWORDCOLS, INTSEARCHQUERYCOLS, INTSEARCHWORDCOLS, REDIRREFCOLS, FAILREFCOLS, BROWREPCOLS, BROWSUMCOLS, OSCOLS, VHOSTCOLS, REDIRVHOSTCOLS, FAILVHOSTCOLS, USERCOLS, REDIRUSERCOLS, FAILUSERCOLS and STATUSCOLS. Not every column is allowed in every report, but if you specify an illegal one, analog will warn you about it.
Next you need to know how use a SORTBY command to specify how the reports should be sorted. There are ten possible ways of sorting reports:
REQUESTS
total number of requests
REQUESTS7
requests within the last 7 days
PAGES
total requests for pages
PAGES7
requests for pages within the last 7 days
BYTES
total bytes transferred
BYTES7
bytes transferred within the last 7 days
FIRSTDATE
time of first request
DATE
time of most recent request
ALPHABETICAL
alphabetically
RANDOM
unsorted, sometimes useful for speed in very long reports
For example, the command
HOSTSORTBY ALPHABETICAL
will sort the Host Report alphabetically. The full list of SORTBY commands is HOSTSORTBY, REDIRHOSTSORTBY, FAILHOSTSORTBY, ORGSORTBY, DOMSORTBY, REQSORTBY, DIRSORTBY, TYPESORTBY, REDIRSORTBY, FAILSORTBY, REFSORTBY, REFSITESORTBY, SEARCHQUERYSORTBY, SEARCHWORDSORTBY, INTSEARCHQUERYSORTBY, INTSEARCHWORDSORTBY, REDIRREFSORTBY, FAILREFSORTBY, BROWREPSORTBY, BROWSUMSORTBY, OSSORTBY, VHOSTSORTBY, REDIRVHOSTSORTBY, FAILVHOSTSORTBY, USERSORTBY, REDIRUSERSORTBY, FAILUSERSORTBY and STATUSSORTBY. Again, not every sort method is possible in every report, but you'll be warned if you choose an illegal one.

There is one known bug concerned with SORTBY ALPHABETICAL. The report is sorted before any output alias is applied. This means that if an output alias has been specified for the report, then the report may appear not to be sorted correctly.


You can also specify a FLOOR for most reports, saying how much activity an item needs before it is listed on the report. (Other items will just be accumulated together in the "not listed" line at the bottom of the report.) There are lots of possible ways of specifying floors, which I'll list here, using the DOMFLOOR (Domain Report FLOOR) command as an example. Essentially each one consists of a number indicating the level of the floor, followed by a letter indicating the floor criterion.
DOMFLOOR 1000r       # all domains with at least 1000 requests
DOMFLOOR 100s        # at least 100 requests within the last 7 days
DOMFLOOR 1000p       # at least 1000 requests for pages
DOMFLOOR 100q        # at least 100 requests for pages within the last 7 days
DOMFLOOR 1000000b    # at least 1,000,000 bytes transferred
DOMFLOOR 1kb         # at least 1 kilobyte (1024 bytes)
DOMFLOOR 10.5Mc      # at least 10.5Mb within the last 7 days
DOMFLOOR 0.5%r       # 0.5% of the total requests in the Domain Report
                     # (ditto %s, %p etc.)
DOMFLOOR 0.5:r       # 0.5% of the maximum number of requests for any domain
                     # (ditto :s, :p etc.)
DOMFLOOR 970701d     # last access since 1st July 1997
DOMFLOOR 970701e     # first access since 1st July 1997
DOMFLOOR -00-01-00d  # last access in last month (see
                     # documentation on FROM and TO commands)
DOMFLOOR -100r       # domains with top 100 number of requests
                     # (ditto -100s, p, q, b, c, d, or e)
The full list of FLOOR commands is HOSTFLOOR, REDIRHOSTFLOOR, FAILHOSTFLOOR, DOMFLOOR, ORGFLOOR, REQFLOOR, DIRFLOOR, TYPEFLOOR, REDIRFLOOR, FAILFLOOR, REFFLOOR, REFSITEFLOOR, SEARCHQUERYFLOOR, SEARCHWORDFLOOR, INTSEARCHQUERYFLOOR, INTSEARCHWORDFLOOR, REDIRREFFLOOR, FAILREFFLOOR, BROWREPFLOOR, BROWSUMFLOOR, OSFLOOR, VHOSTFLOOR, REDIRVHOSTFLOOR, FAILVHOSTFLOOR, USERFLOOR, REDIRUSERFLOOR, FAILUSERFLOOR and STATUSFLOOR. Once again, not every floor method is legal for every report, but you'll be warned if you try and choose an illegal one.
I've already told you about how to turn each report on and off from the command line using its code letter. In fact, you can specify the SORTBY and the FLOOR in the same command. Take the example of the Referrer Report. If you follow the +f (to turn the report on) with a letter, it represents the sort method according to the following code:
r
REQUESTS
s
REQUESTS7
p
PAGES
q
PAGES7
b
BYTES
c
BYTES7
d
DATE
e
FIRSTDATE
a
ALPHABETICAL
x
RANDOM
You can then, or alternatively, use one of the above FLOOR formats to specify the floor. If you specify a SORTBY, you can also leave off the last letter of the floor, and analog will guess it according to the sort method: the floor will be the same as the sort method, or by requests if the sort method is ALPHABETICAL or RANDOM. Here are four examples:
+fp
means turn the Referrer Report on and sort it by page requests, but says nothing about the floor;
+f100s
means list all referrers with at least 100 requests in the last 7 days, but says nothing about the sort method;
+fb10000
means list all referrers with at least 10,000 bytes, sorted by bytes;
+fa-000101d
means list all referrers with accesses this year, sorted alphabetically.

Each of these reports can have a pie chart drawn at the top of it. The charts can be turned on and off, or plotted by a different criterion, using the CHART commands. For example,
REQCHART OFF
will stop you getting a pie chart on the Request Report, whereas
REQCHART ON
will turn it back on. You can also use the following arguments to plot the chart by a specific variable.
REQUESTS
total number of requests
REQUESTS7
requests within the last 7 days
PAGES
total requests for pages
PAGES7
requests for pages within the last 7 days
BYTES
total bytes transferred
BYTES7
bytes transferred within the last 7 days
By default, the chart will be plotted by the SORTBY if that's one of the above six variables, or else by the FLOOR if that's one of the six, or failing both of those by REQUESTS. Usually you just want to stick to the default, and analog will warn you if you could have used the SORTBY or FLOOR and requested something different.

The full list of CHART commands is HOSTCHART, REDIRHOSTCHART, FAILHOSTCHART, ORGCHART, DOMCHART, REQCHART, DIRCHART, TYPECHART, REDIRCHART, FAILCHART, REFCHART, REFSITECHART, SEARCHQUERYCHART, SEARCHWORDCHART, INTSEARCHQUERYCHART, INTSEARCHWORDCHART, REDIRREFCHART, FAILREFCHART, BROWREPCHART, BROWSUMCHART, OSCHART, VHOSTCHART, REDIRVHOSTCHART, FAILVHOSTCHART, USERCHART, REDIRUSERCHART, FAILUSERCHART, STATUSCHART, SIZECHART and PROCTIMECHART. Again, not every chart method is available for every report. You can also use

ALLCHART ON
ALLCHART OFF
to turn them all on or off simultaneously.

The pie charts are normally written to the same directory as the OUTFILE. But you can specify a different location using the CHARTDIR and LOCALCHARTDIR commands. If the OUTFILE is standard output, you must use these commands, or you will not get any pie charts. Also, if you are writing two output files to the same directory, you must use these commands, or one set of images will overwrite the other. And you also need to use these commands if you are using the form interface, but there are additional issues in that case.

You have to use both of the commands before they have any effect. The CHARTDIR is the location of the pie chart directory on your server, similar to the IMAGEDIR; it's used for putting in the <img> tag to include the image. The LOCALCHARTDIR is the location on your local disk; it's where the image is written to. For example, you might have

CHARTDIR /images/
LOCALCHARTDIR /usr/local/apache/htdocs/images/
to put the pie charts in locations like /usr/local/apache/htdocs/images/dom.png and link to them like <img src="/images/dom.png">. On Windows, you will need to put the LOCALCHARTDIR in quotes, to stop the backslash at the end of the line being interpreted to mean that the command continues on the next line. For example,
LOCALCHARTDIR "\webimages\analog\"
Actually, the CHARTDIR and LOCALCHARTDIR are just prefixes to the filename, so you can specify something like
CHARTDIR /stats/rep1
LOCALCHARTDIR /usr/local/htdocs/stats/rep1
to put the pie charts in locations like /usr/local/htdocs/stats/rep1dom.png and link to them like <img src="/stats/rep1dom.png">. Also the names can contain date codes in the same way as the LOGFILE and OUTFILE.

If you compiled your own version of analog, and you used your version of libgd instead of mine (see the Makefile for how to do this), then you can use the command

JPEGCHARTS ON
to make the charts in JPEG format instead of PNG. (See the PNGIMAGES command for how to make the bar charts in the time reports into gif's instead of png's.)

Here are the exact rules for which wedges are plotted in the pie chart. Up to ten wedges, plus "Other", are drawn, but wedges are only drawn if they are large enough. Also, wedges are only drawn if the item is listed in the main table for the report. And the whole chart will not be plotted if it would contain only one wedge.

If you want to plot more detail on the pie charts, for example Windows 98 & Windows NT instead of just Windows on the Operating System Report chart, see the next section.


You can list the time period covered by each report. This is off by default because it uses a lot of memory to calculate it, but if different reports cover different time periods (which can happen if your log format has changed at some point), it's useful to turn it on with the command
REPORTSPAN ON
There is also a command called REPORTSPANTHRESHOLD (which can be abbreviated RSTHRESH). This says that each report span should only be listed if it differs from the overall span of the whole report -- listed at the top of the page -- by at least this many minutes at one end. For example,
REPORTSPANTHRESHOLD 60
will only list a report span if that report starts at least an hour after the start of the logfile, or ends at least an hour before the end of the logfile. You can set
REPORTSPANTHRESHOLD 0
to make sure that the report span is listed on all the reports.
We've already seen some other commands affecting what was listed in the non-time reports. The output INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands specified lines to omit from each report, and the output alias commands specified some aliasing to do on the names before they were listed. There were also LINKINCLUDE and LINKEXCLUDE commands to control what was linked to in the reports. You might want to have another look at these paragraphs.

There's one other command which affects the links in the Request Report, Redirection Report and Failure Report. The command BASEURL prepends an additional string to the URLs in the target of the link. For example, after the command

BASEURL http://www.statslab.cam.ac.uk
/~sret1/ will be linked to http://www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~sret1/, not just to /~sret1/. This is very useful if you want to display the statistics on a different server from the server they refer to. If you want the file to be listed as http://www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~sret1/, rather than just to be linked to that address, you need to use the second argument to the LOGFILE command instead.

In the next section, we'll look at commands for generating hierarchical reports, which are closely related to the commands in this section.


Hierarchical reports

Some of the non-time reports have a hierarchical (or tree) structure: so, for example, each domain in the Domain Report can have subdomains listed under it, which in turn can have sub-subdomains, and so on. This section describes commands for managing hierarchical reports.

First, you need to be able to control what gets listed in the reports. For this you need to use the SUB family of commands. So, for example, the command SUBDIR /~sret1/* would ensure that the Directory Report would not only contain an entry for the sum of my files, but also one for each of my subdirectories, something like this:

29,111: /~sret1/
10,234:   /~sret1/analog/
 5,179:   /~sret1/backgammon/
11,908: /~steve/
You can have more than one * in the command. For example
SUBDOMAIN *.*
would list the whole Domain Report two levels deep.

If you specify a SUB command, all the intermediate levels are included automatically. So, for example, after

SUBDOMAIN statslab.cam.ac.uk
cam.ac.uk and ac.uk will be included in the Domain Report too, and after *.*.ac.uk, *.ac.uk will be included.

Here are examples of the other four SUB commands:

SUBTYPE *.gz         # in the File Type Report
SUBBROW */*          # e.g. Netscape/4 in the Browser Summary
SUBBROW Netscape/*.*  # add minor version numbers for Netscape
REFDIR http://search.yahoo.com/*   # Referring Site Report
SUBORG *.aol.com     # Organisation Report
SUBORG *.*.com       # Break down all .com's

The SUBDOMAIN command (but none of the others) can include a second argument describing the subdomain. For example

SUBDOMAIN cam.ac.uk 'University of Cambridge'
Then that subdomain will be listed with its translation in the Domain Report. You can also have numerical subdomains: e.g.,
SUBDOMAIN 131.111 'University of Cambridge'
If you sort the subdomains alphabetically, the numerical ones will also be sorted alphabetically, not numerically. I don't think this will cause any problems.

One other use for the SUBDIR command is if you have used the second argument to the LOGFILE command. Suppose you have translated files like /index.html into http://www.mycompany.com/index.html. Then the command

SUBDIR http://*    # or
SUBDIR http://*/*
would be appropriate to make the Directory Report look right.
The lower levels of each report have FLOOR and SORTBY commands which work exactly the same as those we have already seen for the top level. These commands are SUBDIRFLOOR, SUBDOMFLOOR, SUBORGFLOOR, SUBTYPEFLOOR, SUBBROWFLOOR and REFDIRFLOOR; and SUBDIRSORTBY, SUBDOMSORTBY, SUBORGSORTBY, SUBTYPESORTBY, SUBBROWSORTBY and REFDIRSORTBY.

A sub-item is listed in a hierarchical report only if it is above the sub-FLOOR, and it is included with a SUB command, and it is not excluded because of an INCLUDE or EXCLUDE command, and its immediate parent is listed. For example, specifying

SUBDIR /*/*/
SUBDIRFLOOR -3r
SUBDIRSORTBY REQUESTS
would list the three subdirectories with most requests under each directory. SUBDIRFLOOR 1:r would have listed any subdirectory with at least 1% of the maximum number of requests of any top level directory.

The three file reports (Request Report, Redirection Report and Failure Report) and the three referrer reports (Referrer Report, Redirected Referrer Report and Failed Referrer Report) are not fully hierarchical, but they do list search arguments together under the file to which they refer (provided that the arguments have been read in: see the ARGSINCLUDE command). So they have similar sub-FLOOR and sub-SORTBY commands, namely REQARGSFLOOR, REDIRARGSFLOOR, FAILARGSFLOOR, REFARGSFLOOR, REDIRREFARGSFLOOR and FAILREFARGSFLOOR; and REQARGSSORTBY, REDIRARGSSORTBY, FAILARGSSORTBY, REFARGSSORTBY, REDIRREFARGSSORTBY and FAILREFARGSSORTBY. The same applies to the Operating System Report with its subdivisions of operating systems: it has SUBOSFLOOR and SUBOSSORTBY.


The lower levels of a hierarchical report temporarily interrupt the top level, and even though they are indented, this can sometimes make it look as if the report is out of order. If you have a lot of sub-items, for example in the Referrer Report if there are a lot of search arguments, then including the N column can help to make it clearer again.
Sometimes one item in the pie chart takes up most of the pie. In this case, you can elect to plot its sub-items on the chart instead, by using the *CHARTEXPAND family of commands. For example
OSCHARTEXPAND Windows
will use Windows 98, Windows NT etc. as wedges in the pie chart, instead of accumulating all the Windows versions together in one wedge. The complete list of these commands is DIRCHARTEXPAND, DOMCHARTEXPAND, ORGCHARTEXPAND, TYPECHARTEXPAND, BROWCHARTEXPAND, OSCHARTEXPAND, REQCHARTEXPAND, REDIRCHARTEXPAND, FAILCHARTEXPAND, REFCHARTEXPAND, REDIRREFCHARTEXPAND, FAILREFCHARTEXPAND and REFSITECHARTEXPAND. The CHARTEXPAND commands can take a comma-separated list (without spaces) as an argument, but not wildcards.

Just as for top-level items, sub-items will only be included if they are listed in the main table for the report. And so if an item does not have any sub-items listed, it will not be expanded, even if you asked for it to be. This means that you may need to use the appropriate SUB commands or SUBFLOOR commands to make sure that the sub-items do get listed. For example

SUBDOMAIN *.com
DOMCHARTEXPAND .com

Also, sub-items will only appear on the pie chart if they are large enough to get on in their own right. Note that if an item has any sub-items listed, and is expanded, then the item itself will no longer appear on the chart, only any sub-items which are large enough.


The domains file

The domains file tells analog which country is represented by each domain. You can tell analog where to find your domains file with a command like
DOMAINSFILE mydomains.tab
Normally you don't need this command, because if there is a domains file in your language, it should be selected automatically. But the DOMAINSFILE command can be useful if you want to use a domains file in a new language, for example. If the name of the file doesn't include a directory, it will be looked for wherever analog normally expects to find its language files.

You should have got a domains file with the program, but if you've lost it, you can download one from http://www.analog.cx/ukdom.tab. It should contain on each line a domain code, followed by a number, followed by its location, like this:

ad  2  Andorra
ae  3  United Arab Emirates
[...]
It does not need to be in alphabetical order, though humans may prefer it that way. Subdomains do not go in the domains file: you can list them in the Domain Report using the SUBDOMAIN command.
The number beside each domain represents how many levels deep an "organisation" is considered to be, for the purposes of the Organisation Report. For example, consider the hostname www.sta.ad. The organisation is sta.ad, at the second level, so Andorra has a 2 in the above list. But in the UAE, a host looks like www.economy.gov.ae. There is an extra level in the hierarchy, so the UAE has its organisations at level 3.

There are some problems with this. A few countries have organisations at both levels 2 and 3 (for example asaspace.at and univie.ac.at). In those cases I've favoured false negatives over false positives by using the bigger number. (Also there is a correction which will make most of them right again: the first component is always removed from a hostname of three or more components.) For other countries, I don't have enough information to tell what the level should be. I've just given those a 1. Do let me know if you have any more information, or corrections, for the numbers.

For numerical addresses, the organisation is considered to be at level 2 if the first component is 24, 61-68, 80-81 or 128-255; and otherwise at level 1. Again this is only an approximation -- for example, many organisations use two adjacent blocks of numbers, or subdivided blocks -- but it's the best we can do without looking up every address we come across. (Note that you can always see more detail using the SUBORG command).


Only domains which occur in the domains file will get their own line in the Domain Report: the rest are probably spurious, and will be accumulated together as "unknown domains". If analog couldn't find the domains file, then all the domains will be unknown. If you have debugging turned on, you can see which domains were unknown.

Lines starting with a hash (#) in the domains file are considered to be comments.


Computer-readable output style

This section describes the computer-readable output style. You can select this style by the command
OUTPUT COMPUTER
This style is designed to be easy to read into spreadsheets, or post-process with graphics creation tools, for example. You can find some programs which use this style on the helper applications page. However, the computer-readable output style is not suitable for reading back into analog to create later reports: for that job, use the cache files described in the next section.

Each line in the output is separated into fields by means of a special string. You can specify this string by means of the COMPSEP command; for example, you could use

COMPSEP ,
for CSV (comma separated value) format. Or you can use
COMPSEP \t
to separate fields with a tab. Make sure not to use anything that might occur in the output: for example, a single or double space would not be suitable.
Each line in the preformatted output begins with a letter indicating which report the line is part of. (The code letters for the reports are listed in the section on Configuring the Output.)

After that, there follows a field indicating the remaining columns in the report (using the letters RrSsPpQqBbCcDdEeN as usual). In hierarchical reports (including the reports which can show search arguments) there is an additional column l at the beginning, indicating the level in the hierarchy.

Finally there are the numerical data for each column and then the name of the item. Times actually take up several fields: year, month, date, hour & minute, or as many of those as are necessary to identify the time. (Year and quarter in the case of the Quarterly Report).

So here is an example line from the Domain Report, showing the third-level domain cam.ac.uk with 43 requests and 3.516% of the bytes.

o     lRb     3     43     3.516     cam.ac.uk

The last line of most time reports indicates the busiest time period. After the report letter comes *BT, followed by the letter R, P or B for the GRAPH method, followed by the number of requests, pages or bytes respectively for the busiest time period, followed by the time period itself.

The first lines of non-time reports can also contain overall information about the report. First, if the REPORTSPAN for the report is wanted, it will be listed in lines with *FR and *LR instead of the normal column letters. Then there is a line listing the floor and sortby for the report. It has *f instead of the normal column letters, followed by the floor in the form it would be written for a FLOOR command, followed by the SORTBY using the code letters

r
REQUESTS
s
REQUESTS
p
PAGES
q
PAGES
b
BYTES
c
BYTES
d
DATE
a
ALPHABETICAL
x
RANDOM

The general summary is a bit different. After an initial x, there is a two-character code saying what the line contains. The possible codes are
VE
Version of analog
HN
HOSTNAME
HU
HOSTURL
PS
Program start time
FR
Time of first request
LR
Time of last request
E7
Time last 7 days ends
SR
Total successful requests
S7
Total successful requests in last 7 days
PR
Total successful requests for pages
P7
Total successful requests for pages in last 7 days
FL
Total failed requests
F7
Total failed requests in last 7 days
RR
Total redirected requests
R7
Total redirected requests in last 7 days
NC
Logfile lines without status code
C7
Lines without status code in last 7 days
NF
Number of distinct files requested
N7
Number of distinct files requested in last 7 days
NH
Number of distinct hosts served
H7
Number of distinct hosts served in last 7 days
CL
Number of corrupt lines in the logfile
UL
Number of unwanted lines in the logfile
BT
Total number of bytes transferred
B7
Total number of bytes transferred in last 7 days
Which lines are listed is still controlled by the GENSUMLINES command. This implies that if you turn a line off, you turn off its "last 7 days" version too.

Cache files

Analog has the ability to archive some of the data in your logfile into a cache file so that the logfile can be thrown away without losing the most important data. (This is sometimes known as incremental processing.)

For most people, the cache file will not be needed: compressing the logfile using a standard compression utility such as gzip will be sufficient. Compressing a logfile is very efficient owing to the large number of repeated strings: I find about 12 times compression in practice. That in itself may solve your filespace problems, without needing to throw away any information.

The cache file is also not the best format for post-processing the data or feeding it into a spreadsheet. For that you should use the computer-readable output style.

Many people have trouble using the cache file, and end up accidentally recording corrupt data. You do need to understand what you're doing before you throw away your logfiles. See the discussion on Procedures below.

If you are going to use the cache file feature, it is also very important that you understand what is and what is not recorded. The summary is that all INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands, including FROM and TO, and any ALIASes and LOGTIMEOFFSETs, must be applied when you create the cache file, not when you read it later. If you want different sets of options, you must create several cache files from the same logfile.

The reason for this is that it is not possible to reconstruct everything of interest in the logfile from the cache file. The cache file does contain information about the total number of requests for each host and each file, but not about, for example, which files were read by which hosts. (To do so would take up as much disk space as the compressed logfile.) So you cannot later look at only one file and see which hosts read that file.

Another way to look at this: if you do, for example, a HOSTEXCLUDE when reading the cache file, you are not doing a genuine HOSTEXCLUDE because files that that host read will still be included. You are only excluding those hosts from the Host Report, Organisation Report and Domain Report. This is why you must do all the inclusions and exclusions you want when you create the cache file.

When analog reads in a cache file, it does not apply any more aliases to the items. This is to avoid double-aliasing. So you must do any aliases you want at the time you create the cache file. Similarly, it does not obey the LOGTIMEOFFSET variable, to avoid double-offsetting, so any offset you want must be applied at cache-creation time too.

Also, the cache file does not contain data about the number of requests for each item in the last seven days: it can't, because the figures will be different by the time they are wanted.

Finally, times are only recorded to five-minute resolution.


You can create a cache file by setting the CACHEOUTFILE to be the file you want the cache to live in. Set
CACHEOUTFILE none
to turn it off again. You will still get the regular output as well as the cache output, unless you request OUTPUT NONE. To avoid overwriting, you cannot set the CACHEOUTFILE to be a file which already exists. (Disclaimer: on some systems, race conditions may very occasionally thwart this check. Also on a few systems, making the file writeable but not readable will allow it to be overwritten). You can include the date in the name of the CACHEFILE and CACHEOUTFILE in the same way as described earlier for the LOGFILE and OUTFILE.

You can read in a previously-made cache file with the CACHEFILE command, or with the +U command line option. This works exactly the same as the LOGFILE command, so you can use commas and wildcards to read in several cache files, and read compressed cache files using the UNCOMPRESS mechanism.

If the name of the CACHEFILE or the CACHEOUTFILE doesn't include a directory, it will be looked for, or written to, wherever analog expects to find its cache files. (This location is built in when the program is compiled.) For example, on Windows it would be in the same folder as the analog executable. But a cache file specified in a +U command line option is within the current directory.

It is possible (and useful) to analyse some CACHEFILEs and some LOGFILEs together. LOGFILE and CACHEFILE commands are basically cumulative, except that any logfiles and cache files in the mandatory configuration file or configuration files loaded from there override any on the command line or in configuration files specified on the command line, which themselves override any in the default configuration file or configuration files loaded from there, which in turn override compile-time options. Usually you don't need to worry about this, and it will do what you expect.

Sometimes you don't want to record all the types of item in the cache file. You might want to forget about which hosts had accessed your web site, for example, and only remember how many times each file was requested. You can choose not to include one type of item in the cache file by setting its LOWMEM to 3; for example, specify

HOSTLOWMEM 3
to exclude hosts from the cache file. Because this is a serious step, analog will produce a warning if you do this. You can even set all six LOWMEMs to 3 if you just want to remember the pattern of requests over time, not even which files were requested.

Procedures

Many people have trouble when they try and use cache files, and end up omitting data or double-counting. You have to be careful to make sure that each piece of data is recorded in exactly one cache file. One very common mistake is to use all the old cache files when making each new cache file. Because each piece of data is then in all of the cache files, when you make a new cache file, it will record each piece of data several times over. If analog gives you a "double-counting" warning when you create a cache file, you have probably done something of this sort wrong.

Here is one way to use the cache files correctly. It's not the only correct way, but I think it's conceptually the simplest. The idea is that whenever you start a new logfile, you make a cache file out of the old logfile. So each cache file contains all the data from one, and only one, logfile. You never use old cache files to make new ones: so you never have a CACHEFILE and a CACHEOUTFILE command in the same configuration file.

Here is the procedure.

  1. Rotate your logs: that means, archive the old logfile, and restart the server with a fresh logfile. (There are several standard tools to do this: or see your server documentation.)
  2. Make both a cache file and an ordinary report from the old logfile. You can do this simultaneously by using one LOGFILE command, one OUTFILE command, and one CACHEOUTFILE command.
  3. Make a test report from the cache file (using CACHEFILE and OUTFILE but no LOGFILE) and compare it against the report from the logfile to check it works. (This step really is worth doing!)
  4. Now you can throw away the old logfile, if you've really understood what data you're losing by doing so. (But please remember that I can take no responsibility if something goes wrong: see the licence.)
  5. When you want to make the main report, you can now use all your cache files and the current (not-yet-cached) logfile.
As explained above, all INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands, including FROM and TO, and any ALIASes and LOGTIMEOFFSETs, must be applied when you create the cache file, not when you read it later. So you may want to create several cache files from each logfile with different sets of options. Of course, in this case, you musn't later mix cache files made with different options.

DNS lookups

Sometimes a logfile contains numerical IP addresses - like 131.111.20.59 - for the computers that have visited you, instead of names like lion.statslab.cam.ac.uk. This section describes how you can get analog to do so-called DNS lookups to translate these numbers into names. This relies on you having a suitably configured system: DNS lookups are not possible on some systems.

First a note. Because analog's DNS lookups use only standard, platform-independent code, they are slower than lookups optimised for particular platforms. (This is especially true on platforms without the DNSTIMEOUT command described below.) So if you are doing DNS lookups regularly, you will probably be better off using one of the many specialist DNS lookup programs which you can find on the helper applications page.


DNS lookups are typically rather slow, because your computer has to ask across the network to find out the names of the hosts. For this reason, analog saves the addresses it has looked up in a file, so that you don't have to look them up again next time. The file is specified by a command like
DNSFILE dnscache
You will still need to use one of the commands in the next paragraph in order to actually use the file. If the name of the DNSFILE doesn't include a directory, it will be looked for wherever analog expects to find its DNS files. (This location is built in when the program is compiled.) For example, on Windows it would be in the same folder as the analog executable.

There are four possible levels of DNS activity. If you specify DNS NONE, no numerical addresses will be resolved. If you specify DNS READ, then analog will read the DNS file for old lookups, but no new lookups will take place. This mode is suitable if you are running analog while not connected to the internet. The third level is DNS WRITE. This reads the old file, looks up new addresses, and adds them to the file. (The first time you use DNS WRITE, you will get a missing-file warning as it tries to read the old file, but it will exist the next time.) The final level is DNS LOOKUP. This reads the old file and looks up new addresses, but doesn't add the new addresses to the file, so that they will not be remembered for next time. This is not normally a level that the user wants to specify, but analog will switch to this the behaviour if DNS WRITE fails for some reason.

If you are using a HOSTEXCLUDE command, you need to exclude the numerical IP address if it can't be resolved, or the name if it can. In other words, exclude whatever the host is known as in the Host Report.


If two copies of analog were allowed to write to the DNS file at the same time, the file could become corrupted. So when analog is running in DNS WRITE mode, it creates a lock file which tells other copies of analog to back off to DNS LOOKUP. You can change the location of that file with the command
DNSLOCKFILE filename
Of course you should make sure that all copies of analog use the same lock file, at least if they have the same DNS file! Again, if the name of the DNSLOCKFILE doesn't include a directory, it will put in a canonical location, specified when the program was compiled.

If analog crashes, it may not clear up the lock file, so in that case you may have to delete it yourself. (Disclaimer: on some systems, race conditions may occasionally thwart this mechanism, but this is very unlikely.)

Analog never deletes anything from the DNS file: this means that the DNS file will grow, and can become quite large. You should delete the top of it every so often. There is a program on the helper applications page to help you do this more systematically.

There are two parameters which say how long to trust old lookups for. If you set

DNSGOODHOURS 672
for example, then successful lookups will be checked again after 672 hours (4 weeks). You can also set the DNSBADHOURS similarly, to check failed lookups again after a certain time. By default the DNSBADHOURS is 336 (2 weeks) and the DNSGOODHOURS is a very large number (so that successful lookups are never rechecked, as long as they remain in the DNS file).

On some platforms (maybe only Unix) you can set a parameter called DNSTIMEOUT. If the DNS server still hasn't returned a reply within this many seconds, then the lookup will be aborted. However, this feature is off by default, because it breaks DNS lookups on many platforms. (The symptom is that the first few lookups succeed, but after a while, all lookups fail). If you try it, monitor it, and turn it off again if it causes problems.

Finally, there is a debugging command, DEBUG +D to show all the DNS lookups that analog is making.


Normally you need never write a DNS file: you should rely on analog to do it for you. But in case you need to know, the format of the file is
timestamp IP_address name
where the timestamp is the number of minutes since the beginning of 1970, GMT (i.e., "Unix time" divided by 60), and the name is just * if the address couldn't be resolved.

Coping with low memory

This section describes how to run analog with lower amounts of memory. For a normal logfile this will make analog run a bit slower. But if your computer is running out of memory when running analog, it will go very slowly indeed: so for large logfiles, this can make analog run much faster, or even make an analysis possible that wouldn't otherwise be possible.

Recall what happens to an item when it has been read in. First it is aliased. Secondly, it is checked to see whether it is included or excluded. Then finally, if all the items are wanted, one request is added to its score.

Normally the name of the item is saved before the aliasing takes place. This avoids analog having to do the aliasing again next time the same item is encountered. But this can take up more memory than necessary. So there is a family of LOWMEM commands provided, which tell analog to record the name at a later stage, or even not at all. If you use these commands, analog will have to do a bit more work than normal, but it will use less memory. On most sites, the hosts take up most of the memory, so I'll use the HOSTLOWMEM command as an example.

The command

HOSTLOWMEM 0
represents the normal case, when the hostname is recorded before being aliased. If you specify
HOSTLOWMEM 1
instead, then the hostname is not recorded until after the aliasing. If you specify
HOSTLOWMEM 2
then the name is not recorded until after the inclusion and exclusion lookup has been done as well. And finally, if you give the command
HOSTLOWMEM 3
then the hostname is not saved at all, and the Host Report will not be constructed, even if you've asked for it. (The Domain Report can still be constructed though.) The analogous commands for the other items are FILELOWMEM, BROWLOWMEM, REFLOWMEM, USERLOWMEM and VHOSTLOWMEM.
So what should you do if analog runs out of memory? First, look in your logfile to see which items are taking up all the memory. If you have lots of different filenames, ones you generate on the fly for example, you would want to use the FILELOWMEM commands. Maybe you could combine all the similar filenames into one with a FILEALIAS command, and use FILELOWMEM 1. (If you have lots of different filenames caused by different search arguments, then using ARGSEXCLUDE might solve your problem without any need to use LOWMEM at all). But for most users, it is the hostnames which cause the problem. If you only want to analyse requests from certain hosts, then you could use HOSTLOWMEM 2 to exclude the others before recording those that are left. If you don't want to exclude any hosts, and you haven't got enough memory to record all the different hostnames, then HOSTLOWMEM 3 would be appropriate.

Debugging

This section lists commands to help you debug analog, if you think it's going wrong. There's another section later which lists all the errors and warnings which analog can generate, and what they all mean, and another section which tells you how to report bugs.

First, remember the option we mentioned before, to list the current settings of all of analog's variables. To get this, just put -settings on the command line, or SETTINGS ON in one of your configuration files, along with your other commands. Then analog will produce the list of settings instead of running in the normal way.


There are commands which control how much debugging information and warning information analog gives out while it is running. By default you get all the warnings and no debugging, but you can change this by means of the commands DEBUG and WARNINGS. If you say
DEBUG ON
you get all the debugging. (And DEBUG OFF turns it all off.) You can also get just certain categories of debugging. The categories are
C
list all corrupt logfile lines
D
information about DNS lookups
F
information about file opening and closing
S
summary information about each logfile when it's closed
U
list unknown domains
V
list hosts without a domain (i.e., without a dot)
So, for example, the command
DEBUG FS
would give you information about file opening and closing, and what was in each logfile, but none of the other sorts of debugging. Each line of debugging information is prepended with its code letter. You can also specify
DEBUG +CD
to add C and D category debugging to whatever you've already got, and
DEBUG -CD
to remove those two categories.

There is also a command line abbreviation for this command. Use +V (for ON), -V (for OFF), +VFS (to select exactly options FS), +V+FS (to add those options), and +V-FS (to remove them).

The C messages actually come on two lines. The first line gives the logfile line which was corrupt. The second line indicates where analog first noticed a problem. (This is usually, but not always, close to where the problem actually was!) In fact, each "line" of the message may spread over more than one line on your screen, and you have to be careful to take that into account when trying to find out where the logfile line was corrupt.


The WARNINGS command acts similarly to the DEBUG command (see the syntax above). By default all warnings are on. As well as WARNINGS ON and WARNINGS OFF, you can turn warnings on and off in the following categories.
C
invalid configuration specified
D
dubious configuration specified
E
ERRFILE command used (see below)
F
files missing or corrupt
L
apparent problems in logfiles
M
possible problems in logfiles
R
turning off empty reports
See the section on Errors and warnings for more details about the various categories. Again, warnings are printed with their code letters.

Warnings range from the probably harmless to the usually serious. So it is generally not a good idea to turn all warnings off, or you might miss some important information. If you want to ignore a particular warning, turn just its category off.

There is also a command line version of the WARNINGS command, looking like +q, -q, +q<options>, +q+<options> or +q-<options>. (The syntax is the same as the +V command above.)


By default all these messages go to standard error, which is normally just the screen. But you can change that by means of a command like
ERRFILE newfile
If you do this, analog will warn you that it's redirecting the messages, just so that you don't miss any. To change back to standard error, use
ERRFILE stderr
The ERRFILE command will also erase any previous contents of that file. (So don't use the same ERRFILE command twice, or you may lose messages!) If the name of the ERRFILE doesn't include a directory, it will be put in whichever directory was specified for that purpose when the program was compiled. For example, on Windows it would be in the same folder as the analog executable.
There is a command called ERRLINELENGTH to tell analog the width of screen you want these messages to fit in. As a special case,
ERRLINELENGTH 0
specifies an unlimited screen width.
There is one more command which is useful when trying to debug analog. If you give the command
PROGRESSFREQ 20000  # say
then analog will produce a little message after every 20,000 lines it reads from the logfile. (This message is sent to the screen and to the ERRFILE.) This is useful to determine whether the program has really stopped or (as is more likely) is just being slow for some reason (such as using DNS lookups).
There is just one more section about analog's configuration commands and command line arguments, but it's a rather long one, on the form interface. (This is a way of running analog by selecting options from a web page.) You might prefer to go straight onto the section on What the results mean.

Form interface and CGI program

The form interface provides an HTML front end to analog, on Unix or Windows platforms (and maybe others). That means that users can select options from a web page, instead of having to create a configuration file.

Important: For security reasons, you must not attempt to run analog itself as a CGI program, or even leave it in the directory or folder with your web files or CGI programs. When the form interface runs analog for you, it checks that analog isn't given any dangerous options. Without this check, your system could be vulnerable to attack.

The form interface is suitable for ordinary users to use, but it needs to be set up by a system administrator or other expert. In order to set it up, you have to be running a web server. You need to know what CGI programs are, where they live on your server, and how to set up their permissions properly. You also need to know how to write HTML forms. I shall assume this level of background knowledge for the rest of this section. And you have to be running Perl 5.001 or later: see Technical details below for other system requirements. (Actually, if you're on Windows and don't have Perl, you can download an executable version of the form interface from the helper applications page.)

Please don't try and set up the form until analog has been set up and is running properly on its own. It just adds another level of complexity to troubleshoot. And unlike analog itself, the form interface will not run "out of the box". You have to read the whole of this section to find out how to set it up safely.

Warning: CGI programs can contain security loopholes which allow an unscrupulous user to harm your system. (If you don't know about this, you shouldn't be running CGI programs at all. Read and understand the World Wide Web Security FAQ and the CGI Security FAQ first.) I have tried to make this form interface safe, but I cannot guarantee it. Even the most carefully-designed CGI programs can accidentally have serious security bugs. And I take no responsibility if anything goes wrong: you use it at your own risk. (See the licence.) Furthermore, you should be aware that unless you take special measures like password protection or limiting anlgform.pl to specific hostnames, setting up the form interface implies making analog executable, and your logfiles analysable, by anyone on the internet. It's usually a bad idea to allow this, because it has obvious negative implications both for privacy and for the load on your system: an attacker can run multiple copies of analog causing a denial-of-service attack. There are more notes on security design in this program towards the end of this section.

The form interface consists of two parts: a form (called anlgform.html) to choose the options, and a cgi program (called anlgform.pl) to pass them to the analog program. Both anlgform.html and anlgform.pl must be configured to your system before they will work at all. There are instructions at the top of both files explaining how to do this.

The form which is distributed with the program should only be regarded as an example form. You can find forms in languages other than English in the lang directory. Or you can write your own if you prefer. In fact you don't actually need the form at all: if you want just to create a link to the cgi program, with the arguments passed after a question mark in the URL in the usual way, then that's fine.


Almost every analog configuration command can be specified on the form, just by including a form element with that name on the form. So, for example, if you wanted to add a field for users to choose a logfile, you could write
Logfile name: <input type=text name="LOGFILE">
or maybe something like
<select name=LOGFILE size=1>
  <option value="/var/log/apache/fred"> Fred's logfile
  <option value="/var/log/apache/jane"> Jane's logfile
</select>

There are a few commands which you can't specify on the form for security or performance reasons. The full list is *LOGFORMAT, LANGFILE, DESCFILE, HEADERFILE, FOOTERFILE, UNCOMPRESS, OUTFILE, CACHEOUTFILE, ERRFILE, LOCALCHARTDIR, DNS and SETTINGS; and the person setting up the form can add more. See the security notes below for the reasons for these exclusions, and for some more commands you might want to add to the forbidden list. You can, if you prefer, specify the commands which are allowed, rather than those which are forbidden.


Some commands are most conveniently specified in two halves. First, there are commands which take two arguments (for example ALIASes or LOGFILE). You can cope with these by sending two commands from the form, called COMMAND1 and COMMAND2. For example,
Alias this file: <input type=text name="FILEALIAS1">
To this one: <input type=text name="FILEALIAS2">
You can only specify one such pair this way, so there's no way to specify several of the same ALIAS, for example. Only the last COMMAND1 and the last COMMAND2 you specify count.

Then there are FLOOR commands. To avoid users of the form having to know the syntax of these commands, you can if you want specify them in two halves, FLOORA and FLOORB, and they will be stuck together. For example, the form distributed with the program specifies

<br>Include all domains with at least
<input type=TEXT name="DOMFLOORA" maxlength=6 size=6>
<select name="DOMFLOORB">
  <option value=r>requests
  <option value=p>requests for pages
  <option value=b selected>bytes
</select>
If DOMFLOORA contains 5% and DOMFLOORB contains r, then DOMFLOOR 5%r will be sent to the program. (Or DOMFLOORA=5 and DOMFLOORB=%r would work too, if you chose to present the form that way.)
There are a couple of extra non-analog commands which can be sent from the form. First, if the option qv=1 is set, then analog is not run, but a list of the configuration commands which would have been sent to analog is printed instead. This is useful for checking that the CGI program is working properly. It can also allow users to produce a configuration file from form settings.

Secondly, you can specify other configuration files to be included at specific times. When analog is called by the CGI program, it first processes the default configuration file as usual. Then it processes any configuration file specified by an option with name cg. Then it processes all the other commands which the CGI program specifies. After that, it processes any configuration file specified by an option with name cm. Finally, it processes the mandatory configuration file as usual. (You may therefore want two copies of analog, one for form use and one for non-form use, with different configuration files compiled in.) Note that the commands in the default and mandatory configuration files will contribute to the configuration: some of them may even override options specified on the form. For example, if the default configuration file contains an INCLUDE command, this may cause INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands specified on the form to behave unexpectedly.


anlgform.pl usually sends the commands to analog in the order in which it received them, which should be the same as the order they occurred in the form. But there are some exceptions. First, all commands of the same name are grouped together. So an interleaved sequence of INCLUDEs and EXCLUDEs won't work, for example. Secondly, even though the names of commands are case-insensitive, commands of the same name but in different cases may come in the wrong order. Keep them in the same case! Thirdly, WARNINGS and LOGTIMEOFFSET are sent first (and thus the LOGTIMEOFFSET applies to any logfiles specified on the form).

There are a couple of commands which the form always sets. These may override what you have set elsewhere. First, it sets either DNS READ (if a DNSFILE is set on the form) or DNS NONE (otherwise). Do not attempt to override this -- not only will you get timeout problems, but an attacker can then write to any file by setting DNSFILE.

The second command which the form always sets is WARNINGS FL, so that the less important warnings don't fill up your server's error log. You can override this by sending an explicit WARNINGS command from the form. And thirdly, it sets DEBUG -C to avoid filling up the error log if the LOGFORMAT is incorrectly configured: this can't be overridden from the form, only from the mandatory configuration file.

You won't get pie charts on the form unless you set a CHARTDIR and LOCALCHARTDIR in your default configuration file (LOCALCHARTDIR is disabled from the form for security reasons). And even if you do this, there will be a problem if two users try and run the form interface at the same time, because they will be trying to write the same images, so they may see broken images or each other's charts.

There is one small point about compressed logfiles. For security reasons, when using the form interface you need to specify the full pathname to the uncompression command in the UNCOMPRESS command in your configuration file.

Again for security reasons, analog checks the input from configuration commands more carefully when using the form interface before outputting it. One side-effect of this is that the JAPANESE-JIS character set won't work. Use one of the other Japanese character sets instead.


Form troubleshooting

Here is what to do if you are having problems setting up the form interface.

First, does analog run properly on its own without anlgform?

Next, you can run anlgform.pl from the (DOS or Unix) command line. This is good enough to debug most problems. You can specify options in pairs like this:

anlgform.pl qv=1 LOGFILE=/some/log REQINCLUDE=pages
If you include qv=1 in the argument list as above, you will see what anlgform.pl is trying to send to analog. If you don't include qv=1, anlgform.pl will try and run analog.

If it still doesn't work, check the following points:

  1. Have you edited anlgform.pl and anlgform.html as instructed at the top of those files?
  2. Do other CGI programs work on your server? Is anlgform.pl in the right place to be recognised as a CGI program by the server?
  3. Look in the server's error log for clues. You might want to set WARNINGS ON before you do this, because by default only warnings in categories F and L are reported.
  4. Sometimes it's helpful to set the ERRFILE in your analog configuration file (it won't work from the form) to catch any errors and warnings which may be getting lost. This is especially true on IIS which incorrectly sends errors to the browser instead of to an error log. If you are using Internet Explorer you will probably also need to disable the "friendly" error messages so that you can see the actual error message.
  5. Are all relevant files (analog itself, logfiles, configuration files, auxiliary files such as domain files...) executable/readable by your web server?
  6. If some form options don't seem to take effect, then check whether they are being overridden by a command in a configuration file. (Although SETTINGS is forbidden from the form, you might find it useful to set it in your default configuration file.)
  7. If you get a long wait, then no data returned, the server is probably timing out the request before analog has finished. The remedy is to increase the timeout interval.
  8. As explained above, the form always sets DNS READ or DNS NONE, WARNINGS FL, and DEBUG -C, overriding your default configuration file.
  9. Again as explained above, pie charts may not appear or may appear wrongly.
  10. Again as explained above, uncompressing of compressed logfiles doesn't work unless you use the full pathname in the UNCOMPRESS command.
  11. And once again as explained above, the JAPANESE-JIS character set won't work from the form interface.

Security notes

As I said above, CGI programs can often contain security loopholes. (See the World Wide Web Security FAQ and the CGI Security FAQ for more on this.) Although I don't guarantee that the form interface is safe, I have done my best to make it so. Here I shall explain my design decisions. Comments on them are of course welcome: if they need to remain confidential, you can email me privately at analog-author@lists.meer.net.

First, you should think about who can run the form interface. Unless you take special measures like password protection or limiting anlgform.pl to specific hostnames, adding the form interface to your site implies making analog executable, and your logfiles analysable, by anyone on the internet, as often as they want. It's usually a bad idea to allow this, because of the obvious concerns both about privacy and about the load on your system. Unless you limit the total CPU available to any analog processes, it is easy for an attacker to run multiple copies of analog, causing a denial-of-service attack.

Certain commands are ignored by anlgform.pl and not passed to analog. The list of them can be found at the top of anlgform.pl. Here are the reasons for them. HEADERFILE and FOOTERFILE would place any file on your system within the output. The *LOGFORMAT commands would also allow any file to be read, because someone could designate each line to be a single filename and then just list the filenames. OUTFILE, CACHEOUTFILE, ERRFILE and LOCALCHARTDIR would allow people to write to your filespace; ERRFILE would also divert warnings away from your server's error log. UNCOMPRESS would allow a user to execute any command. DNS is forbidden because setting it higher than READ would normally cause the process to time out, and also because with DNS WRITE, the DNSFILE would be a file to write, not just a file to read. CGI would allow the user to generate syntactically incorrect output. PROGRESSFREQ would allow a user to conduct a denial-of-service attack by filling up your error log really, really fast (and DEBUG C is also disabled for the same reason.)

None of the above should be deleted (unless you are really, really sure that it's completely impossible for anyone other than yourself to run anlgform.pl). There are three other commands which are forbidden by default but which you could consider removing from the forbidden list. SETTINGS is included because it will give away the locations of some files on your system. But it is useful for diagnostic purposes, and you could consider removing it temporarily if you have trouble setting up the form. The other commands which are included are LANGFILE and DESCFILE. They are included because it is possible that another file could be exactly the right number of lines long to be accepted as a language file or report descriptions file, and then parts of it would get into the output. But it would have to be exactly the right number of lines long first. These commands shouldn't really be needed if your copy of analog is installed correctly, because the LANGUAGE command should find the right files. But if you want them, and you're prepared to take the risk described above, you can remove LANGFILE and/or DESCFILE from the list.

There are other commands which you might consider adding to the list. For example, it is theoretically possible (though rather unlikely), that another file on your system could conform sufficiently closely to one of the predefined log formats that analog could be persuaded to analyse it and so reveal some of its contents. If you're worried about this, or even if you want to force only one particular logfile to be analysed from the form, you can add the LOGFILE command to the list of forbidden commands. And you could add DOMAINSFILE for similar reasons. Or if you wanted to stop a user having control over which analog warnings were written to the error log, you could add WARNINGS to the list. (Possible attempted security violations detected by anlgform will always be written.)

You can of course add any command you like to the list. For example, a user can use any configuration file on your system unless you add CONFIGFILE. If you add a command, you must also add any aliases for it. Have a look in the source file globals.c for the same command under different names -- some commands have legacy names which I don't admit to in the documentation.

For more certainty, you can, if you prefer, configure anlgform so that you specify the commands which are allowed, rather than those which are forbidden. See the top of anlgform.pl for how to do this.


For those who know about CGI security issues, here are some more technical comments on my design. anlgform.pl sets the $PATH environment variable to be empty. It opens analog as a pipe in order to pass arguments into analog's standard input. User-specified data is not used for the open() function, only passed down the pipe. anlgform.pl is run with the -T flag on Unix. (Does anyone know how to get this working under Windows?)

The arguments to LOGFILE and CACHEFILE commands are checked for containing only certain allowed characters (specifically, letters, digits, /\.:_*? space, and - between two {letter, digit, underscore}'s). This is because they could match an UNCOMPRESS command and thus be passed to the shell when the uncompress command is popen()'ed.

Apart from that, command names are checked for containing only letters and the digits 1 and 2; and the arguments to commands are checked for not containing control characters (actually characters 0-32 and 127-159; in particular newline characters are prohibited). The length of the commands isn't checked by anlgform.pl, but buffer overflow shouldn't be an issue as configuration commands are checked for length by analog.

By the way, the reason that I advise that analog itself shouldn't be used as a CGI program is that some servers, notably Microsoft IIS, allow users to pass command line arguments into a CGI program. And even if the program doesn't return the proper CGI headers, the output can be sent back to the user. This means that all the above checking of arguments is then thwarted. Of course, on servers on which you can't pass command line arguments to a CGI program, there are not the same security concerns, but then analog isn't very useful as a CGI program because if you can't pass any arguments, you can only get the default output.


Technical details

You need to be running Perl 5.001 or later (unless you're on Windows and download the executable version of the form interface from the helper applications page). You can get the latest version of Perl free from www.perl.org (or from http://www.activestate.com/Products/ActivePerl/ if you're on Windows). You also need the module CGI.pm, but this should have come with Perl anyway.

On Windows, you have to associate the .pl extension with the Perl executable so that Perl scripts are executed by Perl.

anlgform.pl will understand the GET or POST methods of form submission. The HTML spec says that GET should be used when, as in this case, running the program has no side effects. However, section 15.1.3 of the HTTP spec says that POST should be used if some of the options being passed might be confidential. Also, very long URLs, formed by specifying lots of options, can cause trouble to some older servers. So anlgform.html uses the POST method by default. However, the GET method will also work. For example, you could make a normal link to anlgform.pl with options specified after a question mark in the usual GET way.


What the results mean

This section of the Readme is about understanding the results analog produces. It's divided into three subsections.

How the web works

This section is about what happens when somebody connects to your web site, and what statistics you can and can't calculate. There is a lot of confusion about this. It's not helped by statistics programs which claim to calculate things which cannot really be calculated, only estimated. The simple fact is that certain data which we would like to know and which we expect to know are simply not available. And the estimates used by other programs are not just a bit off, but can be very, very wrong. For example (you'll see why below), if your home page has 10 graphics on, and an AOL user visits it, most programs will count that as 11 different visitors!

This section is fairly long, but it's worth reading carefully. If you understand the basics of how the web works, you will understand what your web statistics are really telling you.


1. The basic model. Let's suppose I visit your web site. I follow a link from somewhere else to your front page, read some pages, and then follow one of your links out of your site.

So, what do you know about it? First, I make one request for your front page. You know the date and time of the request and which page I asked for (of course), and the internet address of my computer (my host). I also usually tell you which page referred me to your site, and the make and model of my browser. I do not tell you my username or my email address.

Next, I look at the page (or rather my browser does) to see if it's got any graphics on it. If so, and if I've got image loading turned on in my browser, I make a separate connection to retrieve each of these graphics. I never log into your site: I just make a sequence of requests, one for each new file I want to download. The referring page for each of these graphics is your front page. Maybe there are 10 graphics on your front page. Then so far I've made 11 requests to your server.

After that, I go and visit some of your other pages, making a new request for each page and graphic that I want. Finally, I follow a link out of your site. You never know about that at all. I just connect to the next site without telling you.


2. Caches. It's not always quite as simple as that. One major problem is caching. There are two major types of caching. First, my browser automatically caches files when I download them. This means that if I visit them again, the next day say, I don't need to download the whole page again. Depending on the settings on my browser, I might check with you that the page hasn't changed: in that case, you do know about it, and analog will count it as a new request for the page. But I might set my browser not to check with you: then I will read the page again without you ever knowing about it.

The other sort of cache is on a larger scale. Almost all ISPs now have their own cache. This means that if I try to look at one of your pages and anyone else from the same ISP has looked at that page recently, the cache will have saved it, and will give it out to me without ever telling you about it. (This applies whatever my browser settings.) So hundreds of people could read your pages, even though you'd only sent it out once.


3. What you can know. The only things you can know for certain are the number of requests made to your server, when they were made, which files were asked for, and which host asked you for them.

You can also know what people told you their browsers were, and what the referring pages were. You should be aware, though, that many browsers lie deliberately about what sort of browser they are, or even let users configure the browser name. And some people use "anonymizers" which deliberately send false browsers and referrers.


4. What you can't know.
  1. You can't tell the identity of your readers. Unless you explicitly require users to provide a password, you don't know who connected or what their email addresses are.
  2. You can't tell how many visitors you've had. You can guess by looking at the number of distinct hosts that have requested things from you. Indeed this is what many programs mean when they report "visitors". But this is not always a good estimate for three reasons. First, if users get your pages from a local cache server, you will never know about it. Secondly, sometimes many users appear to connect from the same host: either users from the same company or ISP, or users using the same cache server. Finally, sometimes one user appears to connect from many different hosts. AOL now allocates users a different hostname for every request. So if your home page has 10 graphics on, and an AOL user visits it, most programs will count that as 11 different visitors!
  3. You can't tell how many visits you've had. Many programs, under pressure from advertisers' organisations, define a "visit" (or "session") as a sequence of requests from the same host until there is a half-hour gap. This is an unsound method for several reasons. First, it assumes that each host corresponds to a separate person and vice versa. This is simply not true in the real world, as discussed in the last paragraph. Secondly, it assumes that there is never a half-hour gap in a genuine visit. This is also untrue. I quite often follow a link out of a site, then step back in my browser and continue with the first site from where I left off. Should it really matter whether I do this 29 or 31 minutes later? Finally, to make the computation tractable, such programs also need to assume that your logfile is in chronological order: it isn't always, and analog will produce the same results however you jumble the lines up.
  4. Cookies don't solve these problems. Some sites try to count their visitors by using cookies. This reduces the errors. But it can't solve the problem unless you refuse to let people read your pages who can't or won't take a cookie. And you still have to assume that your visitors will use the same cookie for their next request.
  5. You can't follow a person's path through your site. Even if you assume that each person corresponds one-to-one to a host, you don't know their path through your site. It's very common for people to go back to pages they've downloaded before. You never know about these subsequent visits to that page, because their browser has cached them. So you can't track their path through your site accurately.
  6. You often can't tell where they entered your site, or where they found out about you from. If they are using a cache server, they will often be able to retrieve your home page from their cache, but not all of the subsequent pages they want to read. Then the first page you know about them requesting will be one in the middle of their true visit.
  7. You can't tell how they left your site, or where they went next. They never tell you about their connection to another site, so there's no way for you to know about it.
  8. You can't tell how long people spent reading each page. Once again, you can't tell which pages they are reading between successive requests for pages. They might be reading some pages they downloaded earlier. They might have followed a link out of your site, and then come back later. They might have interrupted their reading for a quick game of Minesweeper. You just don't know.
  9. You can't tell how long people spent on your site. Apart from the problems in the previous point, there is one other complete show-stopper. Programs which report the time on the site count the time between the first and the last request. But they don't count the time spent on the final page, and this is often the majority of the whole visit.
There are lots of other things you can't know. These are just examples. The summary is that you can know what happens at your server, but you can't know what the user or the user's browser does with the data you have sent.
5. Real data. Of course, the important question is how much difference these theoretical difficulties make. In a recent paper (World Wide Web, 2, 29-45 (1999): PDF 228kb), Peter Pirolli and James Pitkow of Xerox Palo Alto Research Center examined this question using a ten day long logfile from the xerox.com web site. One of their most striking conclusions is that different commonly-used methods can give very different results. For example, when trying to measure the median length of a visit, they got results from 137 seconds to 629 seconds, depending exactly what you count as a new visitor or a new visit. As they were looking at a fixed logfile, they didn't consider the effect of server configuration changes such as refusing caching, which would change the results still more.
6. Conclusion. The bottom line is that HTTP is a stateless protocol. That means that people don't log in and retrieve several documents: they make a separate connection for each file they want. And a lot of the time they don't even behave as if they were logged into one site. The world is a lot messier than this naïve view implies. That's why analog reports requests, i.e. what is going on at your server, which you know, rather than guessing what the users are doing.

Defenders of counting visits etc. claim that these are just small approximations. I disagree. For example, almost everyone is now accessing the web through a cache. If the proportion of requests retrieved from the cache is 50% (a not unrealistic figure) then half of the users' requests aren't being seen by the servers.

Other defenders of these methods claim that they're still useful because they measure something which you can use to compare sites. But this assumes that the approximations involved are comparable for different sites, and there's no reason to suppose that this is true. Pirolli & Pitkow's results show that the figures you get depend very much on how you count them, as well as on your server configuration. And even once you've agreed on methodology, different users on different sites have different patterns of behaviour, which affect the approximations in different ways: for example, Pirolli & Pitkow found different characteristics of weekday and weekend users at their site.

Still other people say that at least the trend over time of these numbers tells you something. But even that may not be true, because you may not be comparing like with like. Consider what would happen if a large ISP decided to change its proxy server configuration. It could substantially change your apparent number of visits, even if there was no actual change in the traffic levels at your site.

I've presented a somewhat negative view here, emphasising what you can't find out. Web statistics are still informative: it's just important not to slip from "this page has received 30,000 requests" to "30,000 people have read this page." In some sense these problems are not really new to the web -- they are present just as much in print media too. For example, you only know how many magazines you've sold, not how many people have read them. In print media we have learnt to live with these issues, using the data which are available, and it would be better if we did on the web too, rather than making up spurious numbers.


7. Acknowledgements and further reading. Many other people have made these points too. While originally writing this section, I benefited from three earlier expositions: Interpreting WWW Statistics by Doug Linder; Getting Real about Usage Statistics by Tim Stehle; and Making Sense of Web Usage Statistics by Dana Noonan. (The last two don't seem to be available on the web any more.)

Another, extremely well-written document on these ideas is Measuring Web Site Usage: Log File Analysis by Susan Haigh and Janette Megarity. Being on a Canadian government site, it's available in both English and French. Or for an even more negative point of view, you could read Why Web Usage Statistics are (Worse Than) Meaningless by Jeff Goldberg.


Analog's reports

This section summarises all of analog's reports, and the main commands which control them. For details on these commands, see the sections on Time reports, Other reports and Hierarchical reports. For exact details on what is counted in each report, see the section on Analog's definitions.

You can get descriptions of each report within the output by using the DESCRIPTIONS and DESCFILE commands.

Note: The examples below are in the HTML output style. Most people are using the XHTML output style, but I've used the HTML output style for the documentation to make sure that it works on all browsers.

Top lines


Program started at Thu-24-Sep-1998 13:48.
Analysed requests from Wed-16-Sep-1998 09:52 to Mon-21-Sep-1998 02:04 (4.7 days).
The top two lines of the output tell you when the program was run, and which dates it includes data from. (The second line includes all non-excluded requests, even failures, whereas most reports only include successful requests.)

General Summary


(Figures in parentheses refer to the 7 days to 24-Sep-1998 13:48).
Successful requests: 79,646 (48,947)
Average successful requests per day: 17,036 (6,992)
Successful requests for pages: 31,138 (18,689)
Average successful requests for pages per day: 6,660 (2,669)
Failed requests: 9,008 (6,378)
Redirected requests: 344 (235)
Distinct files requested: 8,180 (2,884)
Distinct hosts served: 6,640 (4,991)
Corrupt logfile lines: 2
Data transferred: 976.92 Mbytes (627.06 Mbytes)
Average data transferred per day: 208.96 Mbytes (89.58 Mbytes)
The General Summary contains some overall statistics about the data being analysed: the most important being the number of requests (the total number of files downloaded, including graphics); the number of requests for pages (just counting the various pages on your site); the number of distinct hosts (the number of different computers requests have come from); and the amount of data transferred in bytes. For exactly what the various lines mean, see the section on Analog's definitions. Bear in mind that one user can generate many requests by viewing lots of different pages or images, or by viewing the same page many times.

The figures in parentheses represent the seven days given at the top of this report: it's the seven days before the TO time if there was a TO command, or if not the seven days before the program was run.

You can't find out the number of visitors or visits you've had, and don't believe any program which tells you that you can. See the section on How the web works for a discussion of this.

You can turn this report on or off with the GENERAL command. You can control which lines are included using the GENSUMLINES command. You can include or exclude the figures for the last seven days with the LASTSEVEN command. You may get slightly different lines to those above, depending on exactly what's in your logfile.

Time reports


Each unit (+) represents 800 requests for pages, or part thereof.
week beg.: #reqs: pages: 
---------: -----: -----: 
13/Sep/98: 69614: 25277: ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
20/Sep/98: 10032:  5861: ++++++++
Busiest week: week beginning 13/Sep/98 (26,654 requests for pages).
These reports tell you how many requests there were in each time period. They also tell you which was the busiest time period.

The timezone is whatever your server records time in -- usually your server's local time, or sometimes GMT. You can adjust it to another timezone with the LOGTIMEOFFSET command.

You can control whether each report is included or not with the appropriate ON or OFF command. You can control which columns are listed by the COLS commands. You can control which measurement to use for the bar charts and the "busiest" line by the GRAPH commands. You can determine how many rows are displayed with the ROWS commands. You can display the lines backwards or forwards in time by the BACK commands. You can change the graphic used for the bar charts with the BARSTYLE command.

Time summaries


Each unit (+) represents 150 requests for pages, or part thereof.
day: #reqs: pages: 
---: -----: -----: 
Sun:  2031:  1193: ++++++++
Mon:  8001:  4668: ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Tue:     0:     0: 
Wed: 13934:  5915: ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
[etc.]

These reports tell you the total number of requests in each day or hour of the week, or in each period of the day, summed over all the weeks or days in the report. (It's not the average, nor is it the figures for just the last week or last day).

You can control whether each report is included or not with the appropriate ON or OFF command. You can control which columns are listed by the COLS commands. You can control which measurement to use for the bar charts by the GRAPH commands. You can change the graphic used for the bar charts with the BARSTYLE command.

Other reports


Listing the first 5 files by the number of requests, sorted by the number of requests.
#reqs: %bytes:       last date: file
-----: ------: ---------------: ----
 4123:  2.29%: 21/Sep/98 01:57: /~sret1/analog/
 3064:  0.15%: 21/Sep/98 01:54: /~sret1/analog/analogo.gif
 1737:  0.01%: 21/Sep/98 01:53: /~sret1/images/bar1.gif
 1692:  0.01%: 21/Sep/98 01:53: /~sret1/images/bar16.gif
 1685:  0.01%: 21/Sep/98 01:53: /~sret1/images/bar8.gif
67345: 97.54%: 21/Sep/98 02:04: [not listed: 8,175 files]

The rest of the reports are all quite similar. Here is a list of them. If you're unfamiliar with some of the terms, see the section on Analog's definitions. Usually you can only get some of these reports, depending on what information is recorded in your logfile.

There are lots of commands which control these reports. As usual, you can control whether each report is included or not with the appropriate ON or OFF command. You can control which columns are listed with the COLS commands. You can change how the reports are sorted with the SORTBY commands. You can control how many items are listed with the FLOOR commands. You can control whether and how the pie charts are plotted with the CHART commands. You can list the time period covered by each report with the REPORTSPAN command. You can include or exclude individual items with the output INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands. You can change the names of items in the reports with the output alias commands. Which files are linked to in the reports is controlled by the LINKINCLUDE and LINKEXCLUDE commands. The links are also affected by the BASEURL command.

The "not listed" line at the bottom counts those items which didn't get enough traffic to get above the FLOOR for the report. (It doesn't include items which you've explicitly excluded.)

Most of these reports have a hierarchical structure, like this example for the Domain Report:


Listing the first 5 domains by the number of requests, sorted by the number of requests.
no.: #reqs: %bytes: domain
---: -----: ------: ------
  1: 13243: 16.23%: .com (Commercial)
   :  1262:  1.26%:   aol.com
  2: 11783: 25.64%: .jp (Japan)
   :  9592: 22.19%:   ad.jp
   :  1043:  1.97%:   co.jp
  3: 10073: 11.62%: .net (Network)
   :  1926:  1.71%:   uu.net
  4:  9657: 13.31%: [unresolved numerical addresses]
  5:  7388:  8.04%: .uk (United Kingdom)
   :  5792:  5.74%:   ac.uk
   :  1510:  1.99%:   co.uk
   : 18502: 25.16%: [not listed: 82 domains]

Notice that the lower levels are always listed with their parents, so they break up the sort order. Also, they don't count towards the total number of items listed, so there are only 5 domains listed in the example above, as you can see in the first column. (The N column is particularly useful in hierarchical reports for this reason.)

You can control which items are listed on the lower levels by the SUB family of commands. There are also separate sub-SORTBY and sub-FLOOR commands for the lower levels. (These commands are called ARGSSORTBY and ARGSFLOOR for some reports, such as the Request Report.) You can plot the lower levels instead of the top-level items on the pie charts using the CHARTEXPAND commands.

Bottom lines


This analysis was produced by analog 6.0.
Running time: 8 seconds.

At the end of the output you can see which version of analog produced the report, and how long it took.

Analog's definitions

This section describes how analog defines its terms, and exactly what is counted in each category. It gets a bit technical at times -- if you're just trying to understand the output, I recommend you read the section on Analog's reports first.

We start with some basic definitions. The host is the computer which has asked you for a file (often called the "client"). The file might be a page (i.e., an HTML document) or it might be something else, such as an image. By default filenames ending in (case insensitive) .html, .htm, or / count as pages, but you can tell analog to count any file as a page with the PAGEINCLUDE command.

The total requests counts all the files which have been requested, including pages, graphics, etc. (Some people call this the number of hits, but that word is also used in other ways by other people, so I avoid it). The requests for pages obviously only counts pages. One user can generate many requests by requesting lots of different files, or the same file many times.

The referrer for a request is the place that the user (or his computer) heard about your file from. If he followed a link to reach a page, it will be the previous page. In the case of a graphic on a page, the referrer will be the page containing the graphic.

Analog's kilobytes are 1024 bytes. (If you prefer to call these kibibytes, you can do so by editing your language file.)


Analog recognises four categories of request, based on the HTTP status code of the request. You can see the total number of requests for each status code, and what the codes mean, in the Status Code Report. (Or see the HTTP spec for a detailed description.)

First, successful requests are those with HTTP status codes in the 200's (where the document was returned) or with code 304 (where the document was requested but was not needed because it had not been recently modified and the user could use a cached copy). (Actually, you can configure code 304 to be a redirected request instead of a successful request with the 304ISSUCCESS command.) Successful requests for pages refers to those lines on which the file requested was named and was a page.

Redirected requests are those with other codes in the 300's, indicating that the user was directed to a different file instead. The most common cause of these requests is that the user has incorrectly requested a directory name without the trailing slash. The server replies with a redirection ("you probably mean the following") and the user then makes a second connection to get the correct document (although usually the browser does it automatically without the user's intervention or knowledge). The other common cause of redirected requests is their use as "click-thru" advertising banners.

Failed requests are those with codes in the 400's (error in request) or 500's (server error). They come about for a variety of reasons, but the most common are when the requested file is not found or is read-protected.

Finally, requests returning informational status code are those with status codes in the 100's. These are very rare at the moment.

There are a few other types of logfile lines listed in the General Summary. Lines without status code refers to those logfile lines without a status code, and the successful requests in the General Summary only counts the ones with a status code: except if the line contains the name of the file requested, and the filename is being counted (not starred in the LOGFORMAT), then it's counted as a success. Unwanted logfile entries are ones which you have explicitly excluded. Finally, corrupt logfile lines are those which analog didn't manage to parse. (The number given is the number of unparseable lines in the whole logfile, even if the rest of the analysis is restricted to a small part of the logfile, because analog doesn't know whether a line would have been wanted if it couldn't parse it! You can list all the corrupt lines by turning debugging on.)


Most reports only include successful requests in calculating the number of requests, requests for pages, bytes, and last date: unless, of course, the report is a redirection or failure report. There is a further restriction on the time reports, the Status Code Report, the Processing Time Report, the File Size Report, and the bytes lines in the General Summary: the logfile line must also contain the name of the file requested, and the filename must be being counted. This is necessary to stop double counting if the server uses separate logs.

The "not listed" line at the bottom of each of the non-time reports represents those items which were not listed because they were below the floor for the report. (It doesn't include items which you've explicitly excluded.)

The figures in parentheses in the General Summary are for the last seven days: either the seven days before the TO time, or if no TO time is given, the seven days before the time of the program start. (It would be nicer to use the seven days before the last time in the logfile, but we don't know when this is until we've read the whole logfile, and by then it's too late.) The figures for the last seven days are not included if all, or none, of the requests fall in the last seven days.

In the Domain Report, "domain not given" means that the hostname did not contain a dot. "Unknown domain" means that it did contain a dot, but that the domain name was not in the domains file (or that the domains file could not be read). The hosts and domains concerned can be listed by turning debugging on.

In the Operating System Report, which browsers count as robots is controlled by the ROBOTINCLUDE and ROBOTEXCLUDE commands.


Errors and warnings

This section lists all the errors and warnings which analog can produce, together with a short explanation.

First, you should understand the difference between a crash, an error, a warning, and a debugging message. First, a crash is when analog exits prematurely, without producing the whole output file. The system might give a message, but analog will not give one of its own messages. Analog should never crash. If it does crash, please tell me about it.

An error is something which stops analog finishing its job. Whenever an error is detected, analog gives a message starting something like analog: Fatal error: and will then tell you what type of thing went wrong before quitting.

A warning is a problem which is not fatal to analog: it will keep on with its processing. These vary from the possibly serious, such as files which could not be found, to purely informational. They produce a message starting analog: Warning. You can turn warnings off using the WARNINGS command.

Finally, a debugging message gives information on the state of the program. They just begin with a single code letter followed by a colon. You don't get any debugging messages unless you've asked for them.

If you want to send these messages to a file instead of to the screen, you can use the ERRFILE command. To tell analog the width of your screen for these messages, you can use the ERRLINELENGTH command.

Now I shall describe all the possible errors and warnings in detail.


Errors

Ran out of memory: cannot continue
Analog ran out of memory. Try increasing the memory available to the process, if your operating system will allow it, or using the LOWMEM commands.
Cannot ignore mandatory configuration file
See the section in the Readme on the mandatory configuration file.
Can't find language file
Language file too short
Language file too long
Language file contains excessively long lines
Analog can't run without a well-formed language file. See the documentation on language files.
Attempted to read more than 50 configuration files
The most likely explanation for this is that you have accidentally created a loop using the CONFIGFILE command, for example if a configuration file includes itself.
Incorrect default given in anlghead.h
Default given in anlghead.h too short
If you've compiled your own version, and you've specified an incorrect configuration in the file anlghead.h, analog gives up to allow you to fix it.
Failed to open output file for writing
Analog couldn't create, or couldn't write to, the output file you specified.
Cache output file already exists: won't overwrite
Analog won't overwrite an old cache file. You must move or delete it yourself first.
OUTFILE and CACHEOUTFILE are the same
OUTFILE and CACHEOUTFILE both set to stdout
This can't be what you wanted, because one would overwrite the other.
OUTPUT NONE and CACHEOUTFILE none selected
You requested no output.
OUTPUT LATEX only available with US-ASCII, ISO-8859-1 and ISO-8859-2 character sets
The LaTeX output style only works with certain European languages because the standard LaTeX distribution doesn't contain the characters for other languages.

Warnings

Remember that warnings are not fatal: in fact some are rarely even serious. You can turn them off using the WARNINGS command. The possible warnings come in several different categories, shown by a letter in the warning message. The categories are as follows.
C
invalid configuration specified
D
dubious configuration specified
E
ERRFILE command used
F
files missing or corrupt
G
corrupt lines in support files
L
apparent problems in logfiles
M
possible problems in logfiles
R
turning off empty reports

Category C

This category indicates an incorrect configuration. Analog will either ignore what you said, or try and do the best it can with it. There are too many warnings in this category to list completely. You will have to consult the documentation for the particular configuration command that gave an error. If you get an error for a command which used to work in a previous version of analog, have a look in the section Updating from older versions.

Category D

This is for configurations which might be intended, but which look suspicious. Analog will not override what you've specified in this case.
LOGFORMAT with no subsequent logfile
You have specified a LOGFORMAT command, but no subsequent logfile to which it could be applied. Most likely you put the LOGFORMAT after the LOGFILE command. You must put the LOGFORMAT before the LOGFILE command or use DEFAULTLOGFORMAT instead. See the section on Specifying a log format for more details.
Offset not a multiple of 30
Offset more than 25 hours
The time offsets are meant to be for correcting between differences in time zones. These differences are usually multiples of 30 minutes between -25 and +25 hours. Maybe you specified the offset in hours instead of minutes by mistake, or something like that.
FROM time is later than the present
Usually this will mean that no entries are counted. Analog doesn't try and correct it in case the clock on your computer or your server is wrong -- but you would be better using TIMEOFFSET or LOGTIMEOFFSET to correct those clocks.
SORTBY doesn't match FLOOR
SORTBY doesn't match SUBSORTBY (or FLOOR/SUBFLOOR)
SORTBY (or FLOOR or GRAPH) isn't included in COLS
Within one report, it's helpful to your readers to have the sort methods and the floors compatible, and all included in the COLS. (See the section on Non-time reports).
Column N with SORTBY ALPHABETICAL/RANDOM
Numbering off the items when they're not in order of busyness is probably a mistake.
Time reports have not all got same value of BACK
It's usually helpful to have all the time reports running in the same direction.
Report contains no COLS
You've got an empty COLS list for one report, so you'll just get a list of names, not any information about them.
LOWMEM 3 prevents that item being cached
You're making a cache file, but one item is not being recorded because of a LOWMEM command, and will therefore not be saved in the cache file.

Category E

There is only one warning in this category.
Redirecting future diagnostic messages
You've used an ERRFILE command to change the destination of errors, warnings, debugging and PROGRESSFREQ diagnostics. This is just warning you so that you don't miss any messages.

Category F

This category is for diagnosing files which couldn't be opened or read successfully. These can be serious, but most of the messages should be self-explanatory. There are a few worth mentioning specifically.
Can't auto-detect format of logfile
The LOGFORMAT is set to automatic detection, but the first line of the logfile is not in any of the standard formats. This error can often be generated when you try and specify your own LOGFORMAT but put it after the LOGFILE command so that it is not in effect for that logfile.
Logfile with ambiguous dates
Some servers, notably IIS and WebSite, record dates in their logfiles according to local conventions. Then if analog encounters 2/1/99, for example, it doesn't know whether it's the 2nd January or 1st February. This problem, and what to do about it, is described in more detail in the section on Choosing a logfile.
Logfile seems to be in Microsoft format
The most common cause of this message is that your IIS logfile uses local conventions for listing dates which analog doesn't know about -- e.g. 25.12.98 instead of 25/12/98. Again, see the section on Choosing a logfile for help.
Ignoring corrupt format line in logfile
The format line within a W3 extended log, Netscape log or WebSTAR log is invalid in some way. Analog will always tell you what's wrong with it. The most common problem is that the date only appears at the top of the logfile, not on every line, which is not allowed. The reason for this, and what to do about it, are in the section on Choosing a logfile.
Failed to open domains file
In this case, all domains will be counted as "unknown domains".
Failed to open DNS input file
The first time you use DNS lookups, you don't have a DNS cache file, so you get this warning. Assuming you are using DNS WRITE, the message will go away next time you run analog.
DNS lock file already exists
To stop two copies of analog trying to write the DNS file at the same time, an empty "lock file" is created, which tells the second copy of analog to use DNS LOOKUP instead of DNS WRITE. If analog crashes, it may not delete its lock file. So if you get the "already exists" message even though no other copy of analog is running, you may need to delete the lock file yourself.

Category G

This category is used when there is a bad line in the DNS file, domains file or report descriptions file. Analog will still use the rest of the file. All the messages should be self-explanatory.

Category L

When analog finishes reading a logfile, it checks whether there might have been something wrong with it.
Large number of corrupt lines
This could indicate a problem with the logfile, or with the LOGFORMAT specification. The possible causes are described in the section on Choosing a logfile. If you specify DEBUG ON, analog will report where each line was corrupt.
Logfiles overlap: possible double counting
This means that two logfiles which were counting the same type of item overlapped in time. Because it's only based on the time period of the logfiles, not the actual entries, this may or may not indicate a genuine problem. It is a problem if you read the same logfile twice. Or maybe you used the cache file feature incorrectly. Or maybe your web server produces several logfiles, and your LOGFORMAT specification should have told analog to ignore some of the items in some of the logfiles. It is not a problem if the logfiles are in fact completely disjoint; for example if you analyse logfiles from two different virtual hosts. In this case, the statistics produced will still be correct.

Category M

This category is for warnings about logfile formats which might make analog produce unexpected results.
Logfile contains lines with no [whatevers], which are being filtered
This is usually harmless. It is perhaps best explained by example. Suppose you are excluding certain files from the analysis, but that you are also analysing a browser log which just contains information about the browsers used, not which files they read. Then we can't exclude the browsers which read the excluded files, because we don't know which they were, so all browsers will be included.
Logfile contains lines with no file names (or bytes): page (or byte) counts may be low
If a logfile line doesn't contain a file name, analog will assume that the request wasn't for a page. Similarly, if it doesn't give the number of bytes transferred, analog will make the bytes zero. So the number of page requests or bytes credited to the other items on that line will then be too low.
Old-style cache file doesn't contain data on first-request times of items; so these may be overestimated
Cache files now contain the first-request time of each item. But if you read a cache file from an older version of analog, this data will not have been recorded, and so the last-request time will be used instead.
Cache file doesn't contain last-seven-day statistics
It is impossible for cache files to record the number of requests in the last 7 days, because the data would be wrong at the time the cache file was read.

Category R

This is used when analog turns off an empty report. This could be because none of the relevant items were included in any of the logfiles, or perhaps beacause a LOWMEM command stopped them being recorded. It is also used when analog turns off a pie chart which would have contained only one wedge.

Broken Pipe

This warning is not generated by analog, but it can occur when analog decides that it doesn't need a logfile which it's uncompressing, and so doesn't finish reading it. It's harmless.

Frequently asked questions

This list is divided into six sections:
  1. Getting Started
  2. Basic Configuration
  3. Understanding the Output
  4. Advanced Usage
  5. Form Interface
  6. Design Decisions

List of Questions

  1. Getting Started
    See also Starting to use analog.
    1. Analog doesn't have a setup.exe.
    2. Analog just flashes up a DOS window and then quits.
    3. When I try and edit analog.cfg, Windows asks me which program I want to use to open that file.
    4. When I try and compile analog, it gives me an error (e.g. on SunOS 5).
    5. Analog didn't write the logfile when I ran it.
    6. Analog won't read extended logfiles generated by IIS.
      or What does "time without date" mean?
    7. What does "Logfile with ambiguous dates" mean?
    8. I tried to analyse a logfile, but I just got "Large number of corrupt lines."
    9. Analog won't read logfiles bigger than 2GB.
    10. What does this error message mean?
    11. I tried to run analog from my browser, but it didn't work.

  2. Basic Configuration
    1. I want to analyse several logfiles together.
    2. I want to make several different statistics pages. Do I have to install several copies of analog?
    3. My analog.cfg included lots of CONFIGFILE commands, but only one output page was produced.
    4. Why does the Daily Report only show the last six weeks?
    5. Why do the time reports all list 0 requests?
      or Why are there no bar charts in the time reports?
    6. How do I get the Request Report to list files with fewer than 20 requests?
    7. How do I ignore accesses from my site?
    8. How do I ignore internal referrers in the Referrer Report?
    9. How do I get information on just my pages, not everybody's?
    10. How do I list subdirectories not just top-level directories in the Directory Report?
    11. How do I list minor browser versions in the Browser Summary?
    12. I want to see the full hostnames in the Organisation Report.
    13. I used the command "DIREXCLUDE /mydir/", but files in that directory were still listed.
    14. I used the command "FILEEXCLUDE /cgi-bin/script.pl", but that file was still listed in the Request Report.
    15. I used the command "IMAGEDIR C:\analog\images\", but I only got broken images.
    16. I want to put several output pages in the same directory, but the pie charts overwrite each other.
    17. I want a configuration file with all of the possible configuration commands in it.
    18. I want to see your configuration file.
    19. Does the order of the commands matter in the configuration file?
    20. Why are my browser and referrer reports empty?
    21. Why isn't the Referrer Report sorted properly?
    22. I want to list (or not to list) referrers with their search arguments in the Referrer Report.
    23. Why are my click-thru's (or CGI scripts) not listed in the Request Report?
    24. I can't find /script.pl?q=1 in the Request Report.
    25. Why can't I have P in the REQCOLS, REQSORTBY or REQFLOOR?
    26. Can I find out which files each referrer pointed to?
      or Can I find out which files each host has read?
      or Can I find out which hosts have read each file?
      or Can I find out the number of hosts visiting on each day?
      or lots of similar questions.
    27. Can SETTINGS ON produce a configuration file instead of an English list of settings?
    28. I get the message "logfiles overlap" even though the two logfiles contain completely separate requests.
    29. Can I count the individual visitors, or visits, to my site?
      or Can I see how long visitors spend on my site?
    30. Can I change the way dates are formatted in the output?
      or Can I change some of the phrases in the output?
    31. How can I change the background colour of my output?
      or How can I make the output prettier?

  3. Understanding the Output
    See also What the results mean.
    1. How do I find out the number of hits from your data?
    2. Why are there so many referrers from my own site?
    3. The analysis covers exactly a week, but the figures for the last seven days don't agree with the totals.
    4. I only have 240 requests in total. Why does analog think there are 840 requests per week?
    5. The pie charts don't agree with the figures in the tables.
    6. Why doesn't analog agree with the counter on my page?
    7. Why doesn't analog agree with grepping the logfile?
    8. Why doesn't analog agree with my other logfile analysis program?
    9. Why do I only get "unresolved numerical addresses" in the Domain Report?
    10. Why are directories listed in the Request Report?
    11. When someone reads one of my PDF files, it scores dozens of hits.
    12. Kilobytes should be 1000 bytes, not 1024 bytes.
    13. The Organisation Report doesn't identify organisations correctly.
    14. "Organization" isn't spelled correctly.

  4. Advanced Usage
    1. How can I do such-and-such with a command line option?
    2. I want a list of all command line arguments.
    3. How do I list all numerical subdomains to depth 2 in the Domain Report?
    4. I want to be able to count requests with status code 301 and 302 as successes, so that they appear in the Request Report.
    5. I want to report on a field analog doesn't know about.
    6. Can analog analyse Squid proxy logfiles?
    7. Can analog analyse FTP logfiles?
      or Can analog analyse streaming media logfiles?
    8. Can analog analyse other logfiles, such as mail logs, or the syslog?
    9. How can I run analog automatically every day?
    10. How can I automatically email the results to myself or someone else?
    11. I'm setting up IIS. Which logfile format should I use?
    12. I host lots of virtual domains. How should I set up analog?
    13. Can I make several output pages with just one run of analog?
    14. I ran out of memory when trying to run analog. What can I do?
    15. You're processing 20,000,000 requests in under 10 minutes. Why is mine much slower?
      or Analog appears to stall.
    16. How do I make a link on my page that runs analog?
    17. Do I have to save all my old logfiles?
      or Can analog make statistics from old reports instead of reading the whole logfile again?
    18. Can analog write to a database or spreadsheet?

  5. Form Interface
    See also Form troubleshooting.
    1. I couldn't make the form run.
    2. How can I specify different logfiles from the form interface?
    3. My browser showed me anlgform.pl, rather than running it.
    4. Why does the form interface give "Document Returned no Data"?
    5. The images don't appear when running analog from the form interface.
    6. Why do I get some reports that weren't requested on the form?
    7. How do I make a link to anlgform.pl without using anlgform.html?
    8. Is there a form interface not using Perl (e.g. ASP or .exe)?

  6. Design Decisions
    1. Why doesn't the HEADERFILE replace the whole <head> of the output file?
    2. Why don't you just use one image, and scale it with the width and height attributes?
    3. In the XHTML output, why not just put a class= on each <COL> instead of on each cell?
    4. Why doesn't the OUTFILE command automatically create the directory for the output file?
    5. Why not automatically spot robots by whether they request /robots.txt?
    6. Why not just do DNS resolution of the hosts that actually make it into the Host Report?
    7. Couldn't you do the DNS lookups faster with threads?
    8. Why doesn't analog analyse the error_log?
    9. My server lists local names in the logfile. Can you put a common suffix on them automatically?
    10. Can you extrapolate from the current month's partial data to produce a prediction for the whole month, based on the rate so far?
    11. Can you extend the Domain Report to say which US states people visited from?
    12. Please distinguish between the different BSDs in the Operating System Report.
    13. Why not use language codes instead of country codes for the names of the language files?
    14. Why doesn't analog produce statistics on "visits"?
    15. Why don't you sell analog?

A. Getting Started

Most questions in this category are answered in the section entitled Starting to use analog. If you can't get analog running you should look there.
  1. Analog doesn't have a setup.exe.
    No, and it doesn't need one. It's already ready to run! See Starting to use analog under Windows.
  2. Analog just flashes up a DOS window and then quits.
    This is the correct behaviour. It should have created an output page called Report.html. See Starting to use analog under Windows.
  3. When I try and edit analog.cfg, Windows asks me which program I want to use to open that file.
    Use Notepad, or any other plain text editor.
  4. When I try and compile analog, it gives me an error (e.g. on SunOS 5).
    Maybe you need to edit the Makefile. There are some platform-specific notes in the section Starting to use analog on other platforms, and in the Makefile itself.
  5. Analog didn't write the logfile when I ran it.
    Analog doesn't write the logfiles. Your web server writes the logfiles, and analog just reads them. See Starting to use analog.
  6. Analog won't read extended logfiles generated by IIS.
    or What does "time without date" mean?
    By default, IIS writes the date only at the top of the logfile, not on every line. But it doesn't write a new date if the date changes during the logfile, so analog can't tell which date later entries in the log occurred on. More details, and what to do about it, are in the section on Choosing a logfile.
  7. What does "Logfile with ambiguous dates" mean?
    See the section on Errors and warnings.
  8. I tried to analyse a logfile, but I just got "Large number of corrupt lines."
    There are lots of possible reasons for this. You can find them described in the section on Choosing a logfile.
  9. Analog won't read logfiles bigger than 2GB.
    Analog doesn't have any limitation, but there may be a limitation in your OS and/or compiler. Try adding CFLAGS=-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 to the Makefile before compiling.
  10. What does this error message mean?
    Again, see the section on Errors and warnings.
  11. I tried to run analog from my browser, but it didn't work.
    Analog should not be run as a CGI program, or even put in the folder with your CGI programs, for security reasons. You should use the special CGI program instead.

B. Basic Configuration

Analog has lots of configuration commands, all of which are in the section on Customising analog. Here are some of the most common questions. If your question isn't answered here, you could also try looking in the index.
  1. I want to analyse several logfiles together.
    Just use several LOGFILE commands, or wildcards in the logfile name.
  2. I want to make several different statistics pages. Do I have to install several copies of analog?
    No. Just install it once, and run it with different configuration files. (You do have to run it once per output page though.)
  3. My analog.cfg included lots of CONFIGFILE commands, but only one output page was produced.
    Analog can only produce one output page per run. To produce several reports, you have to run it several times.
  4. Why does the Daily Report only show the last six weeks?
    This is controlled by the DAYREPROWS command.
  5. Why do the time reports all list 0 requests?
    or Why are there no bar charts in the time reports?
    They probably only list 0 requests for pages. Maybe you need to use PAGEINCLUDE to count more files as pages.
  6. How do I get the Request Report to list files with fewer than 20 requests?
    Use the REQFLOOR command, e.g., REQFLOOR 10r to list down to 10 requests. Also, if you want to list all the files not just pages, you may need to use the command REQINCLUDE *
  7. How do I ignore accesses from my site?
    Use the HOSTEXCLUDE command.
  8. How do I ignore internal referrers in the Referrer Report?
    Use the REFREPEXCLUDE command.
  9. How do I get information on just my pages, not everybody's?
    Use the FILEINCLUDE command.
  10. How do I list subdirectories not just top-level directories in the Directory Report?
    SUBDIR */*
  11. How do I list minor browser versions in the Browser Summary?
    Use SUBBROW */*.* (Note that they then appear in the Browser Summary, not the Browser Report).
  12. I want to see the full hostnames in the Organisation Report.
    The full hostnames are listed in the Host Report.
  13. I used the command "DIREXCLUDE /mydir/", but files in that directory were still listed.
    DIREXCLUDE only affects the Directory Report, not the other reports. You want "FILEEXCLUDE /mydir/*" instead.
  14. I used the command "FILEEXCLUDE /cgi-bin/script.pl", but that file was still listed in the Request Report.
    If the file has search arguments, you have to be a bit careful with FILEEXCLUDE. This is described in the section about search arguments.
  15. I used the command "IMAGEDIR C:\analog\images\", but I only got broken images.
    The IMAGEDIR command has to be a URL, not a directory on your disk. (It's just inserted into the <img> tags in the output: have a look at the output and you'll see.) Also this means that the images have to be put in the part of your filespace that has your web files.
  16. I want to put several output pages in the same directory, but the pie charts overwrite each other.
    You have to set the CHARTDIR and LOCALCHARTDIR to be different for each output. (You can still have all the charts in the same directory if the CHARTDIR and LOCALCHARTDIR don't end with slashes.)
  17. I want a configuration file with all of the possible configuration commands in it.
    One is already distributed with the program, in the examples folder.
  18. I want to see your configuration file.
    This is also included in the examples folder in the distribution.
  19. Does the order of the commands matter in the configuration file?
    Only occasionally. If you have two of one command, the later one will generally override the earlier one. Apart from that, commands can come in any order, except that LOGFORMAT and LOGTIMEOFFSET commands must come before the LOGFILE to which they refer.
  20. Why are my browser and referrer reports empty?
    Maybe your logfile doesn't contain any browser and referrer information?
  21. Why isn't the Referrer Report sorted properly?
    It is sorted properly. But search arguments are also listed under the file they belong to, and this interrupts the ordering. If you set the REFARGSFLOOR high enough you won't see the search arguments. Or you can include the N column to make the ordering more obvious.
  22. I want to list (or not to list) referrers with their search arguments in the Referrer Report.
    To see the search arguments you may need to set the REFARGSFLOOR lower. To avoid seeing them, you could set the REFARGSFLOOR higher, or alternatively use the REFARGSEXCLUDE command to ignore them either for all files or just for particular files.
  23. Why are my click-thru's (or CGI scripts) not listed in the Request Report?
    If they cause a redirection to another page, they will be listed in the Redirection Report, rather than the Request Report.
  24. I can't find /script.pl?q=1 in the Request Report.
    If it causes a redirection, it will be in the Redirection Report not the Request Report. But also, you may need to set the REQARGSFLOOR or REDIRARGSFLOOR lower to actually see it.
  25. Why can't I have P in the REQCOLS, REQSORTBY or REQFLOOR?
    The number of page requests doesn't make sense in the Request Report because it's either the same as the number of requests (if the file is a page) or zero (if it isn't). If you want to list only pages in this report, use REQINCLUDE pages instead.
  26. Can I find out which files each referrer pointed to?
    or Can I find out which files each host has read?
    or Can I find out which hosts have read each file?
    or Can I find out the number of hosts visiting on each day?
    or lots of similar questions.
    There are lots of questions like this. They all want analog to cross-reference two sorts of item (e.g. files and referrers in the first example above, or hosts and dates in the last).
    The solution is to use the *INCLUDE commands. For example, to find out which files a particular referrer pointed to, restrict the analysis to just the referrer you're interested in with the REFINCLUDE command. The Request Report will then just list the files reached from that referrer. Similarly, if you're interested in a particular time period, you can focus on just that time by using the FROM and TO commands.
    You do have to run analog once for each report generated. So for the example of referrers, you would have to run it once for each referrer you're interested in. Of course, it would be useful to be able to cross-refererence all the files and referrers at once. But it is fundamental to analog's speed and minimal memory requirement that it only records statistics for each type of item individually, and doesn't record enough information to cross-reference them afterwards.
  27. Can SETTINGS ON produce a configuration file instead of an English list of settings?
    No. But it does tell you which configuration files it read, so you can just get the commands out of them. Or if you want a list of all configuration commands, there is one in the examples directory.
  28. I get the message "logfiles overlap" even though the two logfiles contain completely separate requests.
    This message is based only on the dates of the files, not the contents. If you're sure there is no problem, you can turn it off with the command WARNINGS -L.
  29. Can I count the individual visitors, or visits, to my site?
    or Can I see how long visitors spend on my site?
    No, it's not technically possible, and don't believe any program which tells you it is. See the section on How the web works for details.
  30. Can I change the way dates are formatted in the output?
    or Can I change some of the phrases in the output?
    Yes, by editing the language file.
  31. How can I change the background colour of my output?
    or How can I make the output prettier?
    You can change almost any aspect of the design using a style sheet. There are also some programs on the helper applications page to make completely different output from the analog data.

C. Understanding the Output

Most of the questions in this category are answered in the section on What the results mean, which I really recommend you read if you want to understand what analog is telling you.
  1. How do I find out the number of hits from your data?
    I don't use the word hits, because people use it in different ways, so it's misleading. I use requests for the number of transfers of any type of file (text, graphics, ...), and page requests for the number of transfers of HTML pages. See the section on Analog's definitions for more information.
  2. Why are there so many referrers from my own site?
    These come from all the internal links on your site, and all the graphics on your pages. See the section on How the web works for more information. If you don't want to see them, you can use REFREPEXCLUDE to exclude them.
  3. The analysis covers exactly a week, but the figures for the last seven days don't agree with the totals.
    The figures in parentheses are for the seven days before the time the program was run, unless there is a TO command. They are never for the seven days before the end of the logfile. (Although if you know that the logfile only contains entries up to a certain time, you may want to include a TO command for that time to get the last seven days' data right.)
  4. I only have 240 requests in total. Why does analog think there are 840 requests per week?
    If you have 240 requests in two days, that's a rate of 840 requests per week. Just like if you drove 28 miles in 20 minutes, you'd have driven at 84 miles per hour.
  5. The pie charts don't agree with the figures in the tables.
    Possibly you are looking at out-of-date images. Make sure to reload the images as well as the text. Also, if you are running analog several times, make sure to use CHARTDIR and LOCALCHARTDIR to stop the images for the different runs overwriting each other.
  6. Why doesn't analog agree with the counter on my page?
    There are lots of possible reasons. Do they both start from the same date? Are you just looking at requests for that one page with analog, not for all your other pages and graphics? Also, analog will record all requests to that page; if it's a graphic, your counter will only measure requests from people on graphical browsers that reached that place on the page.
  7. Why doesn't analog agree with grepping the logfile?
    Have you understood what analog includes in its counts? In particular, most reports only list "successful" requests (HTTP status codes 200-209 & 304). A naïve grep would count failures too.
  8. Why doesn't analog agree with my other logfile analysis program?
    Small differences can be put down to different parsing. But if you are seeing large differences, you have to understand what analog counts, and what the other program counts. For example, some programs count HTTP status codes 301 & 302 as successes, whereas I think that to do so gives extremely misleading results.
  9. Why do I only get "unresolved numerical addresses" in the Domain Report?
    Your server only records the numerical IP address of the hosts that contact you, not their names. Read the section about DNS lookups, or turn DNS resolution on in your server.
  10. Why are directories listed in the Request Report?
    They are not directories, they are pages with the same name as the directory. For example, I have both a directory called /analog/ and a page called /analog/ (which happens to be the same as /analog/index.html).
  11. When someone reads one of my PDF files, it scores dozens of hits.
    PDF reading software often downloads a file in small parts, and each part counts as a separate request. This is unavoidable: analog has no way of knowing how many downloads constituted a single document in the reader's mind. The parts may be pages, or some larger amount, and sometimes the software may download the whole document at once. In addition, the user may only want to read part of the document, and so never download the whole thing. As usual, we can only reliably report how many requests there were at the server, not guess what the user did with the file later.
  12. Kilobytes should be 1000 bytes, not 1024 bytes.
    Personally I think that whatever 1024 bytes should have been called originally, it's stupid to try and change half a century of established usage now. But we don't need to argue about it. Analog's kilobytes are 1024 bytes, but if you prefer to call them kibibytes, you can do so by editing your language file.
  13. The Organisation Report doesn't identify organisations correctly.
    The rules I use are described in the section on The domains file. I admit they aren't perfect, but this is because in domains in which organisations aren't all at the same level in the domain hierarchy, there is no way to identify them perfectly without long lists.
  14. "Organization" isn't spelled correctly.
    Yes it is. If you want American spellings, you have to specify
    LANGUAGE US-ENGLISH
    in your configuration file.

D. Advanced Usage

  1. How can I do such-and-such with a command line option?
    Use the +C option to put any configuration command on the command line.
  2. I want a list of all command line arguments.
    There is a list in the index.
  3. How do I list all numerical subdomains to depth 2 in the Domain Report?
    SUBDOMAIN *.* deliberately only lists the top-level numerical subdomains to avoid cluttering the output. SUBDOMAIN *.*.* will work but will list everything else to depth 3. So the best solution is
    SUBDOMAIN 1*.*,2*.*,3*.*,...
  4. I want to be able to count requests with status code 301 and 302 as successes, so that they appear in the Request Report.
    No, you really don't, because that would lead to double counting when a request for /dir (code 301) is redirected to /dir/ (code 200). For CGI scripts etc. look in the Redirection Report instead of the Request Report.
  5. I want to report on a field analog doesn't know about.
    Use the following kludge. Write a LOGFORMAT to declare the field to be a virtual host or a user (whichever you aren't already using). Then edit your language file so that the right text is output.
  6. Can analog analyse Squid proxy logfiles?
    It can analyse Squid's common log format, although Squid uses some extra HTTP status codes which will be rejected as corrupt by analog. But really you want to know different statistics from a proxy log, such as percentage of requests retrieved from cache, and you might be better to use Squid's native format and a tool specifically designed to analyse it such as Calamaris.
  7. Can analog analyse FTP logfiles?
    or Can analog analyse streaming media logfiles?
    Yes. There are some configuration files in the examples directory giving sample LOGFORMAT commands. If you have a server which isn't covered there, you will have to write your own LOGFORMAT.
  8. Can analog analyse other logfiles, such as mail logs, or the syslog?
    Yes and no. Analog is primarily designed as an HTTP logfile analyser. For mail logs, there is a program on the helper applications page to help you. For other logs, you can get some results out by writing your own LOGFORMAT. But analog does make some assumptions about the sort of information it expects on a logfile line, and the further these assumptions are from being met, the harder it will be!
  9. How can I run analog automatically every day?
    This depends on your particular machine. On Unix, you need to run analog as a cron job (see "man cron"). This is my cron command to run it at 1:50am every day:
    50 1 * * * $HOME/bin/analog
    On Windows NT you can do the same with the at command. (It's probably easiest to put it in a batch job; also only an administrator can run at.) On Windows 98, it should be possible with the Task Scheduler, although I haven't tried it. On Windows 95 it's not possible as far as I know.
    On Mac, there are programs called Cron or CronoTask to do this.
  10. How can I automatically email the results to myself or someone else?
    Again, this depends on your operating system. On Unix, it's easy:
    analog +a +O- | mailx -s"Subject" someuser@somewhere.com
    I don't know about other operating systems, but at the worst, you can write the output to a temporary file, and then mail that file.
  11. I'm setting up IIS. Which logfile format should I use?
    The W3C format is probably best. You can turn fields on and off in this format. And it contains all the possible fields which can be logged, which the other formats do not. However, it is important to turn the date field on (it's off by default), not just to log the date once at the top: see the section on problems with logfile formats for why.
  12. I host lots of virtual domains. How should I set up analog?
    There's a How-To which discusses this issue. There's also a file in the examples directory.
  13. Can I make several output pages with just one run of analog?
    Not at the moment. I want to do this in a future version, but it will require some considerable work. However, depending on your which options you want to vary, you may be able to avoid having to read the logfile several times by using cache files. (This is likely to be faster, but more complicated.)
  14. I ran out of memory when trying to run analog. What can I do?
    See the section on Coping with low memory.
  15. You're processing 20,000,000 requests in under 10 minutes. Why is mine much slower?
    or Analog appears to stall.
    If you have DNS lookups on, they are very slow. Otherwise, it probably depends on the speed of your computer and disks, and what other programs are running at the same time. You can use the PROGRESSFREQ command to see if it's really stalled or whether it's just being slow. If you are running out of memory, you might find analog's LOWMEM commands helpful.
  16. How do I make a link on my page that runs analog?
    Link to the anlgform program, with the desired options. But be careful about the load on your server.
  17. Do I have to save all my old logfiles?
    or Can analog make statistics from old reports instead of reading the whole logfile again?
    These questions are answered in the section about Cache files.
  18. Can analog write to a database or spreadsheet?
    Use the computer-readable output style, which can export to CSV. Or if what you really want to do is to run analog again without re-reading the logfiles, read the section about Cache files.

E. Form Interface

There is also a section on troubleshooting in the documentation about the form interface.
  1. I couldn't make the form run.
    Have you made analog work without the form? Have you run anlgform.pl from the command line as explained in the section on troubleshooting?
  2. How can I specify different logfiles from the form interface?
    Just add a new field to the form with name=LOGFILE
  3. My browser showed me anlgform.pl, rather than running it.
    You have to tell the server to execute the CGI program, not just send it out like it would for a normal file. Often this is done by putting it in a special /cgi-bin/ directory.
  4. Why does the form interface give "Document Returned no Data"?
    If it doesn't happen for a while, then probably the server is giving up before the analog process has finished running. Increase the timeout interval on the server.
  5. The images don't appear when running analog from the form interface.
    For the bar charts, you probably need to set the IMAGEDIR, because if the images are in your /cgi-bin/ directory, the server will normally try to execute them instead of just sending them out. Pie charts don't appear unless you configure them specially.
  6. Why do I get some reports that weren't requested on the form?
    If a report is neither included nor excluded on the form, the system default will be used. This will depend on your configuration files and on compile-time settings.
  7. How do I make a link to anlgform.pl without using anlgform.html?
    anlgform.pl accepts the GET or POST methods of form submission. So you can make a link with the arguments passed after a question mark in the usual GET way.
  8. Is there a form interface not using Perl (e.g. ASP or .exe)?
    There is a Windows executable version of the Perl script on the analog helpers page. At the time of writing, I don't know of any ASP version of the anlgform program, but if someone writes one, I'll put it on the analog helpers page too. Warning: Potential authors must understand CGI security issues in general, and the extra issues about what the analog form interface must disallow, or they will open security holes on their system.

F. Design Decisions

or "Why didn't you do it this way?"
  1. Why doesn't the HEADERFILE replace the whole <head> of the output file?
    Because you almost never get valid HTML or XHTML that way. Use a style sheet instead.
  2. Why don't you just use one image, and scale it with the width and height attributes?
    It doesn't work with the BARSTYLE command.
  3. In the XHTML output, why not just put a class= on each <COL> instead of on each cell?
    Because most properties can't be set on columns. For example, you can't set the text colour for a whole column. See the CSS spec.
  4. Why doesn't the OUTFILE command automatically create the directory for the output file?
    Actually, most programs don't do this. It's too easy to create directories in unrelated parts of the filesystem if you make a typo.
  5. Why not automatically spot robots by whether they request /robots.txt?
    It's not reliable. Not all robots request /robots.txt, and not everything that requests /robots.txt is a robot. (Consider a webmaster checking his own /robots.txt, for example.)
  6. Why not just do DNS resolution of the hosts that actually make it into the Host Report?
    There is one theoretical and one practical problem. Theoretically, the problem is that which hosts do make it into the Host Report can change when the DNS lookups have been done. And practically, this wouldn't help identify the busiest countries or organisations, which is usually what you really want to know. However, there is a Perl script on the helper applications page to do this.
  7. Couldn't you do the DNS lookups faster with threads?
    The problem is, the standard commands for DNS lookups are not thread-safe on many platforms, so it would involve a lot of platform-specific code. Also it's technically difficult to coordinate the lookup threads and the main logfile-reading thread. Again, there are programs for specific platforms on the helper applications page.
  8. Why doesn't analog analyse the error_log?
    The error log is intended for humans rather than computers to read. So there is no consistent format: even different versions of the same server have different formats. And there is not much need to analyse it because analog's various failure reports are good enough for almost all purposes.
  9. My server lists local names in the logfile. Can you put a common suffix on them automatically?
    This wouldn't be a good idea by default, because things like "unknown" would get the suffix. You can always add them using HOSTALIAS. (There is an example to accomplish this using regular expressions in the section about aliases.)
  10. Can you extrapolate from the current month's partial data to produce a prediction for the whole month, based on the rate so far?
    No. There are too many problems in trying to produce anything sensible, especially near the beginning of the month. Different days of the week and different times of day cause lots of problems. I would prefer to produce accurate raw data than suspect derived data.
  11. Can you extend the Domain Report to say which US states people visited from?
    No. Some programs pretend to do this, but you can actually only tell which state the computer the person was using is in, which may be quite different from where the user was for ISP's or other large organisations.
  12. Please distinguish between the different BSDs in the Operating System Report.
    Sorry, I know they're different operating systems, but I don't want to introduce any finer granularity. At least, not in the main distribution -- the prepackaged versions for BSD do add this granularity, and this is good.
  13. Why not use language codes instead of country codes for the names of the language files?
    People are more familiar with the country codes, and not all of my languages have language codes anyway. Anyway, the filenames are normally invisible to the user.
  14. Why doesn't analog produce statistics on "visits"?
    See How the Web Works.
  15. Why don't you sell analog?
    I didn't write analog for the money, and I'm happy just to see people use it. Also, by making it open source, lots of people send me ideas and code to include in future versions. How do you think I got all those languages? (Of course, if you want to send me money, or gifts in kind, or even just postcards...).

Mailing lists

I welcome mail about analog, both praise and bug reports! I and others are also usually happy to help people who have trouble with analog: it helps me to find bugs, and know where the documentation is unclear.

If your statistics are provided by someone else, for example your web hosting company, you should normally get support from them. They're the only ones who can configure analog to your specifications.

There are three mailing lists for analog.

analog-announce
Announcements about analog. I post to this when there are new versions, for example. Only gets a few messages a year. You can join this list by filling in the form at http://lists.meer.net/mailman/listinfo/analog-announce
analog-help
Getting help with analog from experienced users. This is the place to go if you have trouble setting up or configuring the program. Usually you will get a swift reply. You have to subscribe to the list before you can send a message. This is necessary to deter spammers. You can subscribe at http://lists.meer.net/mailman/listinfo/analog-help
You can also read this list as a forum (but not post) or as a newsgroup.
analog-author
This just goes to me. Use for private comments, or other things that would not be suitable for the analog-help list. I'm pretty bad at answering my mail, so don't expect a swift reply. Don't use this address for user support questions: they will be ignored.
There is also an independent Japanese analog mailing list. And there are also companies offering support for analog on a commercial basis: you can find a list of them on the analog home page.
If you want to get help with analog, please check the following simple things first. (For articles on how to ask in such a way that you'll get a useful answer, I recommend Eric Raymond's How To Ask Questions The Smart Way and Simon Tatham's How to Report Bugs Effectively.)
  1. Read the FAQ. Maybe I've answered your question already. If I have, I'll just direct you to the FAQ, not answer it again.
  2. If analog produced some error messages when it ran, they probably indicate what went wrong. Read the section on Errors and warnings.
  3. If your question is "Will this command have that effect?", why not try it and see!
  4. If you think you've found a bug, read the list of known bugs at my site, to see if your bug is already known about.
  5. Read the other relevant pages of the Readme, particularly the sections on Starting to use analog and Customising analog. You may also find the index useful. We don't appreciate people who are too lazy to read the documentation. (If the documentation is unclear, or the relevant paragraph is too well hidden, then that's a different matter. Of course I want to know about that.)
  6. Have a look in the web archives of the mailing list to see if your question has already been answered there.
  7. If analog isn't doing what you thought you asked it to, then run it with the SETTINGS ON configuration command, and see what options it thinks it's meant to be using.
I'm sorry to be so fussy, but a lot of the mail on the list really needn't have been sent at all, and just wastes the time of everybody on the list. As I say, I really do welcome genuine mail.

If you still need help, subscribe to the to the analog-help mailing list using the form at http://lists.meer.net/mailman/listinfo/analog-help, and then send your mail to analog-help@lists.meer.net. Please do the following when you send mail to the list.

  1. Describe exactly what you did, what you expected, and what the computer did. Include the exact text of any error messages, not a précis.
  2. Mention which version of analog you are using, on which operating system.
  3. Although you should obey the first two points, you should also try and send a short message. Most people don't bother to read long messages.
  4. Give your mail a subject line which indicates immediately what aspect of analog it is about. (This is useful for the archives).
  5. Do not send long files or attachments unless you're asked to. We do not want to see your configuration file, your header file, your output file, or any logfile over 10 lines long. They are almost always useless to us. And anyway, excessively long messages will be rejected by the mailing list server.

If you want to send a private message to me, you can send it to me at analog-author@lists.meer.net. Please don't use this address for user support questions: I don't have time to answer them, and I'll just ignore them.
There are several web archives of the analog-help list. You can find them at these places: You can also find archives of the analog-announce list at If you prefer Usenet format, you can also read the groups as newsgroups at Many thanks to meer.net for providing these mailing lists for me, to GMane for the mail-to-news gateways, and to all those who provide list archives.

Helper applications

Some people have written helper applications for analog. These are independent programs which work together with analog to make certain tasks easier. There are graphical configuration tools, for example, or tools which post-process analog's output to produce graphs. There are tools to do the DNS lookups more quickly, configuration files for certain jobs, and lots of other things.

These helper applications are all listed at the analog site. The list is constantly changing, so I'm not distributing it with the program. But I strongly recommend you go to the analog helper applications page and check it out.

There are also some example configuration files in the examples directory or folder distributed with the program.


Acknowledgements

Many people have helped me with analog, and I can't thank them all specifically. But I do appreciate everyone who's given me feedback or sent me bug reports.

Thanks are due to the author of getstats, Kevin Hughes. In the days before analog there were only three serious logfile analysis programs, and only one of them, getstats, had attractive output. I wrote analog when getstats stopped being able to cope with the size of our logfile, but my output was based on his, and still shows its parentage.

Thanks are also due to all those who helped in the early stages of writing this program, and gave me the encouragement to continue with analog and to release it publicly. Those who made helpful suggestions during the first few weeks of the program are numerous, but I must mention particularly Dan Anderson, Martyn Johnson, Joe Ramey, Chris Ritson, Quentin Stafford-Fraser and Dave Stanworth. Above all Gareth McCaughan gave me lots of programming advice. The early versions of the program would have run much more slowly without him.

My employer, ClickTracks, kindly let me continue to develop analog while I am working for them. More than that -- they even let me incorporate some code developed for ClickTracks into analog!

For six years, analog's home page was at my previous employer, the University of Cambridge Statistical Laboratory. Now it is provided by SourceForge. niccx.com donated the address analog.cx, and Takayuki Matsuki of Tokyo Kasei University and Peter Gradwell of gradwell dot com ltd provide DNS services.

meer.net very kindly provide the mailing lists for analog, as well as a mailbox for the analog-author mail. Thank you too to Aengus for administering the mailing lists, GMane for turning them into newsgroups, and all the services who provide list archives.

Thanks to Ian Jackson for providing official FTP and rsync sites for analog, and for hosting the old versions of the documentation. Many other people have provided mirror sites for analog, starting with Dave Stanworth (again!). The full list of mirror sites is listed elsewhere; thanks to all of them.

Mark Roedel first suggested porting analog to different platforms, and made the original DOS port. Shortly afterwards, Jason Linhart made the Mac port, and has continued to contribute lots of extra code for that platform and for the program in general. The Mac version also includes code contributed by Stephan Somogyi and Nigel Perry. Later ports were made by Dave Jones, Martin Zinser & Rick Dyson (OpenVMS), Magnus Hagander (Win32), Ivan Martinez (OS/2), Nick Smith & Stefan Bellon (RISC OS), Scott Tadman & Rob Judd (BeOS), Thomas Engel (NeXTSTEP), Martin Kraemer & Holger Schranz (BS2000/OSD, including EBCDIC support), and Hideyuki Yahagi (AS/400). Thank you also to the people who make precompiled versions available for various platforms.

The regular expression parsing is taken from Philip Hazel's PCRE library. The graphics use Thomas Boutell's gd library, the libpng library, and the zlib library by Jean-loup Gailly & Mark Adler. Logfile decompression uses the zlib library, Gilles Vollant's unzip library and Julian Seward's bzip2 library. Each of these libraries is subject to its own copyright and licensing conditions: PCRE licence, gd licence, libpng licence, zlib licence, unzip licence, bzip2 licence. If NEED_MEMMOVE is defined at compile time, then this product includes software developed by the University of California, Berkeley and its contributors (licence).

The XML output style was written by Per Jessen. The form interface is based on an idea by James Dean Palmer. The code to expand wildcards in directory names under Unix is by Owen Cliffe. Thanks to all the other people who have contributed bits of code too: I apologise for not having room to name all of them.

Thanks also to those who have written helper applications, for making analog more usable, and to those who have written How-To's, for sharing their experience of how to use analog in practical situations. And thanks to Alexander Toth for the Unix man page.

Many people have volunteered to translate analog into their own languages. Many thanks to the following who have contributed in this way over the years: Tigran Nazarian (Armenian), Jon Otegi (Basque), Emir Alikadic (Bosnian), Luchezar Georgiev (Bulgarian), Francesc Rocher, M. Mercè Llauge, Francesc Burrull i Mestres & Jordi Vidal (Catalan), Yang Meng & Che Dong (Simplified Chinese), Andrew Choi & Tzu-hsien Yu (Traditional Chinese), Tomo Sombolac (Croatian), Jan Simek & Karel Fajkus (Czech), Adrian Price (Danish), Ferry van het Groenewoud, Joost Baaij, Dimitry Smagghe, Bert Hiddink & Frank Fesevur (Dutch), Henrik Huhtinen, Steve Kelly, Andrew Staples, Mikko Silvonen, Juha Ojaniemi & Markus Peuhkuri (Finnish), Patrice Lafont, Lucien Vieira, Jean-Marc Coursimault, Lionel Delaude & Gordon Macpherson (French), Mario Ellebrecht, Martin Kraemer, Holger Schranz, Thomas Jacob, Thomas Frings, Georg Schwarz, Ralf Döring & Gustaf Mossakowski (German), Dimitris Xenakis (Greek), Laszlo Nemeth & Andras Kemeny (Hungarian), Gustaf Gustafsson & Valberg Larusson (Icelandic), Haris Hasanudin (Indonesian), Furio Ercolessi, Luca Andreucci, Alessio Bragadini & Marco Bernardini (Italian), Takayuki Matsuki, Stephen Obenski, Motonobu Takahashi, Kaori Chikenji & Kazuto Ishigaki (Japanese), Byungkwan Kim & InChang Oh (Korean), Jurijs Turjanskis & Anda Bimbere (Latvian), Ingrid (Lithuanian), Jan-Aage Bruvoll, Espen Bjarnø & Pål Løberg (Norwegian Bokmål), Magni Onsøien & Trond Øksendal (Norwegian Nynorsk), Wlodek Lapot, Tomek Wozniak & Marcin Sochacki (Polish), Ivan Martinez, Paulino Michelazzo & Ronan Lucio Pereira (Brazilian Portuguese), Jaime Carvalho e Silva (European Portuguese), Alex Mihaila (Romanian), San Sanych Timofeev, Boris Litvinenko, Vyacheslav Nikitich, Oleg Philon & Denis Zhukov (Russian), Mile Peric (Serbian), Stefan Billik & Dusan Zervan (Slovak), Andrej Zizmond & Dalibor Cvijetinoviè (Slovene), Javier Solis, Alexander Velasquez, Alfredo Sola, Martin Perez, Nelson Tactuk, Javier Kohan & J. L. García (Spanish), Björn Malmberg, Frank Osterberg, Wesley Schaal & Christian Rose (Swedish), Nezih Erkman & Dikran Diragormacioglu (Turkish), and Yaroslav Boychuk (Ukrainian).

Finally, thanks to all of you for using the program!


What's new in this version?

This section lists the major new features in each version of analog. There's also another section about how to upgrade from older versions of analog, listing which commands have changed or been abolished, or how the output of this version differs from that of previous versions.
6.0 (19-Dec-04)
Added Palm OS and Symbian OS to the Operating System Report.
ISO 8601 extended date format available in language files.
Another style sheet from James Reeves added to the examples directory.
5.92beta1 (14-Nov-04)
Analog is now distributed under the GNU General Public License.
Fix problems building unzip.c on some platforms.
Fix invalid XHTML output in non-European languages.
The DNSTIMEOUT command is now off by default, because it breaks DNS lookups on many platforms.
Recognises Firebird and Firefox as browsers.
msnbot recognised as a robot in the default configuration.
Patches for Mac.
New Makefiles for Windows and RISC OS.
Corrections to Finnish and Japanese language files.
5.91beta1 (23-Aug-03)
Reads zip and bzip2 logfiles without the need for an UNCOMPRESS command.
Automatically strips ;params section from URLs (for example, jsessionid's).
Recognises Windows Server 2003 in the Operating System Report.
First user-contributed style sheets added to examples/css directory.
Computer-readable output style now forces English output.
More corrections to XML output style.
Patches for OpenVMS and RISC OS.
Basque language files.
Country code .cs, formerly Czechoslovakia, is now Serbia and Montenegro. (Changed in English, French and German domains files, and removed from other domains files).
Corrections to Swedish and Ukrainian language files, and to German domains files.
5.90beta2 (10-Apr-03)
Internal Search reports now work properly on case-insensitive file systems.
Various bug fixes and improvements to XHTML and XML output styles.
New command CSSPREFIX to add a prefix to the CSS class names used in the XHTML output.
XML DTD distributed with the program.
Language files for Simplified Chinese.
5.90beta1 (30-Mar-03)
This is the first beta test for version 6.
Output code completely rewritten, to permit more output formats.
New output formats XHTML and XML. (Thanks to Per Jessen for XML, and to Jeremy Wadsack for help with XHTML).
XHTML is now the default output style.
The barcharts are now made from png's not gif's by default.
New command LOGOURL.
What was new in version 5?
What was new in version 4?
What was new in version 3?
What was new in version 2?
What was new in version 1?

Upgrading from earlier versions

This section lists those commands which existed in older versions of analog, but which have been changed or abolished in this version. It also lists reasons why the same input might now produce different output. The new features in this version are listed in the section What's new in this version?.

If you are upgrading from a previous version of analog, you should keep your old analog.cfg, and your old anlghead.h if you are compiling your own copy of analog rather than using one of the precompiled versions.

Upgrading from 5.91beta1 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.90beta2 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.32 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.31 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.24 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.23 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.21 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.1 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.03 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.02 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.01 and earlier

Upgrading from 5.0 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.91beta1 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.90beta4 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.90beta3 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.90beta1 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.16 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.13 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.11 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.1 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.04 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.03 and earlier

Upgrading from 4.0 and earlier

Upgrading from 3.90beta1 and earlier

Upgrading from 3.32 and earlier

Upgrading from 3.3 and earlier

Upgrading from 3.2 and earlier

Upgrading from 3.11 and earlier

Upgrading from 3.0, Win32 form interface

Upgrading from 2.90beta1

Upgrading from 2.11 and earlier

Upgrading from 2.0, Win32 users

Upgrading from 1.92 and earlier, Mac users

Upgrading from 1.9beta's

Upgrading from 1.2's and earlier


What was new in version 5?

This section lists the new features which were in version 5 of analog.
What's new in version 6?
5.32 (23-Mar-03)
Recognises Safari and Camino browsers.
New LOGFORMAT specification %D (processing time in microseconds).
Understands %A and %D in APACHELOGFORMAT.
5.31 (11-Jan-03)
Recognises Phoenix and Chimera browsers.
Fixes for Mac, OpenVMS and RISC OS ports.
Various other small bug fixes.
5.30 (30-Nov-02)
Reads gzipped logfiles without the need for an UNCOMPRESS command.
Host inclusions and exclusions can now use IP address ranges and subnet masks.
New command BYTESDP command to list kilobytes etc. to a chosen number of decimal places. The default number of decimal places has changed from three to two.
New code for RISC OS port, including wildcards in filenames. (Thanks to Stefan Bellon for this code).
Various bug fixes.
Indonesian and Slovak language files.
New How-To entitled Getting started under Windows. (Thanks to Simon Handfield).
5.24 (25-Jun-02)
Recognises Netscape 7 browser. Also better diagnosis of Windows operating systems for Netscape and Mozilla browsers.
New version of IIS How-To.
Later UNCOMPRESS commands now correctly override earlier ones.
SEARCHCHARCONVERT can now be turned on for multibyte character sets, though it's not recommended.
French report descriptions files.
New versions of Polish and alternative Swedish language files.
East Timor country code is now .tl.
5.23 (14-May-02)
Added PROGRESSFREQ to the list of forbidden commands from the form interface, because it allows a denial-of-service attack.
Also emphasised in the documentation that allowing untrusted users to run analog through the form interface is inherently open to a denial-of-service attack.
Fixed two bugs which caused occasional crashes while outputting.
Russian language files included (KOI8-R and Windows-1251 character sets).
Added new domains to the French domains files.
New How-To on configuring IIS.
5.22 (20-Mar-02)
Security fix for cross-site scripting security bug.
Upgraded zlib code to version 1.1.4 (although analog wasn't vulnerable to the security bug in zlib 1.1.3).
The PROGRESSFREQ messages now go to the screen as well as to the ERRFILE.
The second argument to SUBDOMAIN can now contain *'s and $'s.
Added eight new domains to many of the domains files.
Revised Japanese language files.
5.21 (20-Feb-02)
Corrected the MacHTTP log format, which didn't work in 5.2.
All the BARSTYLEs redrawn, and two new BARSTYLEs added, adapted from an idea by Dave Holle. (You will have to move the new graphics into your IMAGEDIR in order to use them.)
5.2 (13-Feb-02)
You can now plot the lower levels of hierarchical reports on the pie charts by using the new CHARTEXPAND family of commands.
Added MACHTTP to the list of built-in log formats that analog recognises automatically.
Recognises ; as well as & as query-string separator.
The rules for generating "organisations" from numerical addresses have changed.
Filenames given on the command line are now relative to the current directory, not the analog directory.
Ignores completely blank lines at the top of a logfile.
Makefiles for Microsoft Visual C++ can be found in the new src/build directory. Makefiles for other platforms have moved out of the source tree into there too.
You can now refer to kilobytes as kibibytes by editing your language file.
Revised versions of Japanese language files.
Revised the Licence.
Advertised new donations page.
5.1 (07-Nov-01)
The Browser Summary now recognises the Konqueror and Galeon browsers, and distinguishes Mozilla and Netscape. (If you are using a configuration file from an older version of analog, you need to remove one line.)
The Operating System Report now recognises Windows XP.
Numerical addresses are now included in the Organisation Report.
Logfile and cache file names can now contain date codes, in the same way as the OUTFILE.
The person setting up the form interface can now specify a list of allowed commands, rather than a list of forbidden commands.
The LATEX output style now works with the ISO-Latin-2 character set as well as ISO-Latin-1. New command PDFLATEX.
New LOGFORMAT token %Z for two- or four-digit years.
In the COMPSEP, you can now use \t to represent a tab.
New warnings category G; some warnings reclassified.
Various small bugs fixed. Also there is some rewriting internally, but it should be transparent to the user.
The Windows executable has been compiled using MinGW instead of Microsoft Visual C++.
Finnish translation, and corrections to German and Serbian. Brazilian Portuguese report descriptions files.
5.03 (07-Jul-01)
Bug fixes, including one bug that caused a crash under Windows.
Spanish translation, and corrections to SWEDISH-ALT translation.
5.02 (23-Jun-01)
Understands the new IIS log format with four-digit years.
Traditional Chinese and Brazilian Portuguese language files.
Japanese is now available in four character sets.
Four language files which were already distributed with the program are now available through the LANGUAGE command: BULGARIAN-MIK (MIK-16 charset), CZECH-1250 and SLOVENE-1250 (Windows-1250), and SWEDISH-ALT (alternative translation avoiding Anglicisms).
5.01 (19-May-01)
New command PNGIMAGES.
New token "PLAIN:" in ALIAS commands.
Unix man page included in source distribution.
New example configuration file examples/bigbyrep.cfg.
A few small bug fixes.
Italian report descriptions files; corrections to German language files.
5.0 (01-May-01)
How-To's introduced.
Wildcards now allowed in LOGFILE names from the form interface.
UNCOMPRESS now works on filenames with spaces in, and other small bug fixes.
Makefiles and build scripts for OpenVMS.
This version is available in 24 languages: Armenian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, US English, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latvian, Norwegian (Bokmål & Nynorsk), Polish, Portuguese, Serbian, Slovene, Swedish, Turkish and Ukrainian.
4.91beta1 (10-Apr-01)
Output EXCLUDEs are now more fully excluded, producing significant changes in results.
New JPEGCHARTS command (only available if you compile analog yourself, with your own libgd).
New mailing list instructions to include subscriptions over the web, and the digest version of the analog-help list.
Mac version decompresses pkzip and bzip2 logfiles.
Ports to Mac OS X (Carbon) and IBM OS/390.
Pie charts work with EBCDIC character sets; and other improved EBCDIC support.
Wildcards in LOGFILE directories now work under more Unices.
The one-page version of the documentation, whole.html, is no longer distributed with the program. (It's still available at my site.)
This version is available in 21 languages: Armenian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Dutch, English, US English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latvian, Norwegian (Bokmål & Nynorsk), Polish, Portuguese, Serbian, Slovene, Swedish, Turkish and Ukrainian.
4.90beta4 (26-Mar-01)
Wildcards in directory names in LOGFILE commands now work under Unix. (Thanks to Owen Cliffe for this code.)
The CHARTDIR and LOCALCHARTDIR can now contain date codes, in the same way as the OUTFILE.
My own configuration file included in the examples directory.
This version is available in sixteen languages: Armenian, Bulgarian, Catalan, English, US English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latvian, Polish, Portuguese, Slovene, Swedish and Ukrainian.
4.90beta3 (13-Feb-01)
Security fix for buffer overflow bug.
4.90beta2 (05-Feb-01)
New commands CHARTDIR and LOCALCHARTDIR.
The pie charts are now easier to read, and work properly in non-European character sets.
*.asp is no longer included in the default definition of "pages". (See how to upgrade).
The computer-readable output style now gives the REPORTSPANs.
On Unix, now follows symlinks when finding the name of the analog binary to construct other filenames.
Various other minor bug fixes from 4.90beta1.
This version is available in nine languages: Armenian, Bulgarian, Catalan, English, US English, French, Portuguese, Swedish and Ukrainian.
4.90beta1 (22-Jan-01)
This is the first beta test for version 5.
In addition, version 4.14 was also released on the same date, and this version includes all its changes.
This version is only available in English and US English.
What was new in version 4?
What was new in version 3?
What was new in version 2?
What was new in version 1?

What was new in version 4?

This section lists the new features which were in version 4 of analog.
What's new in version 6?
What was new in version 5?
4.16 (13-Feb-01)
Security fix for buffer overflow bug.
Small correction to Brazilian Portuguese language file.
4.15 (01-Feb-01)
Bug fixes for accented letters in dates and for EBCDIC character set.
4.14 (22-Jan-01)
Commas are allowed in regular expressions.
Can do a FLOOR beyond Terabytes.
OS X & MPE/iX ports.
Bug fixes, especially for multibyte character sets.
Unprintable characters in the report are now replaced by '?'.
Traditional Chinese, Portuguese, Brazilian Portuguese, US English and corrected French domains files.
Rewrote the documentation on Cache files. Added some new data to How the Web Works.
4.13 (11-Oct-00)
Corrected infelicity in compilation procedure.
4.12 (05-Oct-00)
Recognises Windows Me for Operating System Report.
Can count beyond Terabytes.
PCRE code upgraded to version 3.4.
AS/400 port. Patches to compile cleanly on Cygwin and 64-bit Solaris.
Bulgarian and Croatian language files. Catalan and Finnish domains files.
Various bug fixes.
New Licence (mostly less restrictive than the previous one).
4.11 (31-May-00)
The default definition of "pages" is now case insensitive, and also includes *.asp.
Reads the extended logs from IIS 5 correctly.
Version number displayed before any warning or debugging messages.
The "number of days" at the top of the report now obeys DECPOINT (and is also now to 2 decimal places).
Improved OpenVMS build procedure.
Hungarian and Romanian language files, and corrected Spanish language files and English domains files.
Italian and Spanish form interfaces.
The FAQ now has a list of contents.
4.1 (30-Mar-00)
Regular expressions in ALIASes and INCLUDEs are now available on all platforms.
Regular expressions are now Perl-syntax regular expressions. (Thanks to Philip Hazel's PCRE library.)
"Repeated fields" in logfile header lines are now allowed.
New commands STATUSINCLUDE and STATUSEXCLUDE, and 304ISSUCCESS.
New output style PLAIN (like ASCII but with accents). New language files for this.
In the computer-readable output, hierarchical reports now have an extra column, indicating the depth of the item in the hierarchy.
All referrers now count as "pages." (See upgrade notes.)
Configuration commands can be continued across lines with a backslash.
New token %s in LOGFORMAT, allowing per-line selection of client-name and client-IP fields.
New log format WEBSTAR-EXTENDED to allow for a small bug in WebSTAR's implementation of the extended log format.
Korean language files. Also alternative Swedish translation.
4.04 (21-Mar-00)
The analog home page has moved to www.analog.cx
New column d in non-time reports.
The RUNTIME command now turns off the "Program started at" line as well as the "Running Time" line.
Non-alphanumeric characters are now allowed in the REPORTORDER as separators.
Correctly parses more APACHELOGFORMATs.
Better detection of Windows 2000 in Operating System Report.
Better warning messages when the erroneous command contains a space.
Code for NeXTSTEP operating system.
Better treatment of multibyte character sets.
Icelandic language files. Corrections to Bosnian, French, Italian, Japanese & Swedish.
4.03 (21-Feb-00)
Fixed several small bugs.
New command RUNTIME.
Brazilian Portuguese language files and Swedish domains files. Corrections to Dutch.
4.02 (31-Jan-00)
New command SEARCHCHARCONVERT.
Support for Apache's new %q code in APACHELOGFORMAT.
Fix for search reports causing crashes on Windows.
New language: Czech. Corrections for Serbian, Slovene and Ukrainian.
4.01 (17-Dec-99)
New command USERCASE.
Some of the default paths have changed in anlghead.h.
Improvements to OpenVMS port.
Language files included for Armenian, Bosnian, Catalan, traditional Chinese, Dutch, Finnish, German, Italian, Slovak, Slovene, Spanish, Swedish & Ukrainian; corrections to Russian & Turkish.
4.0 (16-Nov-99)
Simplified Chinese, Danish, Japanese, Portuguese & Serbian language files included.
Otherwise only small changes since 3.90beta2.
3.90beta2 (02-Nov-99)
It is now recommended that you don't run analog as a CGI program for security reasons. (The CGI command is still present, but it is now not documented.)
The Organisation Report is now hierarchical.
The Browser Summary is now arranged by major version number. (See notes on upgrading.)
Non-exact bytes are now given to 3 decimal places.
GOTOS FEW puts the "Go To" lines just at the top and bottom of the output.
PRINTVARS has been renamed SETTINGS.
-settings output improved, especially with OUTPUT NONE.
Split PAGEWIDTH into HTMLPAGEWIDTH and ASCIIPAGEWIDTH.
Includes language files for French, Greek, Norwegian (Bokmål & Nynorsk), Polish, Russian and Turkish.
New configuration file examples/big.cfg containing most commands.
3.90beta1 (07-Oct-99)
First beta test for version 4. The most important new features are:
What was new in version 3?
What was new in version 2?
What was new in version 1?

What was new in version 3?

This section lists the new features which were in version 3 of analog.
What's new in version 6?
What was new in version 5?
What was new in version 4?
3.32 (02-Sep-99)
Bug fixes, including: New VMS build scripts. Let me know of any compilation problems.
Computer-readable output now reports version of analog used.
Improved some diagnostic messages.
New language Serbo-Croatian; new domains files for Italian and Russian; corrected Polish language files.
New documentation on Analog's reports and Quick reference.
Now uses named anchors throughout the documentation, so that cross-references link to the right part of a page.
3.31 (19-Jun-99)
New command BARSTYLE; you will need to use new images.
Russian language file corrected.
Some bug fixes, including one important one correcting cache file output.
3.3 (19-May-99)
New commands ERRFILE, DNSLOCKFILE, APACHELOGFORMAT and APACHEDEFAULTLOGFORMAT.
Can include the date in the name of the OUTFILE and the CACHEOUTFILE.
Support for WebSite logfiles.
New token %U in log formats for "Unix time" (seconds since 1970).
Won't overwrite old cache files.
Now works properly on SunOS 4.
Fix for occasional crashes on Windows.
Checks language files are not too long.
"Last seven days" data now calculated more accurately and displayed more clearly.
Computer-readable output now reports SORTBY's as well as floors.
Revised Makefile will work with older make's.
Corrected Catalan language files.
Includes form interfaces in French and Japanese.
LOGFORMAT documentation now includes the LOGFORMAT commands for all built-in log formats.
3.2 (04-May-99)
Bug fixes: in particular REFLINKINCLUDE pages now works; and cache files now include all items even if they're not wanted for the main report.
Lines without a particular item now work properly with INCLUDE and EXCLUDE commands. This can cause differences in results from previous versions.
New version of form interface to work round bug in Microsoft Internet Information Server.
New command NOROBOTS.
Backslashes are now coerced to forward slashes in filenames and usernames. While not always correct technically, it usually is in practice, and it makes them behave correctly in other parts of the program.
Usernames are now treated as case insensitive. Let me know if this causes a problem on any system.
Computer-readable output style now reports floors.
Rewritten Unix Makefile, and VMS build script. Let me know of any compilation problems.
New languages: Catalan, Icelandic, Japanese, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian. Corrected Spanish language files and French domains file.
LANGUAGE now selects local domains file automatically, where available.
Removed support for NetPresenz logs. The reasons are in the section on how to upgrade.
Form interface documentation rewritten; FAQ broken into sections; sections on logfiles and log formats separated and rewritten; new section on helper applications; and dozens of other improvements to the documentation.
3.11 (26-Nov-98)
Bug fix version.
Microsoft's attempt at W3 extended format is now understood even if there is a second #Fields: line in the logfile.
There is also a fix for a new Microsoft bug which results in an non-standard common format.
Intermittent crashes under Windows fixed.
Mailing lists announced.
3.1 (17-Oct-98)
Understands Microsoft's attempt at W3 extended format.
Several bugs fixed, including one that caused occasional crashes and one that caused the output to grow and grow.
Form interface works on Windows.
Allows aliases with two or more *'s on left hand side, if right hand side contains no *'s.
Aliases work properly with CASE INSENSITIVE.
Numerical SUBDOMAINs fixed.
Understands more WebSTAR and Netscape tokens.
Accents in domains file work.
LOGFORMAT removed from form interface as security risk.
Several warning messages improved.
Report aliases and in/exclusions shown in settings output.
Character set declared at top of output.
Spanish, Dutch, Norwegian (Bokmål and Nynorsk), Finnish, Turkish, Greek, Polish, Russian & Chinese language files included.
3.0 (15-Jun-98)
Corrected W3 extended format.
Fix for broken strcmp() function on SunOS 5.
Portuguese, Brazilian Portuguese, Danish and Hungarian language files included.
Precompiled executable for OS/2 available.
2.91beta1 (04-Jun-98)
Form interface included.
Uses less memory when compiling reports.
New operating system, BS2000/OSD, and code for EBCDIC character set.
New command DEFAULTLOGFORMAT.
LASTSEVEN and BASEURL reinstated.
More information added to PRINTVARS output.
AppleScript support for Unix-style command lines added to Mac version.
Now works on SunOS 4, and other small bug fixes.
French, German, Swedish, Czech, Slovak, Slovene and Romanian language files included.
One page version of the Readme included in the documentation.
2.90beta4 (09-Apr-98)
Mended DNS cache file reading, which I broke in yesterday's release.
2.90beta3 (08-Apr-98)
Fixed bug that caused a crash while giving warning messages on SunOS; bug that caused configuration files that called other configuration files not to be completed; and other smaller bugs.
Italian language files included.
2.90beta2 (03-Apr-98)
Separate LOGFORMATs for North American and international date formats, when using Microsoft or Netpresenz logs.
Understands the AppleShare IP server's attempt at the WebSTAR format.
Directory report now works properly even if you use the second argument to the LOGFILE command.
Wild cards in filenames work properly on the Mac.
Other small bug fixes.
One speed improvement (I gain about 3%).
Several corrections and clarifications to the documentation.
2.90beta1 (27-Mar-98)
This version is a completely rewritten version. Every single line of code is new. The whole code is shorter despite considerable improvements in functionality. Several people have reported that it is significantly faster. The most important new features are: The following features have been abolished. The following features are not yet present, but will be added by version 3.
What was new in version 2?
What was new in version 1?

What was new in version 2?

This section lists the new features which were in version 2 of analog.
What's new in version 6?
What was new in version 5?
What was new in version 4?
What was new in version 3?
2.11 (14-Mar-97)
Minor bug fixes to yesterday's release.
2.1 (13-Mar-97)
Language support rewritten, causing reduction in code size of 2200 lines.
New configuration command LANGFILE.
New Acorn RiscOS version.
Page requests per day reported.
Bug fix: CASE INSENSITIVE could cause %7E-type conversions not to take place.
2.0.2 (04-Mar-97)
DNS lookups and wildcards should now work in the Win32 version.
New configuration command PRINTVARS.
Fix for zero length hostnames after DNS lookups.
Minor corrections in French and Spanish translations.
2.0 (10-Feb-97)
New native Win32 version.
Wildcards allowed in filenames on Mac.
Ignores browser "-".
1.93beta (18-Jan-97)
New commands BROWALIAS, CONFIGFILE and PROGRESSFREQ.
Form program can now call configuration files.
Form program now uses the default choices if none specified.
Domain report prints correctly in preformatted output.
Specifying +1 and +V2 doesn't crash the program.
-v reports dates correctly.
Trailing dots on hostnames removed.
Second argument to LOGFILE command can't be obliterated by /../
1.92beta (08-Oct-96)
DNS lookups added on Mac.
Netpresenz format understood on Mac.
New languages: Spanish, Italian and Danish.
Extra information when debugging turned on.
*.htm are now pages on all machines.
A few small bugs fixed.
1.91beta4 (13-Jul-96)
Cache file now includes page request information.
DNS bug fixed.
New command DNSHASHSIZE.
Bug in browser reports fixed.
1.91beta3 (09-Jul-96)
BSD/OS compilation bug believed fixed.
Fixed HOSTALIAS which I broke yesterday.
DNS bug (causing too many lookups) identified, although not yet fixed.
1.91beta2 (08-Jul-96)
Some bug fixes (including: HOSTEXCLUDE and CASE INSENSITIVE didn't work properly; selecting "no links" failed on the form; less fussy about what can appear on the form).
Mac version no longer includes source code, so is much shorter.
1.91beta1 (05-Jul-96)
Now DNS code doesn't look up a name twice, even if one is a failed request.
1.91beta (05-Jul-96)
Will now output in any of several languages.
Preformatted output introduced.
New File Type Report.
Can limit the number of rows in the time reports.
Number of requests for pages (as opposed to raw requests) now calculated throughout.
DNS lookup returns, with caching across runs.
Logfiles can include wildcards.
Wildcards can include multiple *'s.
Can process case insensitive logfiles.
OUTPUTALIAS commands introduced.
New commands to specify exactly what is included, and what linked, in the request report and referrer report.
FILEALIAS a a and FILEALIAS a b; FILEALIAS b c now work.
New ALLOW options to cancel INCLUDES.
REPSEPCHAR and DECPOINT introduced.
DIRSUFFIX introduced.
Debugging reports number of corrupt lines in other logs.
Hash sizes can now be allocated at run time.
stdin can now be used for any input file, but not for two.
Macintosh version now quits automatically if no warnings have been issued.
Form interface made more secure.
"Mozilla (compatible)" separated out in Browser Summary.
Major internal changes should improve speed.
Code for non-Unix platforms integrated into main code.
"Referrer" spelled correctly.
Licence introduced.
Update file introduced.
Readme updated to include non-Unix instructions.
(19-Apr-96)
First Mac version.
1.9beta6 (11-Apr-96)
Two bug fixes (number of bytes was incorrectly reported in some cases, and -v would overwrite the OUTFILE).
Documentation improved.
1.9beta5 (06-Mar-96)
More bug fixes...
1.9beta4 (05-Mar-96)
One important bug fix (I broke GRAPHICAL OFF in 1.9beta3).
New form cgi options: ch, gr and ou=3.
Code shortened.
(05-Mar-96)
First DOS version.
1.9beta3 (01-Mar-96)
Mainly bug fixes and improved documentation.
Browser and referer reports now include failed requests.
The WARNINGS option can now be specified on the form.
1.9beta2 (07-Feb-96)
Small bug fixes.
1.9beta (06-Feb-96)
Lots of changes. The most important new features are
What was new in version 1?

What was new in version 1?

This section lists the new features which were in version 1 of analog.
What's new in version 6?
What was new in version 5?
What was new in version 4?
What was new in version 3?
What was new in version 2?
1.2.6 (08-Jun-96)
Minor bug fix; will only affect those with corrupt logfiles.
1.2.5 (05-Feb-96)
Minor bug fix for weekly report.
1.2.4 (23-Jan-96)
Patch for Spyglass server logfile format.
1.2.3 (22-Nov-95)
A couple of bug fixes (wild subdomains sometimes caused crashes).
-v option now gives the version number.
1.2.2 (13-Nov-95)
Patch for proxy servers: http:// not translated to http:/
1.2 (11-Nov-95)
Can configure columns in reports to give percentage requests and number of bytes.
Wild subdomains (e.g., *.com).
Nameless subdomains.
Subdomains now listed in alphabetical order.
Proper support for numerical hostnames in HOSTIGNORE, HOSTONLY, SUBDOMAIN and alphabetical sorting.
New BASEURL command allowing statistics to be displayed on other servers.
Output always says how things are sorted.
"Last 7 days" now behaves sensibly with TO.
Filenames containing /../, /./ and // translated.
Header and footer options removed from form (for security reasons).
1.1 (02-Oct-95)
Form interface introduced.
ASCII output now possible as well as HTML.
Output file can now be specified in the configuration file.
FROM and TO commands more powerful.
DEBUG and BACKGROUND introduced.
One bug fix: alphabetical sorting doesn't now swap some hostnames.
List of primes included in distribution.
1.0 (12-Sep-95)
Only minor changes since 0.94beta.
0.94beta (30-Aug-95)
New configuration variables SEPCHAR and REPORTORDER.
New configuration commands WITHARGS and WITHOUTARGS.
New commandline options +-A and +-x. (Config.: ALL and GENERAL).
Logfile entries with - as the return code are now regarded as successes, not corrupt entries.
Fixed bugs in host report when aliases or numerical hosts are present.
Documentation rewritten.
0.93beta (27-Jul-95)
Approximate hostname counting now possible in fixed memory.
New configuration commands ISPAGE and ISNOTPAGE.
New commandline option -v.
New configuration command WEEKBEGINSON.
Proper error message when memory exceeded.
Program split into several files.
0.92beta (11-Jul-95)
New reports introduced: hostname, full daily, and weekly.
FROM and TO commands introduced.
Header and footer files introduced.
More helpful warning messages.
Ability to read configuration instructions from stdin.
Subdomain commands moved from domains file to configuration file.
Makefile provided.
0.91beta (04-Jul-95)
Configuration file introduced, enabling many new options.
Some bug fixes and speed improvements.
Ability to print "top n" reports (rather than "everything higher than n").
Request report can print only pages.
Ability to try and resolve numerical addresses.
Now less fussy about the format of the domains file.
Logo added.
Readme converted to HTML.
0.9beta
More speed improvements, and some bug fixes.
Introduced -u option.
Introduced subdomain analysis.
Included "not modified" replies as successes, not redirects.
First public release at 0.9beta3. (29-Jun-95)
0.89beta (21-Jun-95)
Commandline arguments.
Efficiency improvements.
Host count and "last 7 day" statistics.
0.8beta (14-Jun-95)
Initial program, just default options.

Quick reference

This section is list of all of analog's configuration commands, together with a quick reference to their syntax and some examples. It's designed for those who are already familiar with the program, so it's pretty useless for trying to learn the program: to learn about the commands, read the section on Customising analog instead, or consult the index for a reference. Command line arguments aren't listed here, but there is a list of them in the index. Not all commands are available on all platforms.

This section is divided into the following parts:

Notation

The syntax for each command is given using the following notation.
"stuff"        the word stuff
x y            x followed by y
(x | y)        x or y
[x]            optional x
subset("...")  any letters from the string, in any order
perm("...")    all the letters from the string, in any order
*x             x may contain wildcards * and ? (and often comma-separated list)
x := y         x is defined to be y
COMMAND        the command under discussion
In addition, I use the following names for different types of argument.
char           a single character
string         a string
digit          a digit
number         a non-negative integer (i.e. a string of digits)
real           a non-negative real number
regexp         a Perl-syntax regular expression
file           a filename within your server's filespace;
                   e.g. /index.html
localfile      a filename within your system's filespace;
                   e.g. /usr/local/analog.html
                      or analog.html
                 if no directory specified, placed within suitable
                 directory specified at compile-time
localfmtfile   as localfile, but may contain date codes;
                   e.g. /usr/local/analog%y%M.html
referrer       a URL of a referring page;
                   e.g. http://search.yahoo.com/
URL            a URL which may be absolute, or relative to the output page;
                   e.g. images/ or /~fred/images/
                      or http://www.fred.com/images/
fmtURL         as URL, but may contain date codes

Note: I have occasionally opted for clarity above strict accuracy where I don't think it will cause any confusion!

The syntax for commands in general was given earlier: remember that an argument which contains a hash or a space must be put in quotes or parentheses.

Input and output files

Syntax
LOGFILE (*localfmtfile | "-" | "none") [prefix_string]
OUTFILE (localfmtfile | "-" | "none")
CACHEFILE (*localfmtfile | "-" | "none")
CACHEOUTFILE (localfmtfile | "-" | "none")
UNCOMPRESS *localfile program
Examples
LOGFILE /httpd/logs/*
LOGFILE c:\logs\log1,c:\logs\log2
OUTFILE "Hard Disk:Report%Y%M.html"
UNCOMPRESS *.Z "/usr/bin/uncompress -c"

LOGFORMAT commands

Syntax
format_string := (see documentation)
Apache_format_string := (see Apache documentation)
logformat := ("COMMON" | "COMBINED" | "REFERRER" | "BROWSER" | "EXTENDED" |
              "MICROSOFT-NA" | "MICROSOFT-INT" | "WEBSITE-NA" | "WEBSITE-INT" |
              "MS-EXTENDED" | "WEBSTAR-EXTENDED" | "MS-COMMON" | "NETSCAPE" |
              "WEBSTAR" | "MACHTTP" | "AUTO" | format_string)
LOGFORMAT logformat
DEFAULTLOGFORMAT logformat
APACHELOGFORMAT Apache_format_string
APACHEDEFAULTLOGFORMAT Apache_format_string
Notes
LOGFORMAT and APACHELOGFORMAT only affect logfiles occurring later in the same configuration file.
Examples
LOGFORMAT (%S - %u [%d/%M/%Y:%h:%n:%j %j] "%j %r %j" %c %b)
DEFAULTLOGFORMAT MS-EXTENDED
APACHELOGFORMAT (%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %s %b)

ALIAS commands

1. Commands (items)
FILEALIAS, HOSTALIAS, BROWALIAS, REFALIAS, USERALIAS, VHOSTALIAS
Syntax
COMMAND *olditem ["PLAIN:"]newitem
COMMAND ("REGEXP:" | "REGEXPI:")regexp ["PLAIN:"]newitem
Notes
Aliases item in all reports. Items with the same resultant name are combined. newitem may contain $1, $2 etc., representing the *'s in olditem or the bracketed subexpressions in regexp. (PLAIN: makes $'s on the right-hand side into literal $'s.)
Examples
FILEALIAS /*/football/* /$1/soccer/$2
USERALIAS REGEXP:^([^U].*) U$1

2. Commands (reports)
TYPEALIAS, HOSTREPALIAS, REDIRHOSTALIAS, FAILHOSTALIAS, REQALIAS, REDIRALIAS, FAILALIAS, DIRALIAS, DOMALIAS, ORGALIAS, REFREPALIAS, REFSITEALIAS, REDIRREFALIAS, FAILREFALIAS, BROWREPALIAS, BROWSUMALIAS, OSALIAS, VHOSTREPALIAS, REDIRVHOSTALIAS, FAILVHOSTALIAS, USERREPALIAS, REDIRUSERALIAS, FAILUSERALIAS
Syntax
COMMAND *item ["PLAIN:"]string
COMMAND ("REGEXP:" | "REGEXPI:")regexp ["PLAIN:"]string
Notes
Aliases item on one line of one report only. $1, $2 etc. in string are interpreted as explained above.
Examples
REQALIAS /football/ "/football/ (Main football page)"
REFREPALIAS REGEXP:^(http://([^/]*\.)?(maths|stats)\.uxy\.edu.*) ([$3] $1)

3. Other commands: syntax
CASE ("SENSITIVE" | "INSENSITIVE")
USERCASE ("SENSITIVE" | "INSENSITIVE")
SEARCHCHARCONVERT ("ON" | "OFF")
DIRSUFFIX suffix
LOGTIMEOFFSET ["+" | "-"] number
TIMEOFFSET ["+" | "-"] number
304ISSUCCESS ("ON" | "OFF")
Examples
CASE SENSITIVE
DIRSUFFIX index.htm
LOGTIMEOFFSET -300

INCLUDE/EXCLUDE commands

1. Commands (items)
FILEINCLUDE, FILEEXCLUDE, HOSTINCLUDE, HOSTEXCLUDE, BROWINCLUDE, BROWEXCLUDE, REFINCLUDE, REFEXCLUDE, USERINCLUDE, USEREXCLUDE, VHOSTINCLUDE, VHOSTEXCLUDE
Syntax
COMMAND (*item | "")
COMMAND ("REGEXP:" | "REGEXPI:")regexp
Notes
Excludes all logfile entries containing an excluded item from all reports. Includes and excludes are done after aliases, so the item is the aliased name, if applicable. HOSTINCLUDE and HOSTEXCLUDE can also take IP address ranges and subnet masks.
Examples
FILEINCLUDE /jim/*,/jane/*
FILEINCLUDE REGEXP:^/~[^/]*/$
HOSTEXCLUDE proxy*.aol.com
USEREXCLUDE ""

2. Syntax (including and excluding status codes)
range := (number | number "-" number | number "-" | "-" number | "*")
STATUSINCLUDE range [, ranges]
STATUSEXCLUDE range [, ranges]
Notes
All numbers must be in the range 100-599.
Example
STATUSINCLUDE 200-299,304

3. Syntax (including and excluding dates)
partdate := ["+" | "-"] digit digit
date := partdate partdate partdate [":" partdate partdate]
FROM date
TO date
Examples
FROM 990719:1200
TO -00-0101

4. Commands (reports)
REQINCLUDE, REQEXCLUDE, REDIRINCLUDE, REDIREXCLUDE, FAILINCLUDE, FAILEXCLUDE, TYPEINCLUDE, TYPEEXCLUDE, DIRINCLUDE, DIREXCLUDE, HOSTREPINCLUDE, HOSTREPEXCLUDE, REDIRHOSTINCLUDE, REDIRHOSTEXCLUDE, FAILHOSTINCLUDE, FAILHOSTEXCLUDE, DOMINCLUDE, DOMEXCLUDE, ORGINCLUDE, ORGEXCLUDE, REFREPINCLUDE, REFREPEXCLUDE, REFSITEINCLUDE, REFSITEEXCLUDE, SEARCHQUERYINCLUDE, SEARCHQUERYEXCLUDE, SEARCHWORDINCLUDE, SEARCHWORDEXCLUDE, INTSEARCHQUERYINCLUDE, INTSEARCHQUERYEXCLUDE, INTSEARCHWORDINCLUDE, INTSEARCHWORDEXCLUDE, REDIRREFINCLUDE, REDIRREFEXCLUDE, FAILREFINCLUDE, FAILREFEXCLUDE, BROWREPINCLUDE, BROWREPEXCLUDE, BROWSUMINCLUDE, BROWSUMEXCLUDE, OSINCLUDE, OSEXCLUDE, VHOSTREPINCLUDE, VHOSTREPEXCLUDE, REDIRVHOSTINCLUDE, REDIRVHOSTEXCLUDE, FAILVHOSTINCLUDE, FAILVHOSTEXCLUDE, USERREPINCLUDE, USERREPEXCLUDE, REDIRUSERINCLUDE, REDIRUSEREXCLUDE, FAILUSERINCLUDE, FAILUSEREXCLUDE
Syntax
COMMAND *item
COMMAND ("REGEXP:" | "REGEXPI:")regexp
Notes
Excludes an excluded item from one report only. HOSTREP*, REDIRHOST* and FAILHOST* can also take IP address ranges and subnet masks.
Example
REQINCLUDE pages

5. Commands (hyperlinks)
See below.

6. Syntax (miscellaneous)
PAGEINCLUDE *file
PAGEEXCLUDE *file
ARGSINCLUDE *file
ARGSEXCLUDE *file
REFARGSINCLUDE *referrer
REFARGSEXCLUDE *referrer
ROBOTINCLUDE *browser
ROBOTEXCLUDE *browser
Notes
These can be regular expressions too.
Examples
PAGEINCLUDE *.jsp
ROBOTINCLUDE *crawler*

DNS commands

Syntax
DNSFILE localfile
DNS ("NONE" | "READ" | "LOOKUP" | "WRITE")
DNSLOCKFILE localfile
DNSGOODHOURS number
DNSBADHOURS number
DNSTIMEOUT number
Examples
DNSFILE dnscache.txt
DNS WRITE
DNSBADHOURS 48

Sub-item commands

Syntax
SUBDIR *file
SUBDOMAIN *subdomain
SUBDOMAIN subdomain name
SUBORG *subdomain
SUBTYPE *extension
SUBBROW *browser
REFDIR *referrer
Examples
SUBDIR /jim/*/*
SUBTYPE *.gz

LOWMEM commands

Commands
FILELOWMEM, HOSTLOWMEM, BROWLOWMEM, REFLOWMEM, USERLOWMEM, VHOSTLOWMEM
Syntax
COMMAND ("0" | "1" | "2" | "3")
Example
HOSTLOWMEM 3

Report commands

Commands
GENERAL, ALL, YEARLY, QUARTERLY, MONTHLY, WEEKLY, DAILYREP, DAILYSUM, HOURLYREP, HOURLYSUM, WEEKHOUR, QUARTERREP, QUARTERSUM, FIVEREP, FIVESUM, HOST, REDIRHOST, FAILHOST, ORGANISATION, DOMAIN, REQUEST, DIRECTORY, FILETYPE, SIZE, PROCTIME, REDIR, FAILURE, REFERRER, REFSITE, SEARCHQUERY, SEARCHWORD, INTSEARCHQUERY, INTSEARCHWORD, REDIRREF, FAILREF, BROWSERREP, BROWSERSUM, OSREP, VHOST, REDIRVHOST, FAILVHOST, USER, REDIRUSER, FAILUSER, STATUS
Syntax
REPORTCOMMAND ("ON" | "OFF")
Examples
ALL OFF
HOURLYREP ON

GRAPH commands

Commands
ALLGRAPH, YEARGRAPH, QUARTERLYGRAPH, MONTHGRAPH, WEEKGRAPH, DAYREPGRAPH, DAYSUMGRAPH, HOURREPGRAPH, HOURSUMGRAPH, WEEKHOURGRAPH, QUARTERREPGRAPH, QUARTERSUMGRAPH, FIVESUMGRAPH, FIVEREPGRAPH
Syntax
COMMAND ("R" | "r" | "P" | "p" | "B" | "b")
Example
ALLGRAPH B

BACK commands

Commands
ALLBACK, YEARBACK, QUARTERLYBACK, MONTHBACK, WEEKBACK, DAYREPBACK, HOURREPBACK, QUARTERREPBACK, FIVEREPBACK
Syntax
COMMAND ("ON" | "OFF")
Example
ALLBACK ON

ROWS commands

Commands
YEARROWS, QUARTERLYROWS, MONTHROWS, WEEKROWS, DAYREPROWS, HOURREPROWS, QUARTERREPROWS, FIVEREPROWS
Syntax
COMMAND number
Example
QUARTERREPROWS 192

COLS commands

1. Commands (time reports)
TIMECOLS, YEARCOLS, QUARTERLYCOLS, WEEKCOLS, MONTHCOLS, WEEKCOLS, DAYREPCOLS, DAYSUMCOLS, HOURREPCOLS, HOURSUMCOLS, WEEKHOURCOLS, QUARTERREPCOLS, QUARTERSUMCOLS, FIVEREPCOLS, FIVESUMCOLS
Syntax
cols1 := subset("RrPpBb")
COMMAND cols1
Example
MONTHCOLS bRP

2. Commands (most success reports)
HOSTCOLS, ORGCOLS, DOMCOLS, DIRCOLS, REFCOLS, REFSITECOLS, SEARCHQUERYCOLS, SEARCHWORDCOLS, INTSEARCHQUERYCOLS, INTSEARCHWORDCOLS, BROWREPCOLS, BROWSUMCOLS, OSCOLS, VHOSTCOLS, USERCOLS
Syntax
cols2 := subset("NDdEeRrSsPpQqBbCc")
COMMAND cols2
Example
USERCOLS BD

3. Syntax (Request and File Type Reports)
REQCOLS subset("NDdEeRrSspqBbCc")
TYPECOLS subset("NDdEeRrSsBbCc")
Example
TYPECOLS NRb

4. Commands (failure, redirection and Status Code reports)
REDIRCOLS, FAILCOLS, REDIRHOSTCOLS, FAILHOSTCOLS, REDIRREFCOLS, FAILREFCOLS, REDIRVHOSTCOLS, FAILVHOSTCOLS, REDIRUSERCOLS, FAILUSERCOLS, STATUSCOLS
Syntax
cols4 := subset("NDdEeRrSs")
COMMAND cols4
Example
FAILCOLS D

5. Commands (Size and Processing Time Reports)
SIZECOLS, PROCTIMECOLS
Syntax
cols5 := subset("DdEeRrSsPpQqBbCc")
COMMAND cols5
Example
SIZECOLS RB

SORTBY commands

1. Commands (most success reports)
HOSTSORTBY, ORGSORTBY, DOMSORTBY, DIRSORTBY, REFSORTBY, REFSITESORTBY, SEARCHQUERYSORTBY, SEARCHWORDSORTBY, INTSEARCHQUERYSORTBY, INTSEARCHWORDSORTBY, BROWREPSORTBY, BROWSUMSORTBY, OSSORTBY, VHOSTSORTBY, USERSORTBY, SUBDIRSORTBY, SUBDOMSORTBY, SUBORGSORTBY, SUBBROWSORTBY, SUBOSSORTBY, REFDIRSORTBY, REFARGSSORTBY
Syntax
sortby1 := ("REQUESTS" | "REQUESTS7" | "PAGES" | "PAGES7" |
            "BYTES" | "BYTES7" | "DATE" | "FIRSTDATE" |
            "ALPHABETICAL" | "RANDOM")
COMMAND sortby1
Example
DOMSORTBY ALPHABETICAL

2. Commands (Request and File Type Reports)
REQSORTBY, TYPESORTBY, REQARGSSORTBY, SUBTYPESORTBY
Syntax
sortby2 := ("REQUESTS" | "REQUESTS7" | "BYTES" | "BYTES7" |
            "DATE" | "FIRSTDATE" | "ALPHABETICAL" | "RANDOM")
COMMAND sortby2
Example
REQSORTBY REQUESTS

3. Commands (failure, redirection and Status Code reports)
REDIRSORTBY, FAILSORTBY, REDIRHOSTSORTBY, FAILHOSTSORTBY, REDIRREFSORTBY, FAILREFSORTBY, REDIRVHOSTSORTBY, FAILVHOSTSORTBY, REDIRUSERSORTBY, FAILUSERSORTBY, STATUSSORTBY, REDIRARGSSORTBY, FAILARGSSORTBY, REDIRREFARGSSORTBY, FAILREFARGSSORTBY
Syntax
sortby3 := ("REQUESTS" | "REQUESTS7" | "DATE" | "FIRSTDATE" |
            "ALPHABETICAL" | "RANDOM")
COMMAND sortby3
Example
FAILSORTBY DATE

FLOOR commands

Commands (top-level)
HOSTFLOOR, REDIRHOSTFLOOR, FAILHOSTFLOOR, ORGFLOOR, DOMFLOOR, REQFLOOR, DIRFLOOR, TYPEFLOOR, REDIRFLOOR, FAILFLOOR, REFFLOOR, REFSITEFLOOR, SEARCHQUERYFLOOR, SEARCHWORDFLOOR, INTSEARCHQUERYFLOOR, INTSEARCHWORDFLOOR, REDIRREFFLOOR, FAILREFFLOOR, BROWREPFLOOR, BROWSUMFLOOR, OSFLOOR, VHOSTFLOOR, REDIRVHOSTFLOOR, FAILVHOSTFLOOR, USERFLOOR, REDIRUSERFLOOR, FAILUSERFLOOR, STATUSFLOOR
Commands (lower levels)
REQARGSFLOOR, REDIRARGSFLOOR, FAILARGSFLOOR, REFARGSFLOOR, REDIRREFARGSFLOOR, FAILREFARGSFLOOR, SUBDIRFLOOR, SUBDOMFLOOR, SUBORGFLOOR, SUBTYPEFLOOR, SUBBROWFLOOR, SUBOSFLOOR, REFDIRFLOOR
Syntax
partdate := ["+" | "-"] digit digit
date := partdate partdate partdate [":" partdate partdate]
COMMAND number ("r" | "s" | "p" | "q")
COMMAND number ["k" | "M" | "G" | "T" | "P" | "E" | "Z" | "Y"] ("b" | "c")
COMMAND real ("%" | ":") ("r" | "s" | "p" | "q" | "b" | "c")
COMMAND date ("d" | "e")
COMMAND "-" number ("r" | "s" | "p" | "q" | "b" | "c" | "d" | "e")
Notes
Actually, this syntax isn't quite correct. REQFLOOR, TYPEFLOOR, REQARGSFLOOR and SUBTYPEFLOOR aren't allowed to be of type "p" or "q"; and REDIRFLOOR, FAILFLOOR, REDIRHOSTFLOOR, FAILHOSTFLOOR, REDIRREFFLOOR, FAILREFFLOOR, REDIRVHOSTFLOOR, FAILVHOSTFLOOR, REDIRUSERFLOOR, FAILUSERFLOOR, STATUSFLOOR, REDIRARGSFLOOR, FAILARGSFLOOR, REDIRREFARGSFLOOR and FAILREFARGSFLOOR aren't allowed to be of type "p", "q", "b" or "c".
Examples
TYPEFLOOR -20r
REQARGSFLOOR 0.1%b

CHART commands

1. Commands (most success reports)
HOSTCHART, ORGCHART, DOMCHART, REQCHART, DIRCHART, REFCHART, REFSITECHART, SEARCHQUERYCHART, SEARCHWORDCHART, INTSEARCHQUERYCHART, INTSEARCHWORDCHART, BROWREPCHART, BROWSUMCHART, OSCHART, VHOSTCHART, USERCHART, SIZECHART, PROCTIMECHART
Syntax
chart1 := ("ON" | "OFF" | "REQUESTS" | "REQUESTS7" | "PAGES" | "PAGES7" |
            "BYTES" | "BYTES7")
COMMAND chart1
Example
DOMCHART BYTES

2. Commands (failure, redirection and Status Code reports)
REDIRHOSTCHART, FAILHOSTCHART, REDIRCHART, FAILCHART, REDIRREFCHART, FAILREFCHART, REDIRVHOSTCHART, FAILVHOSTCHART, REDIRUSERCHART, FAILUSERCHART, STATUSCHART
Syntax
chart2 := ("ON" | "OFF" | "REQUESTS" | "REQUESTS7")
COMMAND chart2
Example
FAILCHART ON

3. Syntax (TYPECHART)
TYPECHART ("ON" | "OFF" | "REQUESTS" | "REQUESTS7" | "BYTES" | "BYTES7")

4. Syntax (ALLCHART)
ALLCHART ("ON" | "OFF")

5. CHARTEXPAND commands
DIRCHARTEXPAND, DOMCHARTEXPAND, ORGCHARTEXPAND, TYPECHARTEXPAND, BROWCHARTEXPAND, OSCHARTEXPAND, REQCHARTEXPAND, REDIRCHARTEXPAND, FAILCHARTEXPAND, REFCHARTEXPAND, REDIRREFCHARTEXPAND, FAILREFCHARTEXPAND, REFSITECHARTEXPAND
Syntax
COMMAND item[,item...]
Example
DOMCHARTEXPAND .com,.net

Hyperlinks

Syntax
REQLINKINCLUDE *file
REQLINKEXCLUDE *file
REDIRLINKINCLUDE *file
REDIRLINKEXCLUDE *file
FAILLINKINCLUDE *file
FAILLINKEXCLUDE *file
REFLINKINCLUDE *referrer
REFLINKEXCLUDE *referrer
REDIRREFLINKINCLUDE *referrer
REDIRREFLINKEXCLUDE *referrer
FAILREFLINKINCLUDE *referrer
FAILREFLINKEXCLUDE *referrer
BASEURL prefix_string
Notes
The LINK commands can be regular expressions too.
Examples
REQLINKINCLUDE pages
REFLINKINCLUDE *.cgi,*.cgi?*
BASEURL http://www.mycompany.com

Language commands

Syntax
LANGUAGE ("ARMENIAN" | "BASQUE" | "BULGARIAN" | "BULGARIAN-MIK" |
          "CATALAN" | "SIMP-CHINESE" | "TRAD-CHINESE" | "CZECH" |
          "CZECH-1250" | "DANISH" | "DUTCH" | "ENGLISH" | "US-ENGLISH" |
          "FINNISH" | "FRENCH" | "GERMAN" | "HUNGARIAN" | "INDONESIAN" |
          "ITALIAN" | "JAPANESE-EUC" | "JAPANESE-JIS" | "JAPANESE-SJIS" |
          "JAPANESE-UTF" | "KOREAN" | "LATVIAN" | "NORWEGIAN" | "NYNORSK" |
          "POLISH" | "PORTUGUESE" | "BR-PORTUGUESE" | "RUSSIAN" |
          "RUSSIAN-1251" | "SERBIAN" | "SLOVAK" | "SLOVAK-1250" | "SLOVENE" |
          "SLOVENE-1250" | "SPANISH" | "SWEDISH" | "SWEDISH-ALT" | "TURKISH" |
          "UKRAINIAN")
LANGFILE localfile
DOMAINSFILE localfile
DESCFILE localfile
Notes
I hope that the other languages which were available in previous versions of analog -- BOSNIAN, SIMP-CHINESE, TRAD-CHINESE, CROATIAN, FINNISH, GREEK, ICELANDIC, LITHUANIAN, BR-PORTUGUESE, ROMANIAN, SLOVAK and SPANISH -- will be available for download from the analog home page soon.
Examples
LANGUAGE ITALIAN
LANGFILE hindi.lng

Cosmetic and miscellaneous commands

Syntax

OUTPUT ("XHTML" | "HTML" | "PLAIN" | "ASCII" | "LATEX" | "COMPUTER" | "XML" | "NONE")
GOTOS ("ON" | "OFF" | "FEW")
RUNTIME ("ON" | "OFF")
DESCRIPTIONS ("ON" | "OFF")
REPORTSPAN ("ON" | "OFF")
REPORTSPANTHRESHOLD number
LASTSEVEN ("ON" | "OFF")
REPORTORDER perm("x1QmWDdHwh4657oZSlLujJkKfsNnBbpvRMcPztiEIYyr")
GENSUMLINES ("ALL" | ["+" | "-"] subset("BCDEFGHIJKLMN"))
IMAGEDIR URL
CHARTDIR fmtURL
LOCALCHARTDIR localfmtfile
JPEGCHARTS ("ON" | "OFF")
PNGIMAGES ("ON" | "OFF")
NOROBOTS ("ON" | "OFF")
LOGO (URL | "none")
LOGOURL (URL | "none")
HOSTNAME string
HOSTURL (URL | "none")
HEADERFILE (localfile | "none")
FOOTERFILE (localfile | "none")
STYLESHEET (URL | "none")
CSSPREFIX (string | "none")
SEPCHAR (char | "none")
REPSEPCHAR (char | "none")
DECPOINT char
COMPSEP string
RAWBYTES ("ON" | "OFF")
BYTESDP number
HTMLPAGEWIDTH number
PLAINPAGEWIDTH number
LATEXPAGEWIDTH number
PDFLATEX ("ON" | "OFF")
BARSTYLE ("a" | "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "f" | "g" | "h" | "i" | "j")
MARKCHAR char
MINGRAPHWIDTH number
WEEKBEGINSON ("SUNDAY" | "MONDAY" | "TUESDAY" | "WEDNESDAY" | "THURSDAY" | "FRIDAY" | "SATURDAY")
SEARCHENGINE *referrer comma-separated-strings
INTSEARCHENGINE *file comma-separated-strings
Examples
Too many to list. See the documentation on each individual command.

Diagnostics

Syntax
SETTINGS ("ON" | "OFF")
DEBUG ("ON" | "OFF" | ["+" | "-"] subset("CDFSU"))
WARNINGS ("ON" | "OFF" | ["+" | "-"] subset("CDEFLMR"))
PROGRESSFREQ number
ERRFILE localfile
ERRLINELENGTH number
Examples
DEBUG ON
DEBUG CF
WARNINGS -DL
PROGRESSFREQ 50000

Index

[ A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | numbers]

This is the index for this Readme. Follow the numbers after each name to find references to that command or concept. Families of commands are indexed under the second part of the name: for example, HOSTEXCLUDE is under *EXCLUDE, not under HOST.

This index includes all of analog's configuration commands: if a command you used in previous versions is not here, see the section on Upgrading from earlier versions. All commands are also listed in the Quick reference with their syntax and examples, and that section is not cross-referenced from this index.

Acknowledgements [1]
Addresses, numerical [1]
*ALIAS [1]
Aliases [1]
ALL [1]
ALLBACK [1]
ALLGRAPH [1]
analog.cfg [1][2][3][4]
anlgform.html [1]
anlgform.pl [1]
anlghead.h [1][2]
Announcements [1]
APACHEDEFAULTLOGFORMAT [1]
APACHELOGFORMAT [1]
ARGSEXCLUDE [1]
*ARGSFLOOR [1]
ARGSINCLUDE [1]
*ARGSSORTBY [1]
Arguments in URLs [1][2]
ASCII output style [1]
*BACK [1]
Bar charts [1]
BARSTYLE [1]
BASEURL [1]
Basic commands [1]
Broken pipe [1][2]
BROW* commands - see under second part of name
Browser Report [1][2][3]
Browser Summary [1][2][3][4]
BROWREP* commands - see under second part of name
BROWSERREP [1]
BROWSERSUM [1]
BROWSUM* commands - see under second part of name
Bugs, reporting [1]
Bytes, how displayed [1]
BYTESDP [1]
bzip2 logfiles [1]
Cache files [1]
CACHEOUTFILE [1]
CACHEFILE [1]
CASE [1]
CGI program [1]
*CHART [1]
CHARTDIR [1]
*CHARTEXPAND [1]
"Click-thru"s [1]
Colours [1]
*COLS [1][2]
Comma separated value output [1]
Command line arguments [1][2][3]


Compilation problems [1]
Compiling [1]
Compressed logfiles [1]
COMPSEP [1]
Computer-readable output style [1]
CONFIGFILE [1]
Configuration files [1][2][3][4]
Configuration file, default [1]
Configuration file, mandatory [1]
Contents [1]
Contributors [1]
Cookies [1]
Corrupt logfile lines, definition [1]
Countries [1]
Crashes [1]
CSSPREFIX [1]
CSV output [1]
Customising analog [1]
Daily Report [1][2][3]
Daily Summary [1][2][3]
DAILYREP [1]
DAILYSUM [1]
Date reports [1][2]
Dates, restricting [1]
DAYREP* commands - see under second part of name
DAYSUM* commands - see under second part of name
DEBUG [1]
Debugging [1]
DECPOINT [1]
Default configuration file [1]
Default logfile format [1]
DEFAULTLOGFORMAT [1]
Definitions [1]
DESCFILE [1][2]
DESCRIPTIONS [1]
DIR* commands - see under second part of name
DIRECTORY [1]
Directory Report [1][2][3][4]
DIRSUFFIX [1]
DNS [1]
DNS lookups [1]
DNSBADHOURS [1]
DNSFILE [1]
DNSGOODHOURS [1]
DNSLOCKFILE [1]
DNSTIMEOUT [1]
DOM* commands - see under second part of name
DOMAIN [1]
Domain Report [1][2][3][4][5]
Domains file [1]
DOMAINSFILE [1]
Donations [1]
ERRFILE [1]
ERRLINELENGTH [1]
error_log [1][2]
Error Report [1]
Errors [1]
Example outputs [1]
Examples of each command [1]
*EXCLUDE [1]
Exclusions [1]
FAIL* commands - see under second part of name
Failed Referrer Report [1][2][3][4]
Failed requests, definition [1]
FAILHOST [1]
FAILHOST* commands - see under second part of name
FAILREF [1]
FAILREF* commands - see under second part of name
FAILURE [1]
Failure Report [1][2][3][4]
FAILUSER [1]
FAILUSER* commands - see under second part of name
FAILVHOST [1]
FAILVHOST* commands - see under second part of name
FAQ [1]
Fatal errors [1]
FILE* commands - see under second part of name
File, definition [1]
File Size Report [1][2][3]
File Type Report [1][2][3][4]
FILETYPE [1]
Filters [1]
First day of week [1]
FIVEREP [1]
FIVEREP* commands - see under second part of name
FIVESUM [1]
FIVESUM* commands - see under second part of name
Five-Minute Report [1][2][3]
Five-Minute Summary [1][2][3]
*FLOOR [1][2][3]
FOOTERFILE [1]
Form interface [1]
Frequently Asked Questions [1]
FROM [1]
GENERAL [1]
General Summary [1][2]
GENSUMLINES [1]
GOTOS [1]
*GRAPH [1]
Graphs [1]
gzipped logfiles [1]
HEADERFILE [1]
Helper applications [1]
Hierarchical reports [1]
Hits [1]
Home page [1]
HOST [1]
HOST* commands - see under second part of name
Host, definition [1]
Host Failure Report [1][2][3]
Host Redirection Report [1][2][3]
Host Report [1][2][3]
HOSTNAME [1]
Hostnames, numerical [1]
HOSTREP* commands - see under second part of name
HOSTURL [1]
Hour of the Week Summary [1][2][3]
Hourly Report [1][2][3]
Hourly Summary [1][2][3]
HOURLYREP [1]
HOURLYSUM [1]
HOURREP* commands - see under second part of name
HOURSUM* commands - see under second part of name
HTML output style [1]
HTMLPAGEWIDTH [1]
IMAGEDIR [1]
*INCLUDE [1]
Inclusions and exclusions [1]
Incremental processing [1]
Internal Search Query Report [1][2][3][4]
Internal Search Word Report [1][2][3][4]
Introduction [1]
INTSEARCHENGINE [1]
INTSEARCHQUERY [1]
INTSEARCHQUERY* commands - see under second part of name
INTSEARCHWORD [1]
INTSEARCHWORD* commands - see under second part of name
IP addresses [1]
JPEGCHARTS [1]
LANGFILE [1]
LANGUAGE [1]
Languages [1][2]
LASTSEVEN [1]
LATEX output style [1]
Licence [1][2]
*LINKEXCLUDE [1]
*LINKINCLUDE [1]
LOCALCHARTDIR [1]
LOGFILE [1]
Logfile formats [1][2]
Logfile prefix [1]
Logfiles [1]
Logfiles, choosing [1]
Logfiles, compressed [1]
Logfiles, finding [1]
Logfiles, preprocessing [1]
LOGFORMAT [1]
LOGO [1]
LOGOURL [1]
LOGTIMEOFFSET [1]
Low memory [1]
*LOWMEM [1][2]
Mailing lists [1]
Makefile [1]
Mandatory configuration file [1]
Map [1]
MARKCHAR [1]
Meaning of output [1]
Memory, using less [1]
MINGRAPHWIDTH [1]
MONTH* commands - see under second part of name
MONTHLY [1]
Monthly Report [1][2][3]
Non-time reports [1][2]
NOROBOTS [1]
"Not listed" lines [1][2][3]
Numerical addresses [1]
Numerical hostnames [1]
Operating System Report [1][2][3][4]
ORG* commands - see under second part of name
ORGANISATION [1]
Organisations, definition [1]
Organisation Report [1][2][3][4]
OS Report [1][2][3][4]
OS* commands - see under second part of name
OSREP [1]
OUTFILE [1]
OUTPUT [1]
Output aliases [1]
OUTPUT COMPUTER [1][2]
Output, configuring [1]
Output style, computer-readable [1]
Output styles [1]
Page, definition [1]
PAGEEXCLUDE [1]
PAGEINCLUDE [1]
Pages, defining [1]
*PAGEWIDTH [1]
Path through site [1]
PDFLATEX [1]
Pie charts [1]
PLAIN output style [1]
PLAINPAGEWIDTH [1]
PNGIMAGES [1]
Preprocessing logfiles [1]
Processing Time Report [1][2][3]
PROCTIME [1]
PROCTIME* commands - see under second part of name
PROGRESSFREQ [1]
QUARTERLY [1]
Quarterly Report [1][2][3]
QUARTERLY* commands - see under second part of name
QUARTERREP [1]
QUARTERREP* commands - see under second part of name
QUARTERSUM [1]
QUARTERSUM* commands - see under second part of name
Quarter-Hour Report [1][2][3]
Quarter-Hour Summary [1][2][3]
Quick reference [1]
RAWBYTES [1]
REDIR [1]
REDIR* commands - see under second part of name
Redirected Referrer Report [1][2][3][4]
Redirected requests, definition [1]
Redirection Report [1][2][3][4]
REDIRHOST [1]
REDIRHOST* commands - see under second part of name
REDIRREF [1]
REDIRREF* commands - see under second part of name
REDIRUSER [1]
REDIRUSER* commands - see under second part of name
REDIRVHOST [1]
REDIRVHOST* commands - see under second part of name
REF* commands - see under second part of name
REFARGSEXCLUDE [1]
REFARGSINCLUDE [1]
REFDIR [1]
Reference, quick [1]
REFERRER [1]
Referrer, definition [1]
Referrer Report [1][2][3][4]
Referring Site Report [1][2][3][4]
REFREP* commands - see under second part of name
REFSITE [1]
REFSITE* commands - see under second part of name
Regular expressions [1][2]
Report descriptions, in documentation [1]
Report descriptions, in output [1]
Report descriptions file [1][2]
Report.html [1][2]
Reporting bugs [1]
REPORTORDER [1]
Reports, list of [1][2]
REPORTSPAN [1]
REPORTSPANTHRESHOLD [1]
REPSEPCHAR [1]
REQ* commands - see under second part of name
REQUEST [1]
Request Report [1][2][3][4]
Requests, definition [1]
Requests for pages, defining [1]
Requests for pages, definition [1]
Requests, types of [1]
Robots, discouraging [1]
Robots, identifying [1]
ROBOTEXCLUDE [1]
ROBOTINCLUDE [1]
*ROWS [1]
RUNTIME [1]
Sample outputs [1]
Search arguments [1][2] -- see also Search Query Report and Search Word Report below
Search Query Report [1][2][3][4]
Search Word Report [1][2][3][4]
SEARCHCHARCONVERT [1]
SEARCHENGINE [1]
SEARCHQUERY [1]
SEARCHQUERY* commands - see under second part of name
SEARCHWORD [1]
SEARCHWORD* commands - see under second part of name
Search engines, discouraging [1]
SEPCHAR [1]
Session ids [1]
SETTINGS [1][2]
SIZE [1]
SIZE* commands - see under second part of name
*SORTBY [1][2][3]
Source code [1]
Spiders, discouraging [1]
Starting to use analog [1]
Starting to use analog on a Mac [1]
Starting to use analog on Windows [1]
Starting to use analog on other platforms [1]
STATUS [1]
Status Code Report [1][2][3]
STATUS* commands - see under second part of name
STYLESHEET [1]
SUBBROW [1]
SUBDIR [1]
Subdirectories [1]
SUBDOMAIN [1]
Subdomains [1]
SUB*FLOOR [1]
SUBORG [1]
SUB*SORTBY [1]
SUBTYPE [1]
Successful requests, definition [1]
Syntax [1][2]
Time reports [1][2]
TIMECOLS [1]
TIMEOFFSET [1]
Times, restricting [1]
Title line [1][2]
TO [1]
Total requests, definition [1]
Translators [1]
Tree reports [1]
TYPE* commands - see under second part of name
UNCOMPRESS [1]
Unknown domains [1][2]
Unresolved numerical addresses [1][2]
Unwanted logfile entries, definition [1]
Upgrading from earlier versions [1]
USER [1]
USER* commands - see under second part of name
USERCASE [1]
User Failure Report [1][2][3]
User Redirection Report [1][2][3]
User Report [1][2][3]
USERREP* commands - see under second part of name
VHOST [1]
VHOST* commands - see under second part of name
VHOSTREP* commands - see under second part of name
Virtual domains/virtual hosts [1][2]
Virtual Host Failure Report [1][2][3]
Virtual Host Redirection Report [1][2][3]
Virtual Host Report [1][2][3]
Visitors [1]
Visits [1]
WARNINGS [1]
Warnings [1][2]
WEEK* commands - see under second part of name
WEEKBEGINSON [1]
WEEKHOUR [1]
WEEKHOUR* commands - see under second part of name
WEEKLY [1]
Weekly Report [1][2][3]
What was new? [1][2][3][4]
What's new? [1][2]
XHTML output style [1]
XML output style [1]
YEAR* commands - see under second part of name
YEARLY [1]
Yearly Report [1][2][3]
zipped logfiles [1]
304ISSUCCESS [1]

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Go to the analog home page.

Stephen Turner
19 December 2004

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