Analog CE 6.0: Analog's reports
This section summarises all of analog's reports.
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.)
(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. 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.
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.
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).
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.
- The Host Report lists all computers which downloaded files from you.
- The Domain Report lists which countries those computers came
from. (You may only get unresolved numerical addresses.)
- The Organisation Report attempts to
list the organisations (companies, institutions, ISPs etc.) which
the computer was registered under.
- The Host Redirection Report and Host Failure Report list all computers
which encountered redirections or errors.
- The Request Report (the example above) lists which files were
downloaded.
- The Directory Report lists which directories those files came from.
- The File Type Report lists the file types (actually, extensions) of
those files.
- The File Size Report breaks them down by size.
- The Processing Time Report shows the time taken to serve each file.
- The Redirection Report lists the filenames which resulted in redirections:
mainly directories without the final slash, and
"click-thru"'s.
- The Failure Report lists the filenames which caused errors.
- The Referrer Report lists which pages linked to your files (and
also pages which included your images).
- The Referring Site Report lists the servers those referrers were on.
- The Search Query Report and the Search Word Report list which search
terms people used to find your site.
- The Internal Search Query Report and Internal Search Word Report list the
search terms people used on scripts within your site.
- The Redirected Referrer Report lists the referrers which led to
redirections.
- The Failed Referrer Report is essentially a broken link report.
- The Browser Report lists the detailed versions of browsers used,
and the Browser Summary collects them by vendor. You should be aware that
browsers can lie about what sort of browser they are.
- The Operating System Report lists the operating systems of the
visitors whose browser types you know (as far as possible: it's not always
possible to distinguish accurately between different Windows versions, for
example, because the same browser can run on more than one Windows
version).
- The Virtual Host Report lists the activity of your various virtual
domains.
- The Virtual Host Redirection Report and Virtual Host Failure Report give
the number of redirections and errors on each of those domains.
- The User Report lists your visitors if your server requires
authentication; or perhaps the visitors' cookies or session ids.
- The User Redirection Report and User Failure Report list the users who
encountered redirections or errors.
- The Status Code Report lists the number of each
HTTP status code that you had.
Usually you can only get some of these reports, depending on what information
is recorded in your logfile.
The "not listed" line at the bottom counts those items which
didn't get enough traffic to get above the FLOOR for the report.
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.
This analysis was produced by Analog 6.0.x.
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.
Go to the Analog CE home page.
Stephen Turner
19 December 2004