Glen,

In analog's definition, "The host is the computer which has asked you for a
file", not the server that sent it. Unless you are running stats on an
intranet with only 6 clients and what to know what part of the site the client
169.237.132.84 saw, the HOSTINLCUDE/HOSTEXCLUDE statement below won't work.
(What you've done is generated a report of all files requested by the server.)

> My server has 6 IP numbers and space devoted to 6 Web Sites.
> I used the following commands:
> HOSTINCLUDE 169.237.132.84
> HOSTEXCLUDE 169.237.132.80
> HOSTEXCLUDE 169.237.132.81
> HOSTEXCLUDE 169.237.132.82
> HOSTEXCLUDE 169.237.132.83
> HOSTEXCLUDE 169.237.132.75
> HOSTEXCLUDE 169.237.132.76

>
> to isolate the information for only the first IP#.
>

You want to create virtual hosts (this term is confusing isn't it?) and report
for each of them. Or (and this is what I'd recommend, especially if the sites
get a lot of traffic) configure the server to generate separate set of logs
for each site. Being an academic site, each IP# is probably a different
virtual host (e.g. host80.ucdavis.edu, host84.ucdavis.edu) not a virtual
domain so reconfiguring the server may be hard or impossible. Check the docs
for more info on virtual hosts.

HTH

--
Jeremy Wadsack
OutQuest Magazine
a Wadsack-Allen publication


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