Analog only stores the correlation between requests, the times, and counts of each. It does not store a correlation table of the requested file names and the process times for each file (the same as hosts in the FAQ item). This is because the process time could be different for each file. Since processing time is stored in buckets it would have to remember 10 possible process times for each file name, which adds up to a lot of memory storage. To remain fast, Analog doesn't do this.
Please read the balance of that thread where there was discussions about storing total/average or other values. In general very, very few Analog users actually use the process time report (or have the data to use it) so it tends to be a low priority issue. -- Jeremy Wadsack Wadsack-Allen Digital Group J Leigh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (Saturday, January 10, 2004 10:52 AM): > Could you explain the answer, I can't see have FAQ helps on this question > and I have the same problem > "Stephen Turner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >> On Tue, 4 Feb 2003, Roger Perttu wrote: >> >> > Hi! >> > >> > In the Processing time report, is it possible to get a list of the 10 >> > files that have the longest processing time? There is a date of last >> > access but afik no file name or url of last access. >> > >> >> See docs/faq.html#faq128 >> +------------------------------------------------------------------------ | TO UNSUBSCRIBE from this list: | http://lists.isite.net/listgate/analog-help/unsubscribe.html | | Digest version: http://lists.isite.net/listgate/analog-help-digest/ | Usenet version: news://news.gmane.org/gmane.comp.web.analog.general | List archives: http://www.analog.cx/docs/mailing.html#listarchives +------------------------------------------------------------------------
