> > Yes, analog is ugly. However, look into the debian package 'rmagic'. > > I have done. > I can't get it to work :( > Anyone on this list got it to work with testing, 2.2.19?
Yup sure... and yes it is fiddly :/ I have a little script called 'runstats' which contans the following: -----------------------runstats -------------------------- #!/bin/bash if [ -d /www/$1/logs ]; then mkdir /www/$1/htdocs/logs >/dev/null cd /www/$1/htdocs/logs cat /etc/rmagic/template >rmagic.ini echo >>rmagic.ini Base_URL = http://www.$1/ echo >>rmagic.ini Title = $1 - Traffic Report genanalogconf $1 | analog -G +g- | rmagic >/dev/null fi -------------------------------------------------------- All of our customers have a directory matching their domain name in /www, so there would be a /www/domain.com/logs directory. /etc/rmagic/template is available from http://www.bytel.net.uk/template genanalogconf is available from http://www.bytel.net.uk/genanalogconf Basically all that happens is analog runs on a domain's log files as usual but instead of outputting to an .html file with a collection of GIFs, the analog config tells it to change the output format to 'COMPUTER' which is a text file with lots of numbers :> That output is then piped into 'rmagic' which reads it's rmagic.ini from the current directory and generates lots of HTML, PNGs to produce a nice report for end users available for viewing at http://domain.com/logs/ :) The templates I use tend to generate lots of warnings about things being disabled, etc. but the reports still come out OK - <shrug> it works for me :) Have fun! Gavin. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]