I figured out where the wysiwyg:// referers in web server logs come from.
If you use an old version of Netscape (4.7 or earlier, I think), and do print or print/preview, Netscape refreshes all of the images on the page -- including any images that may be be pre-loaded by Javascript.
On a big site,
John G. Norman ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> I have some weird entries in my apache access log file, and I
> thought I'd see if anyone else is seeing this. This is not directly
> related to Analog, but those who use it may very well have seen such
> entries in reports from Analog. The problem is this:
Just a vague memory, but I came across this once and had some suspicions it was
someone viewing source and clicking on the links... How they can come in bursts is
another matter... Would they be harvesting anything valuable?
Ale
On Thu, 03 Jan 2002 10:17:54 -0500
Rich Dempsey <[EMAIL PROTECTED
On the one hand, I've never seen a URL beginning with the wysiwyg protocol.
OTOH, I've not been looking for it.
Note that these are not requested URLs, these are referrer URLs, which seems
entirely appropriate to me.
Rich
At 06:54 AM 01/03/2002 -0800, you wrote:
>I have some weird entries in m
I have some weird entries in my apache access log file, and I thought I'd see if anyone else is seeing this. This is not directly related to Analog, but those who use it may very well have seen such entries in reports from Analog.
The problem is this:
We have a number of weird entries of http GET
Hi All,
Just wondering if it is possible to run analog on a made up logfile with the
format thus:
"15/03/2000","00:00:21","953078421","APPLET DOWNLOAD
STARTED","195.147.146.207","Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 5.0; Windows
98)","start0.16613920747892802","END OF DATA"
"15/03/2000","00:00:29","953