Re: Webtrends style reporting for linux?

2004-01-14 Thread Greg Rundlett
I've had the best results with AWStats (see http://awstats.sourceforge.net), even to the point of setting up configuration files to report for each client separate parts of the same website. And there is also a tool called PhpOpenTracker (POT) which won't get you high, but will do click-path a

Re: Webtrends style reporting for linux?

2004-01-14 Thread brian
On Wed, 2004-01-14 at 14:46, Tom Fogal wrote: > I'm not quite sure what webtrends does, but you might want to look at > 'webalizer'. It works with apache log files (among other things). Thanks, last time I looked, I don't think that webalizer got detailed enough, but I will look again. > Also, if

Re: Webtrends style reporting for linux?

2004-01-14 Thread Tom Fogal
I'm not quite sure what webtrends does, but you might want to look at 'webalizer'. It works with apache log files (among other things). Also, if youre looking for more general bandwidth usage, MRTG is pretty cool. My friend has MRTG setup at his site, so you can see if that does (part?) of what yo

Re: Webtrends style reporting for linux?

2004-01-14 Thread Cole Tuininga
On Wed, 2004-01-14 at 14:33, brian wrote: > Here is the scenario, I need to provide a handful of customers with > (weekly|monthly) "comprehensive web statistics reports". This is done > currently using WebTrends on a Win2K box, which I want to kill for > various reasons. > > The solution doesn't

Webtrends style reporting for linux?

2004-01-14 Thread brian
Here is the scenario, I need to provide a handful of customers with (weekly|monthly) "comprehensive web statistics reports". This is done currently using WebTrends on a Win2K box, which I want to kill for various reasons. The solution doesn't have to be "webtrends", but should offer similar detai