Criando relatórios estatísticos com o webalizer

O webalizer é uma ferramenta analisadora de logs, ele foi escrito em C e gera relatórios gráficos em HTML com estatísticas de utilização de vários programas, como por exemplo, Apache, Squid, wu-ftp entre outros. Nesse artigo veremos como instalar e configurar detalhadamente esse pacote.

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Por: Wanderson Berbert em 20/11/2004


Webalizer com Apache



Agora que você já conhece os principais parâmetros de configuração do webalizer, segue abaixo um exemplo de configuração para o Apache.

Se achar mais cômodo, pode baixar o arquivo em formato texto aqui: webalizer_apache.txt.

#
# Sample Webalizer configuration file
# Copyright 1997-2000 by Bradford L. Barrett (brad@mrunix.net)
#
# Distributed under the GNU General Public License. See the
# files "Copyright" and "COPYING" provided with the webalizer
# distribution for additional information.
#
# This is a sample configuration file for the Webalizer (ver 2.01)
# Lines starting with pound signs '#' are comment lines and are
# ignored. Blank lines are skipped as well. Other lines are considered
# as configuration lines, and have the form "ConfigOption Value" where
# ConfigOption is a valid configuration keyword, and Value is the value
# to assign that configuration option. Invalid keyword/values are
# ignored, with appropriate warnings being displayed. There must be
# at least one space or tab between the keyword and its value.
#
# As of version 0.98, The Webalizer will look for a 'default' configuration
# file named "webalizer.conf" in the current directory, and if not found
# there, will look for "/etc/webalizer.conf".


# LogFile defines the web server log file to use. If not specified
# here or on on the command line, input will default to STDIN. If
# the log filename ends in '.gz' (ie: a gzip compressed file), it will
# be decompressed on the fly as it is being read.

#LogFile /var/lib/httpd/logs/access_log
LogFile /var/log/apache/www.sermap.com.br-access.log

# LogType defines the log type being processed. Normally, the Webalizer
# expects a CLF or Combined web server log as input. Using this option,
# you can process ftp logs as well (xferlog as produced by wu-ftp and
# others), or Squid native logs. Values can be 'clf', 'ftp' or 'squid',
# with 'clf' the default.

#LogType clf
LogType clf

# OutputDir is where you want to put the output files. This should
# should be a full path name, however relative ones might work as well.
# If no output directory is specified, the current directory will be used.

#OutputDir /var/lib/httpd/htdocs/usage
OutputDir /var/webalizer/apache

# HistoryName allows you to specify the name of the history file produced
# by the Webalizer. The history file keeps the data for up to 12 months
# worth of logs, used for generating the main HTML page (index.html).
# The default is a file named "webalizer.hist", stored in the specified
# output directory. If you specify just the filename (without a path),
# it will be kept in the specified output directory. Otherwise, the path
# is relative to the output directory, unless absolute (leading /).

#HistoryName webalizer.hist

# Incremental processing allows multiple partial log files to be used
# instead of one huge one. Useful for large sites that have to rotate
# their log files more than once a month. The Webalizer will save its
# internal state before exiting, and restore it the next time run, in
# order to continue processing where it left off. This mode also causes
# The Webalizer to scan for and ignore duplicate records (records already
# processed by a previous run). See the README file for additional
# information. The value may be 'yes' or 'no', with a default of 'no'.
# The file 'webalizer.current' is used to store the current state data,
# and is located in the output directory of the program (unless changed
# with the IncrementalName option below). Please read at least the section
# on Incremental processing in the README file before you enable this option.

#Incremental no
Incremental yes

# IncrementalName allows you to specify the filename for saving the
# incremental data in. It is similar to the HistoryName option where the
# name is relative to the specified output directory, unless an absolute
# filename is specified. The default is a file named "webalizer.current"
# kept in the normal output directory. If you don't specify "Incremental"
# as 'yes' then this option has no meaning.

#IncrementalName webalizer.current

# ReportTitle is the text to display as the title. The hostname
# (unless blank) is appended to the end of this string (seperated with
# a space) to generate the final full title string.
# Default is (for english) "Usage Statistics for".

#ReportTitle Usage Statistics for
ReportTitle Estatísticas de uso servidor www.sermap.com.br em

# HostName defines the hostname for the report. This is used in
# the title, and is prepended to the URL table items. This allows
# clicking on URL's in the report to go to the proper location in
# the event you are running the report on a 'virtual' web server,
# or for a server different than the one the report resides on.
# If not specified here, or on the command line, webalizer will
# try to get the hostname via a uname system call. If that fails,
# it will default to "localhost".

#HostName localhost

# HTMLExtension allows you to specify the filename extension to use
# for generated HTML pages. Normally, this defaults to "html", but
# can be changed for sites who need it (like for PHP embeded pages).

#HTMLExtension html

# PageType lets you tell the Webalizer what types of URL's you
# consider a 'page'. Most people consider html and cgi documents
# as pages, while not images and audio files. If no types are
# specified, defaults will be used ('htm*', 'cgi' and HTMLExtension
# if different for web logs, 'txt' for ftp logs).

PageType htm*
PageType cgi
PageType phtml
PageType php3
PageType pl

# UseHTTPS should be used if the analysis is being run on a
# secure server, and links to urls should use 'https://' instead
# of the default 'http://'. If you need this, set it to 'yes'.
# Default is 'no'. This only changes the behaviour of the 'Top
# URL's' table.

#UseHTTPS no

# DNSCache specifies the DNS cache filename to use for reverse DNS lookups.
# This file must be specified if you wish to perform name lookups on any IP
# addresses found in the log file. If an absolute path is not given as
# part of the filename (ie: starts with a leading '/'), then the name is
# relative to the default output directory. See the DNS.README file for
# additional information.

#DNSCache dns_cache.db
DNSCache /var/webalizer/dnscache.db

# DNSChildren allows you to specify how many "children" processes are
# run to perform DNS lookups to create or update the DNS cache file.
# If a number is specified, the DNS cache file will be created/updated
# each time the Webalizer is run, immediately prior to normal processing,
# by running the specified number of "children" processes to perform
# DNS lookups. If used, the DNS cache filename MUST be specified as
# well. The default value is zero (0), which disables DNS cache file
# creation/updates at run time. The number of children processes to
# run may be anywhere from 1 to 100, however a large number may effect
# normal system operations. Reasonable values should be between 5 and
# 20. See the DNS.README file for additional information.

#DNSChildren 0
DNSChildren 15

# HTMLPre defines HTML code to insert at the very beginning of the
# file. Default is the DOCTYPE line shown below. Max line length
# is 80 characters, so use multiple HTMLPre lines if you need more.

#HTMLPre <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">

# HTMLHead defines HTML code to insert within the <HEAD></HEAD>
# block, immediately after the <TITLE> line. Maximum line length
# is 80 characters, so use multiple lines if needed.

#HTMLHead <META NAME="author" CONTENT="The Webalizer">

# HTMLBody defined the HTML code to be inserted, starting with the
# <BODY> tag. If not specified, the default is shown below. If
# used, you MUST include your own <BODY> tag as the first line.
# Maximum line length is 80 char, use multiple lines if needed.

#HTMLBody <BODY BGCOLOR="#E8E8E8" TEXT="#000000" LINK="#0000FF" VLINK="#FF0000">

# HTMLPost defines the HTML code to insert immediately before the
# first <HR> on the document, which is just after the title and
# "summary period"-"Generated on:" lines. If anything, this should
# be used to clean up in case an image was inserted with HTMLBody.
# As with HTMLHead, you can define as many of these as you want and
# they will be inserted in the output stream in order of apperance.
# Max string size is 80 characters. Use multiple lines if you need to.

#HTMLPost <BR CLEAR="all">

# HTMLTail defines the HTML code to insert at the bottom of each
# HTML document, usually to include a link back to your home
# page or insert a small graphic. It is inserted as a table
# data element (ie: <TD> your code here </TD>) and is right
# alligned with the page. Max string size is 80 characters.

#HTMLTail <IMG SRC="msfree.png" ALT="100% Micro$oft free!">

# HTMLEnd defines the HTML code to add at the very end of the
# generated files. It defaults to what is shown below. If
# used, you MUST specify the </BODY> and </HTML> closing tags
# as the last lines. Max string length is 80 characters.

#HTMLEnd </BODY></HTML>

# The Quiet option suppresses output messages... Useful when run
# as a cron job to prevent bogus e-mails. Values can be either
# "yes" or "no". Default is "no". Note: this does not suppress
# warnings and errors (which are printed to stderr).

#Quiet no

# ReallyQuiet will supress all messages including errors and
# warnings. Values can be 'yes' or 'no' with 'no' being the
# default. If 'yes' is used here, it cannot be overriden from
# the command line, so use with caution. A value of 'no' has
# no effect.

#ReallyQuiet no

# TimeMe allows you to force the display of timing information
# at the end of processing. A value of 'yes' will force the
# timing information to be displayed. A value of 'no' has no
# effect.

#TimeMe no

# GMTTime allows reports to show GMT (UTC) time instead of local
# time. Default is to display the time the report was generated
# in the timezone of the local machine, such as EDT or PST. This
# keyword allows you to have times displayed in UTC instead. Use
# only if you really have a good reason, since it will probably
# screw up the reporting periods by however many hours your local
# time zone is off of GMT.

#GMTTime no

# Debug prints additional information for error messages. This
# will cause webalizer to dump bad records/fields instead of just
# telling you it found a bad one. As usual, the value can be
# either "yes" or "no". The default is "no". It shouldn't be
# needed unless you start getting a lot of Warning or Error
# messages and want to see why. (Note: warning and error messages
# are printed to stderr, not stdout like normal messages).

#Debug no

# FoldSeqErr forces the Webalizer to ignore sequence errors.
# This is useful for Netscape and other web servers that cache
# the writing of log records and do not guarentee that they
# will be in chronological order. The use of the FoldSeqErr
# option will cause out of sequence log records to be treated
# as if they had the same time stamp as the last valid record.
# Default is to ignore out of sequence log records.

#FoldSeqErr no

# VisitTimeout allows you to set the default timeout for a visit
# (sometimes called a 'session'). The default is 30 minutes,
# which should be fine for most sites.
# Visits are determined by looking at the time of the current
# request, and the time of the last request from the site. If
# the time difference is greater than the VisitTimeout value, it
# is considered a new visit, and visit totals are incremented.
# Value is the number of seconds to timeout (default=1800=30min)

#VisitTimeout 1800

# IgnoreHist shouldn't be used in a config file, but it is here
# just because it might be usefull in certain situations. If the
# history file is ignored, the main "index.html" file will only
# report on the current log files contents. Usefull only when you
# want to reproduce the reports from scratch. USE WITH CAUTION!
# Valid values are "yes" or "no". Default is "no".

#IgnoreHist no

# Country Graph allows the usage by country graph to be disabled.
# Values can be 'yes' or 'no', default is 'yes'.

#CountryGraph yes

# DailyGraph and DailyStats allows the daily statistics graph
# and statistics table to be disabled (not displayed). Values
# may be "yes" or "no". Default is "yes".

#DailyGraph yes
#DailyStats yes

# HourlyGraph and HourlyStats allows the hourly statistics graph
# and statistics table to be disabled (not displayed). Values
# may be "yes" or "no". Default is "yes".

#HourlyGraph yes
#HourlyStats yes

# GraphLegend allows the color coded legends to be turned on or off
# in the graphs. The default is for them to be displayed. This only
# toggles the color coded legends, the other legends are not changed.
# If you think they are hideous and ugly, say 'no' here :)

#GraphLegend yes

# GraphLines allows you to have index lines drawn behind the graphs.
# I personally am not crazy about them, but a lot of people requested
# them and they weren't a big deal to add. The number represents the
# number of lines you want displayed. Default is 2, you can disable
# the lines by using a value of zero ('0'). [max is 20]
# Note, due to rounding errors, some values don't work quite right.
# The lower the better, with 1,2,3,4,6 and 10 producing nice results.

#GraphLines 2

# The "Top" options below define the number of entries for each table.
# Defaults are Sites=30, URL's=30, Referrers=30 and Agents=15, and
# Countries=30. TopKSites and TopKURLs (by KByte tables) both default
# to 10, as do the top entry/exit tables (TopEntry/TopExit). The top
# search strings and usernames default to 20. Tables may be disabled
# by using zero (0) for the value.

#TopSites 30
#TopKSites 10
#TopURLs 30
#TopKURLs 10
#TopReferrers 30
#TopAgents 15
#TopCountries 30
#TopEntry 10
#TopExit 10
#TopSearch 20
#TopUsers 20

TopSites 50
TopURLs 50

# The All* keywords allow the display of all URL's, Sites, Referrers
# User Agents, Search Strings and Usernames. If enabled, a seperate
# HTML page will be created, and a link will be added to the bottom
# of the appropriate "Top" table. There are a couple of conditions
# for this to occur.. First, there must be more items than will fit
# in the "Top" table (otherwise it would just be duplicating what is
# already displayed). Second, the listing will only show those items
# that are normally visable, which means it will not show any hidden
# items. Grouped entries will be listed first, followed by individual
# items. The value for these keywords can be either 'yes' or 'no',
# with the default being 'no'. Please be aware that these pages can
# be quite large in size, particularly the sites page, and seperate
# pages are generated for each month, which can consume quite a lot
# of disk space depending on the traffic to your site.

#AllSites no
#AllURLs no
#AllReferrers no
#AllAgents no
#AllSearchStr no
#AllUsers no

AllUsers yes

# The Webalizer normally strips the string 'index.' off the end of
# URL's in order to consolidate URL totals. For example, the URL
# /somedir/index.html is turned into /somedir/ which is really the
# same URL. This option allows you to specify additional strings
# to treat in the same way. You don't need to specify 'index.' as
# it is always scanned for by The Webalizer, this option is just to
# specify _additional_ strings if needed. If you don't need any,
# don't specify any as each string will be scanned for in EVERY
# log record... A bunch of them will degrade performance. Also,
# the string is scanned for anywhere in the URL, so a string of
# 'home' would turn the URL /somedir/homepages/brad/home.html into
# just /somedir/ which is probably not what was intended.

#IndexAlias home.htm
#IndexAlias homepage.htm

# The Hide*, Group* and Ignore* and Include* keywords allow you to
# change the way Sites, URL's, Referrers, User Agents and Usernames
# are manipulated. The Ignore* keywords will cause The Webalizer to
# completely ignore records as if they didn't exist (and thus not
# counted in the main site totals). The Hide* keywords will prevent
# things from being displayed in the 'Top' tables, but will still be
# counted in the main totals. The Group* keywords allow grouping
# similar objects as if they were one. Grouped records are displayed
# in the 'Top' tables and can optionally be displayed in BOLD and/or
# shaded. Groups cannot be hidden, and are not counted in the main
# totals. The Group* options do not, by default, hide all the items
# that it matches. If you want to hide the records that match (so just
# the grouping record is displayed), follow with an identical Hide*
# keyword with the same value. (see example below) In addition,
# Group* keywords may have an optional label which will be displayed
# instead of the keywords value. The label should be seperated from
# the value by at least one 'white-space' character, such as a space
# or tab.
#
# The value can have either a leading or trailing '*' wildcard
# character. If no wildcard is found, a match can occur anywhere
# in the string. Given a string "www.yourmama.com", the values "your",
# "*mama.com" and "www.your*" will all match.

# Your own site should be hidden
#HideSite *mrunix.net
#HideSite localhost

# Your own site gives most referrals
#HideReferrer mrunix.net/

# This one hides non-referrers ("-" Direct requests)
#HideReferrer Direct Request

# Usually you want to hide these
HideURL *.gif
HideURL *.GIF
HideURL *.jpg
HideURL *.JPG
HideURL *.png
HideURL *.PNG
HideURL *.ra

# Hiding agents is kind of futile
#HideAgent RealPlayer

# You can also hide based on authenticated username
#HideUser root
#HideUser admin

# Grouping options
#GroupURL /cgi-bin/* CGI Scripts
#GroupURL /images/* Images

#GroupSite *.aol.com
#GroupSite *.compuserve.com

#GroupReferrer yahoo.com/ Yahoo!
#GroupReferrer excite.com/ Excite
#GroupReferrer infoseek.com/ InfoSeek
#GroupReferrer webcrawler.com/ WebCrawler

#GroupUser root Admin users
#GroupUser admin Admin users
#GroupUser wheel Admin users

# The following is a great way to get an overall total
# for browsers, and not display all the detail records.
# (You should use MangleAgent to refine further...)

#GroupAgent MSIE Micro$oft Internet Exploder
#HideAgent MSIE
#GroupAgent Mozilla Netscape
#HideAgent Mozilla
#GroupAgent Lynx* Lynx
#HideAgent Lynx*

# HideAllSites allows forcing individual sites to be hidden in the
# report. This is particularly useful when used in conjunction
# with the "GroupDomain" feature, but could be useful in other
# situations as well, such as when you only want to display grouped
# sites (with the GroupSite keywords...). The value for this
# keyword can be either 'yes' or 'no', with 'no' the default,
# allowing individual sites to be displayed.

#HideAllSites no

# The GroupDomains keyword allows you to group individual hostnames
# into their respective domains. The value specifies the level of
# grouping to perform, and can be thought of as 'the number of dots'
# that will be displayed. For example, if a visiting host is named
# cust1.tnt.mia.uu.net, a domain grouping of 1 will result in just
# "uu.net" being displayed, while a 2 will result in "mia.uu.net".
# The default value of zero disable this feature. Domains will only
# be grouped if they do not match any existing "GroupSite" records,
# which allows overriding this feature with your own if desired.

#GroupDomains 0

# The GroupShading allows grouped rows to be shaded in the report.
# Useful if you have lots of groups and individual records that
# intermingle in the report, and you want to diferentiate the group
# records a little more. Value can be 'yes' or 'no', with 'yes'
# being the default.

#GroupShading yes

# GroupHighlight allows the group record to be displayed in BOLD.
# Can be either 'yes' or 'no' with the default 'yes'.

#GroupHighlight yes

# The Ignore* keywords allow you to completely ignore log records based
# on hostname, URL, user agent, referrer or username. I hessitated in
# adding these, since the Webalizer was designed to generate _accurate_
# statistics about a web servers performance. By choosing to ignore
# records, the accuracy of reports become skewed, negating why I wrote
# this program in the first place. However, due to popular demand, here
# they are. Use the same as the Hide* keywords, where the value can have
# a leading or trailing wildcard '*'. Use at your own risk ;)

#IgnoreSite bad.site.net
#IgnoreURL /test*
#IgnoreReferrer file:/*
#IgnoreAgent RealPlayer
#IgnoreUser root

# The Include* keywords allow you to force the inclusion of log records
# based on hostname, URL, user agent, referrer or username. They take
# precidence over the Ignore* keywords. Note: Using Ignore/Include
# combinations to selectivly process parts of a web site is _extremely
# inefficent_!!! Avoid doing so if possible (ie: grep the records to a
# seperate file if you really want that kind of report).

# Example: Only show stats on Joe User's pages...
#IgnoreURL *
#IncludeURL ~joeuser*

# Or based on an authenticated username
#IgnoreUser *
#IncludeUser someuser

# The MangleAgents allows you to specify how much, if any, The Webalizer
# should mangle user agent names. This allows several levels of detail
# to be produced when reporting user agent statistics. There are six
# levels that can be specified, which define different levels of detail
# supression. Level 5 shows only the browser name (MSIE or Mozilla)
# and the major version number. Level 4 adds the minor version number
# (single decimal place). Level 3 displays the minor version to two
# decimal places. Level 2 will add any sub-level designation (such
# as Mozilla/3.01Gold or MSIE 3.0b). Level 1 will attempt to also add
# the system type if it is specified. The default Level 0 displays the
# full user agent field without modification and produces the greatest
# amount of detail. User agent names that can't be mangled will be
# left unmodified.

#MangleAgents 0

# The SearchEngine keywords allow specification of search engines and
# their query strings on the URL. These are used to locate and report
# what search strings are used to find your site. The first word is
# a substring to match in the referrer field that identifies the search
# engine, and the second is the URL variable used by that search engine
# to define it's search terms.

SearchEngine yahoo.com p=
SearchEngine altavista.com q=
SearchEngine google.com q=
SearchEngine eureka.com q=
SearchEngine lycos.com query=
SearchEngine hotbot.com MT=
SearchEngine msn.com MT=
SearchEngine infoseek.com qt=
SearchEngine webcrawler searchText=
SearchEngine excite search=
SearchEngine netscape.com search=
SearchEngine mamma.com query=
SearchEngine alltheweb.com query=
SearchEngine northernlight.com qr=

# The Dump* keywords allow the dumping of Sites, URL's, Referrers
# User Agents, Usernames and Search strings to seperate tab delimited
# text files, suitable for import into most database or spreadsheet
# programs.

# DumpPath specifies the path to dump the files. If not specified,
# it will default to the current output directory. Do not use a
# trailing slash ('/').

#DumpPath /var/lib/httpd/logs

# The DumpHeader keyword specifies if a header record should be
# written to the file. A header record is the first record of the
# file, and contains the labels for each field written. Normally,
# files that are intended to be imported into a database system
# will not need a header record, while spreadsheets usually do.
# Value can be either 'yes' or 'no', with 'no' being the default.

#DumpHeader no

# DumpExtension allow you to specify the dump filename extension
# to use. The default is "tab", but some programs are pickey about
# the filenames they use, so you may change it here (for example,
# some people may prefer to use "csv").

#DumpExtension tab

# These control the dumping of each individual table. The value
# can be either 'yes' or 'no'.. the default is 'no'.

#DumpSites no
#DumpURLs no
#DumpReferrers no
#DumpAgents no
#DumpUsers no
#DumpSearchStr no

# End of configuration file... Have a nice day!
Página anterior     Próxima página

Páginas do artigo
   1. O que é o webalizer
   2. Obtendo sua cópia do webalizer
   3. Instalando a partir do código fonte
   4. Squid com webalizer
   5. Modelo modificado para o Squid
   6. Colocando o webalizer para funcionar
   7. Webalizer em detalhes
   8. Webalizer com Apache
   9. Finalizando
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Comentários
[1] Comentário enviado por removido em 20/11/2004 - 18:17h

Poww nem manjo desse programa estou para estudar ele =D , já adicionei no meus favoritos auqi do VOL ...

PS: você é da familia do Fabio Berbet ?, curiooosooooo heheh


abraços e parabéns pelo artigo.

[2] Comentário enviado por fabio em 20/11/2004 - 18:29h

Wanderson é meu primo de 1o. grau, filho do irmão da minha mãe. Por falar em primo, foi ele quem me ensinou a mexer com computador. Se não tivesse ele na família era bem capaz deu ser dentista hoje em dia :)

[3] Comentário enviado por wberbert em 20/11/2004 - 21:47h

Fiquei até emocionado agora :').
Bom brincadeiras a parte.. pra falar a verdade ele tavlez hoje faria parte do exército :D.. Não é a toa que ele era conhecido pela galera pelo apelido de "Soldier".
Hiii... te dedurei...bom mas agora já é tarde. :)
T+

[4] Comentário enviado por removido em 20/11/2004 - 23:15h

HAAhAUahAUAHAUAHA,

POwww primeiro de tudo gracias Wanderson Berbert por indicar o ramo de informatica para o Fabião .... mais agora essa do "Soldier"...


Cuidado que pega em Fabião.........

abraços a familia Berbert!

[5] Comentário enviado por kovas em 18/11/2005 - 00:00h

ola amigo .. eu usei sua conf do webalizer para o apche mais estou com dificuldades para conseguir fazer funcionar .. me diga uma coisa .. como q eu inicio ele e onde eu consigo visualizar os logs?

[6] Comentário enviado por wberbert em 18/11/2005 - 08:36h

Os logs são colocados na pasta onde o parametro

OutputDir /var/webalizer/apache

aponta.

Vc vai iniciá-lo atraves do cron... na verdade o webalizer não é um daemon e sim o programa que vai rodar de tempos em tempos coletando informações e isso é definido no cron.

Os arquivos gerados por ele podem ser abertos diretamente se vc tiver acesso a pasta da máquna local ou através de um aliases configurado no apache.

[7] Comentário enviado por raffaelfasan em 16/12/2005 - 16:41h

ao iniciar o webalizer, aparece a seguinte mensagem:

Webalizer V2.01-10 (Linux 2.6.12-9-386) locale: pt_BR.UTF-8

ele esta com a codificação UTF-8, sendo assim nos browsers fica sux =(

eu procurei bastante e não achei aonde mudar =\

você sabe como alterar para ISO-8859-1 ?

obrigado :D

[8] Comentário enviado por k3icolor em 23/12/2005 - 13:37h

alguem sabe algum scripts ou comando para atualizar o Webalizer manualmente ,no caso atualizar as estatisticas ? se alguem saber algo agradeço

Valeu

[9] Comentário enviado por balani em 11/10/2006 - 01:03h

Parabens, esse é artigo está muito bom e util.

[10] Comentário enviado por renatosd em 08/05/2007 - 12:13h

Boa tarde!

lendo sobre não encontrei mas o webalizer consegue ao invés de ler um arquivo de log ler vários e gerar as estatístcas?

Grato pela atenção

[11] Comentário enviado por diekn em 03/06/2007 - 17:32h

parabens,vou instalar esse programa,desde ja,ja vai estar adicionado no s meus favoritos.

[12] Comentário enviado por balani em 07/09/2007 - 20:33h

Artigo muito util, parabens!!!

[13] Comentário enviado por insanitysnake em 25/10/2014 - 19:44h

Excelente artigo, muito bom!

Consegui instalar e rodar perfeitamente...

Só na primeira parte onde foi preciso baixar e instalar o libgd-2.1.0 ele não foi muito claro quanto a instalação dele, acabei conseguindo instalar seguindo o mesmo modo de instalação do Webalizer... (para leigos em linux como eu, foi um desafio, depois pensei que foi ridículo de tão fácil...kkkkkkkkkkk)

[14] Comentário enviado por inclito em 15/03/2016 - 11:30h

@raffaelfasan muito simples, coloque na configuração do seu conf do apache a seguinte linha: AddDefaultCharset windows-1252, estará acentuado bacana.


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