On Friday, October 14, 2005 12:16 PM [EDT], Matt Murphy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I just volunteered to maintain the website of a local charity and >> one of the first things they asked me for is a report on the web >> statistics - something neither the former web guy nor I have ever >> done. I found daily logs on the server and I can get analog to >> produce a report of one day's activity, but I'm not sure how to get >> it to do all the logs (about 100 of them) for a longer term report. >> >> Is there a way to either a) combine all the logs so the report if >> for a longer time period or b) batch process all the individual log >> files into one report. >> >> Any advice you can provide would be much appreciated. Reading the documentation is always a good place to start. http://analog.cx/docs/logfile.html "You can have several LOGFILE commands. You can include wildcards in the logfile name (but not necessarily in the directory name: this is system-dependent), and you can use a list of logfiles separated by commas (without spaces). So the following commands would tell analog to read logfile1, c:\logs\logfile2, and all files ending in .log: LOGFILE logfile1,*.log LOGFILE c:\logs\logfile2" As it happens, it even includes the answer to yesterdays question regarding how to write a path on a Mac) "Or if you were on a Mac, you might use something like LOGFILE "Hard Drive:Internet Applications:Analog:Logs:*" " Aengus +------------------------------------------------------------------------ | TO UNSUBSCRIBE from this list: | http://lists.meer.net/mailman/listinfo/analog-help | | Analog Documentation: http://analog.cx/docs/Readme.html | List archives: http://www.analog.cx/docs/mailing.html#listarchives | Usenet version: news://news.gmane.org/gmane.comp.web.analog.general +------------------------------------------------------------------------

