Hi
 
Thanks, so now I have PHP running and working I believe. However when I go to 
the sarg-realtime.php, it shows up, but empty. It even refreshes every 3 
seconds, but I dont know why it is all empty. How do I configure that?
 
Thanks
Ben
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Toto Capuccino [mailto
Sent: Thu 12/8/2005 10:38
To: Benedek Frank
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [squid-users] Proxy Monitoring Question

You can find in /usr/local/sarg a sarg-php directory - you need to have an 
apache server installed with php- just copy the sarg-php directory to your root 
web folder and chmod apache (or www-data or whatecer suits to your distro) 
sarg-php. 
Then you'll just have to browse to http://yourserver/sarg-php/sarg-realtime.php
 
2005/12/8, Benedek Frank < 
Hi
I have now configure Sarg 2.1 to run on my Debian Stable release, by upgrading 
to Libc6 newer version, etc. It all works like a charm. I have squid to the 
Proxying, and Sarg generates the daily reports on a restricted HTML page viewed 
only by me. So far so good. 
However, you (Toto) mentioned, that there is a Real Time report that can be 
generated with Sarg. I found that if I pass the sarg -r argument, it will be 
generated, but it should be PHP, which I am not familiar with. I couldn't find 
any info how to implement this setup. Could someone give me some pointers on 
that? 
Thanks a lot,
Benedek
 
________________________________________
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Toto Capuccino
Date: 6 déc. 2005 18:32
Subject: Re: [squid-users] Proxy Monitoring Question 
To: [email protected]
Check out Sarg 2.1, it has a new feature that make a realtime report of 
Internet access with a php page from access.log's squid files. 
http://sarg.sourceforge.net/sarg.php
2005/12/6, Jakob Curdes
Benedek Frank schrieb:
>
>Is there however a tool, that can generate a real time report, kind of 
>like Monitoring the current access to the internet? Lets say, I can see
>a really high throughput on the firewall, and I would like to check who
>is doing what at the time. Is it possible?
>
> 
You can have a look at ntop - although this has nothing to do with
squid, you can identify high volume users using it.

Yours,
Jakob Curdes

Reply via email to