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Site Statistics


The statistics report contains the following information:

  • the number of hits, 304's, files, pageviews, sessions, data sent (in KB)
  • the amount of data requested, transferred, and saved by cache (in KB)
  • the number of unique URLs, sites, and sessions per month
  • the number of all response codes other than 200 (OK)
  • the average hits per weekday and for last week
  • the maximum/average hits per day and per hour
  • the number of hits, files, 304's, sites, data sent by day
  • the top 5 days, 24 hours, 5 minutes and 5 seconds of the summary period
  • the top 30 most commonly accessed URLs (hits, 304's, data sent)
  • the 10 least frequently accessed URLs (hits, 304's, data sent)
  • the top 30 client domains accessing your server most often
  • the top 30 browser types
  • the top 30 referrer hosts
  • the overview/detailed list of all files requested
  • the overview/detailed list of all sites by domain and reverse domain
  • the overview/detailed list of all browser types
  • the overview/detailed list of all referrer URLs
  • The following table summarizes the meaning of all terms in the statistics report which are not self-explanatory:

    Term Meaning
    Hits A hit is any response from the server on behalf of a request sent from a browser. This includes any response from the server, not only text files or documents. If, for example, a HTML page has two images embedded, the server generates three hits if this page is requested: one hit for the HTML page itself and two hits for the two inline images.
    Files If the user requests a document and the server successfully sends back a file for this request, this is counted as a Code 200 (OK) response. Any such response is counted for as a file. Again, "file" here means any kind of a file.
    Code 304 A Code 304 (Not Modified) response is generated by the server if a document hasn't been updated since the last time it was requested by the user and therefore there was no need to actually send the files for this document. This happens if the browser (or a caching proxy server between the browser and your web server) still has an up-to-date copy of the page in it's local storage (cache) and therefore can display the page without requesting the actual content. This technique is used to reduce network traffic, but it also causes an inaccuracy in the statistics reports regarding the number of visitors, because the browser or proxy usually sends only one such a conditional request per user session if it still holds an up-to-date copy of the file. However, the ratio between files and 304's reflects the efficiency of overall caching mechanisms for at least those hits which made it's way to the server.
    Pageviews Pageviews are all files which either have a text file suffix ( .html , .text ) or which are directory index files. This number allows you to estimate the number of "real" documents transmitted by your server. If defined correctly, the analyzer rates text files (documents) as pageviews. Those pageviews do not include images, CGI scripts, Java applets or any other HTML objects except all files ending with one of the pre-defined pageview suffixes, such as .html or .text .
    Other responses There are many responses other than Code 200 (OK) and Code 304 (Not Modified) responses, especially in the coming standard, the HTTP 1.1 protocol specification. For example, the server could generate a Code 302 (Redirected) response if a page has moved, a Code 401 (Unauthorized Request) response if access to the document is denied or a Code 404 (Not Found) response if the requested page does not exist on this server. See the HTML specification for information about all valid responses from a web server.
    KBytes transferred This is the amount of data sent during the whole summary period as reported by the server. Note that some servers log the size of a document instead of the actual number of bytes transferred.
    KBytes requested This is the amount of data requested during the whole summary period. http-analyze computes this number by summing up the values of KBytes transferred and KBytes saved by cache (see below).
    KBytes saved by cache The amount of data saved by various caching mechanisms such as in proxy servers or in browsers. This value is computed by multiplying the number of Code 304 (Not Modified) requests per file with the size of the corresponding file. Note: Because http-analyze can determine the size of a file only if the file has been requested at least once in the same summary period, the values for KBytes saved by cache and KBytes requested are just approximations of the real values.
    Unique URLs Unique URLs are the number of all different, valid URLs requested in a given summary period. This shows you the number of all different files requested at least once in the corresponding summary period.
    Unique sites This is the sum of all unique hosts accessing the server during a given time-window . The time-window is hardwired to the length of the current month. This means that if a host accesses your server very often, it gets counted only once during the whole month. Only the sum of the unique hosts per month is listed in the statistics report.
    Sessions Similar to unique sites , this is the number of unique hosts accessing the server during a given time-window. This time-window is one day by default for backward compatibility, but it can be changed with the option -u or the Session   directive in the configuration file. For example, if the time-window is two hours, all accesses from a certain host in less than 2 hours after the first access from this host are lumped together into one session. All following accesses more than 2 hours apart from the first access will be counted as a new session. This way you may get an estimated number of how many sessions are started on different sites to access your server.


    HTTP-Analyze


    Your account comes with software for statistical analysis called "HTTP-Analyze". It analyzes the raw log files in your [domain]-logs folder and creates a comprehensive summary report from the information found there.

    It's important to know what the product does, and what its limitations are. Since you have access to your raw log files, you have the ability to use any 3rd-party log analyzer you like, if you find that HTTP-Analyze doesn't meet your requirements.

    HTTP-Analyze can give you detailed stats on where your visitors came from, how many pages they visited, which were the most popular ones, etc. It also allows you to view graphical reports right from your Control Panel. However, HTTP-Analyze can not give you the email addresses of your visitors or tell you what search terms were used to find your site.


    An Important Note About Disk Storage and Logs


    Some of the report files generated by HTTP-Analyze do count against your storage allotment. It's important to know what takes up space and what doesn't:

    What counts:
    - All HTML files generated by HTTP-Anzlyze stored in the 'stats' and 'stats/www200x' folders.

    What doesn't:
    - The raw log files stored in [domain]-logs
    - The archive files (ending in .gz) created by the stats program in the 'stats' folder

    If your site has a lot of traffic, or has been around for a while on our servers, it is possible for the HTML files created by the program to grow quite large.


    Deleting Log Files


    If you are looking to conserve space, you are welcome to delete the files in 'stats' and below. However, the server will re-create this folder every night by parsing the logs stored in [domain]-logs. Roughly 6-8 weeks worth of logs are stored in the [domain]-logs folder at any given time. So by deleting files in 'stats' you may reduce the space used as older months will not be re-parsed, but you will not eliminate the space used entirely. There is no need to ever delete raw logs in the [domain]-logs folder since they do not count against storage.

     


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