Download Web Server Log

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Downloading web server logs allows you to see the Apache log file of activity to your blog. The data in log files can be used to identify who visits your blog and what content is downloaded. Log files are available in text format, and logs must be parsed in order to be processed or to make the data easily readable. See the Apache help for more information on Apache log files.

All confidential information has been removed from the log files.

Log files are generated once a day, and will appear between 12 midnight and 4 a.m. Eastern time for the previous day if there was activity to your blog. Seven days of logs are kept.

 

In this topic

Downloading web server logs

Sample log entry

Downloading log files via FTP

 

 

Downloading web server logs

1.Click the Dashboard tab.
2.From the options listed below the Dashboard tab, click the Site Stats link. The Web Stats page opens.
3.From the Detailed Stats section, click Download Web Server Log. The logs for the last seven days are listed. The last seven days will always be listed Sunday to Saturday, in that order, regardless of the current day of the week. See the value in the Generation Date column to identify the day for which you want to download data.

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4.Click the day for which you want to download the log file of activity.
5.Once you've downloaded the log file, you can extract the data by parsing the log file.

 

 

Sample log entry

Each log file includes one entry for each activity. This is an example of a single entry with a description of the information included in the entry.

[17/Jan/2006:08:30:46 -0500](TIME) 0(LENGTH) 200(RESULT) 11202(BYTES) POST(METHOD) blog.blogware.com(REQUESTED HOST) 10.0.12.165(REQUESTOR) "/blog/"(RESOURCE REQUESTED) "http://blog.blogware.com/blog/_archives/2006/1/16/84.html"(REFERRER)

"Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.7.8) Gecko/20050927 Debian/1.7.8-1sarge3"(BROWSER TYPE) "POST /blog/ HTTP/1.1"(LINE) - - "text/html"(TYPE)

 

TIME

Time that the request was made. This is in Eastern time (the location of the servers).

LENGTH

How long it took to serve the request.

RESULT

The result code of the request, which includes: 200 and 300 series (success), 400- unable to fulfill request, 500- internal server errors.

BYTES

How many bytes were sent, excluding HTTP headers.

METHOD

Request method. Common methods include GET (to get info), POST (to post an article, comment, etc.).

REQUESTED HOST

The hostname of the blog that was requested.

REQUESTOR

The IP address of the requester.

RESOURCE REQUESTED

The particular area or file on the blog that was requested (viewed).

REFERRER

The site that referred them to the blog.

BROWSER TYPE

The type of browser that accessed the blog.

LINE

The first line of request.

TYPE

Response content type.

 

 

Downloading log files via FTP

Instead of downloading log files from the Publisher Control Panel, you can receive log files using an FTP client.  This enables you to automate how you get the data on a daily basis. See Uploading files via FTP for more information.

A folder called _weblogs has been added to your blog's folder directory. Inside that folder there will be up to 14 files; two files for each of the last seven days.  One file contains the log data (e.g., 1.log), while the second file contains the date of that log file (e.g., 1.log.meta).

The files in the _weblogs folder always have the same filename:

1.log        

1.log.meta

log file for the most recent Monday

date of that Monday's log file

2.log

2.log.meta

log file for the most recent Tuesday

date of that Tuesday's log file

3.log

3.log.meta

log file for the most recent Wednesday

date of that Wednesday's log file

4.log

4.log.meta

log file for the most recent Thursday

date of that Thursday's log file

5.log

5.log.meta

log file for the most recent Friday

date of that Friday's log file

6.log

6.log.meta

log file for the most recent Saturday

date of that Saturday's log file

7.log

7.log.meta

log file for the most recent Sunday

date of that Sunday's log file