AWStats Revision as of Sunday, 20 December 2015 at 19:56 UTC
Installation
Cron entry
This generates the static HTML pages. Since my logrotate config runs
daily, I’ll set the job to run at that frequency as well.
I added this to /etc/cron.daily/awstats-blog
:
#!/bin/bash
STATIC_DIR="/var/www/html/stats"
YEAR=$(date +"%Y")
MONTH=$(date +"%m")
LOG_DIR=$STATIC_DIR/$YEAR/$MONTH
mkdir -p $LOG_DIR
/usr/local/awstats/tools/awstats_buildstaticpages.pl -dir=$LOG_DIR -config=blog.example.com -update
Don’t forget to make it executable and try it out :)
Importing historic log data
Generating data files
I had previous logfiles in /var/log/nginx
that looked like this as a
result of logrotate:
blog.access.log-20130625.gz
blog.access.log-20130626.gz
blog.access.log-20130628.gz
blog.access.log-20130701.gz
blog.access.log-20130703.gz
blog.access.log-20130704.gz
blog.access.log-20130705.gz
To import these, I removed the AWStats database files in
/var/lib/awstats/blog
. I then temporarily changed the “LogFile
”
parameter in the config file (/etc/awstats/awstats.blog.example.conf
)
to this:
LogFile="zcat /var/log/nginx/blog.access.log*.gz |"
Should be self-exlanatory. Then ran the update script as usual:
/usr/local/awstats/tools/awstats_updateall.pl now
This generated the older database entries. There are
other
methods as well, especially if
you don’t have access to your older records.
You should now regenerate the static HTML.
Regenerating static HTML pages
For the months and years you have log files for, write two small for
loops!
for YEAR in $(seq 2010 2013); do
for MONTH in $(seq --format="%02g" 5 8); do
STATSDIR=/var/www/html/stats/$YEAR/$MONTH
mkdir -p $STATSDIR
/usr/local/awstats/tools/awstats_buildstaticpages.pl -dir=$STATSDIR -month=$MONTH -year=$YEAR -config=blog.example.com
done
done
Ta da!
Category: Nikhil’s Notes
Category: Installation Logs
Category: Linux