i've never used it, but doesn't webalizer do the job? it should chart everything out for you as well.
_________________________________ daniel a. g. quinn starving programmer it could probably be shown by facts and figures that there is no distinctly native american criminal class except congress. - mark twain ----- Original Message ----- Sent: Monday, July 29, 2002 3:47 PM Subject: Re: monitor virtual hosts | I've had this dilemma forever. Here's what I've settled on . It doesn't | monitor traffic in real time but it's the next best thing. | | There is a webserver log analysis program called wwwstat-2.0, download and | install it. | http://ftp.ics.uci.edu/pub/websoft/wwwstat/ | | I'm sure there are others that would do the same job, this just happens to be | the one I used. | | I hacked up the output to only give me the total bytes. I then wrote a small | bash script that, once a week (cron), finds all the "access_log" 's on the | box and runs this program against them and outputs the username along with | the total bytes for each then fires the summary off in a email. | | At least I'm now able to tell who's using a excess bandwidth. | | If you suddenly have one virtual using a lot of bandwidth, you can attempt to | use Apache's "server-status" to try and narrow down which virtual. | http://httpd.apache.org/docs/mod/mod_status.html | | Lastly, if anyone has a better solution I'd love to hear it. | | On Monday 29 July 2002 02:35 pm, Chris Mason wrote: | > I use iptraf to see what connections are on my server, but ther is no | > way to know what websites are getting traf | <-------snip------> _______________________________________________ Redhat-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list