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Stone Steps Webalizer is a fast command line application for web server and web proxy
log file analysis. It supports multiple log formats (Squid, IIS, CLF and Apache) and
produces highly customizable HTML reports in many languages. Stone Steps Webalizer is
distributed under the GNU General Public License license (GPL)
and is available as source and binary distributions.
Stone Steps Webalizer is a fork of
The Webalizer,
originally developed by
Bradford L. Barrett in 1997. Active development of The Webalizer was
stopped in 2002. Stone Steps Webalizer was created in September of 2004
and grew since then from the original 10249 source lines of code to
17421 lines in v2.7, to 28920 lines in v3.2.
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- 18-Jul-2009
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.8.0 has been released. This release addresses two build
issues on 64-bit Linux. Please, note that in order to run Windows
binaries, you will need to install
Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 Redistributable Package (x86).
Release Notes
Download
- 18-Apr-2009
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.7.1 has been released. This release introduces
context-sensitive help in XML reports, as well as better separation between
human, robot and spammer statistics. All content contributions for
context-sensitive help files are very welcome.
Release Notes
- 11-Jan-2009
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.6.1 has been released. This release adds View All
links to XML reports. Clicking any of the View All links expands the report
containing the link to show all report items, up to a configurable maximum.
Starting with this release, all HideX configuration parameters are processed
during report generation, which makes it possible to generate a report with a
new set of hidden items without having to re-process all log files.
Release Notes
- 02-Nov-2008
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.5.1 has been released. This release adds two new
command line options to simplify batch processing and provides functionality to
generate index and top item reports (e.g. top hosts, etc) in XML, which can be
styled through XSL style sheets included in all distributions. This release also
contains two sample XSL style sheets to produce Flash graphs.
Release Notes
- 04-Aug-2008
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.4.4 has been released. This release addresses
several critical bugs described in the release notes. It also includes a preview
of a new report format (XML), which allows webmasters to use 3rd-party charting
components with Stone Steps Webalizer reports.
Release Notes
- 13-Apr-2008
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.3.1 has been released. This release adds visitor
conversion rate to the monthly summary report and extends the daily report with
hourly averages and maximums for all columns. Windows binaries have been rebuilt
to work on older Intel and AMD x86 CPUs.
Release Notes
- 03-Feb-2008
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.2.1 has been released. This release provides the
functionality to exclude and rename user agent identity elements and process
IIS logs without the date field.
Release Notes
- 07-Jan-2008
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.1.2 has been released. This release is primarily
intended to address two critical bugs described in the release notes.
Release Notes
- 25-Nov-2007
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.1.0 has been released. New in this version is
robot tracking, as well as UTC log time stamp adjustment. Robot visits are
reported in the monthly totals report and robot activity is removed from the
country and entry/exit reports, so that reports better reflect human activity on
the website. This version also makes possible to convert UTC/GMT log time stamps
to local time, which makes it easier to interpret the hourly activity report.
Release Notes
- 22-Sep-2007
Stone Steps Webalizer v3.0.0 has been released for public testing. This version
is a major re-write of the state management functionality and replaced the existing
plain-text state file with a Berkeley DB database, which allows Stone Steps
Webalizer to avoid having to read the entire state file into memory and instead
just query the database when processing large log files. Domain name resolver
has been rewritten yet again to reduce the memory footprint. A few other
optimizations were introduced to improve overall processing speed.
Release Notes
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