Aknot Posted October 7, 2003 Posted October 7, 2003 The "new" cpanel APPEARS to be missing a section. I use to be able to tell which of my graphic files were being viewed the most. Now it only says gif. I have a need to know how much "bandwidth" a certain graphic is using. Thanks in advance for any help. Quote
TCH-JimE Posted October 7, 2003 Posted October 7, 2003 Hi, Intresting, where was it on the old CPanel? I have a feeling that it may be lost forever, but if you can describe where it used to be, I will have a good search for you Jim Quote
Aknot Posted October 7, 2003 Author Posted October 7, 2003 arrrggh. Sorry its just one of those things I took for granted. Looked at it once a month. It was in the stat section though. as a matter of fact I think it was the first link and I had to scroll to it. It appears to be replaced by an area that just says what file types have been the most viewed whereas before it broke it down by file name. Quote
TCH-JimE Posted October 7, 2003 Posted October 7, 2003 Hi, Right had a good butchers, although I still could have missed something. It would seem that the feature your talking about is no available. Really sorry! Jim Quote
Aknot Posted October 7, 2003 Author Posted October 7, 2003 Is there any other way to track usage of a particular file that is not associated with a page? Quote
TCH-JimE Posted October 7, 2003 Posted October 7, 2003 Hi, I believe that there are some programs that can help you with this by looking at server logs, but I am unsure which ones they will be. Sorry! Jim Quote
Wilexa Posted October 7, 2003 Posted October 7, 2003 Aknot... If you are desparate (and are just looking for specifics), you can always download the raw files from Cpanel, then filter/sort the entries in a speadsheet. You can count the lines that have the specific file you are looking for. Every hit shows up as a line in a log file, so you will see image files as well as page files. If there is a " 200 " in a log line, that means the file was downloaded successfully. If there is a " 304 " code instead, that means that the file was already in the browser's cache. The file wasn't downloaded, but the user saw the local copy. HTH, ... dave Quote
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