It does have a useful Browsers ▸ Unknown page where you can see a list of the User-Agents it considers to be "Unknown" web browsers. The AWStats code contains a decent, but not great or complete, list of web crawlers. It is a real privacy-concern if you make your statistics publicly available. Listing a bunch of random IP addresses seems kind of meaningless, and AWStats will create a page with all the IPs who last visited your site (with or without reverse DNS lookups) if that's enabled. As an example, if you use it with MediaWiki you will want to add: That's good, because some manual configuration will likely be required depending on what web server and web content management system you use. Most of it's length is comments the default example configuration file has 10+ lines above each item with a detailed description of what a configuration value does. The default configuration file is very long. The same goes for all the other things AWStats makes statistics of.ĪWStats is highly configurable, but only to a degree. You can expand the short list of operating systems used by visitors on the "Summary page" and get a very long list. How many items are shown in the summary in each section is configurable. Most of the items listed in the Summary offer a "Full list" view where you can see more than just the top 10 items, or top XXX.
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