head	1.10;
access;
symbols
	RELEASE_8_3_0:1.10
	RELEASE_9_0_0:1.10
	RELEASE_7_4_0:1.9
	RELEASE_8_2_0:1.9
	RELEASE_6_EOL:1.9
	RELEASE_8_1_0:1.9
	RELEASE_7_3_0:1.9
	RELEASE_8_0_0:1.9
	RELEASE_7_2_0:1.9
	RELEASE_7_1_0:1.8
	RELEASE_6_4_0:1.8
	RELEASE_5_EOL:1.8
	RELEASE_7_0_0:1.8
	RELEASE_6_3_0:1.8
	PRE_XORG_7:1.8
	RELEASE_4_EOL:1.7
	RELEASE_6_2_0:1.7
	RELEASE_6_1_0:1.7
	RELEASE_5_5_0:1.7
	RELEASE_6_0_0:1.6
	RELEASE_5_4_0:1.6
	RELEASE_4_11_0:1.6
	RELEASE_5_3_0:1.6
	RELEASE_4_10_0:1.6
	RELEASE_5_2_1:1.5
	RELEASE_5_2_0:1.5
	RELEASE_4_9_0:1.5
	RELEASE_5_1_0:1.5
	RELEASE_4_8_0:1.5
	RELEASE_5_0_0:1.5
	RELEASE_4_7_0:1.5
	RELEASE_4_6_2:1.5
	RELEASE_4_6_1:1.5
	RELEASE_4_6_0:1.5
	RELEASE_5_0_DP1:1.5
	RELEASE_4_5_0:1.5
	RELEASE_4_4_0:1.4
	RELEASE_4_3_0:1.4
	RELEASE_4_2_0:1.4
	RELEASE_4_1_1:1.3
	RELEASE_4_1_0:1.3
	RELEASE_3_5_0:1.3
	RELEASE_4_0_0:1.3
	RELEASE_3_4_0:1.3
	RELEASE_3_3_0:1.3
	RELEASE_3_2_0:1.2
	RELEASE_3_1_0:1.1.1.1
	RELEASE_2_2_8:1.1.1.1
	RELEASE_3_0_0:1.1.1.1
	RELEASE_2_2_7:1.1.1.1
	v1_12_09:1.1.1.1
	BRADFORD:1.1.1;
locks; strict;
comment	@# @;


1.10
date	2011.10.24.09.11.30;	author dougb;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.9;

1.9
date	2009.03.19.21.09.05;	author dinoex;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.8;

1.8
date	2007.02.10.06.31.13;	author dinoex;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.7;

1.7
date	2005.09.16.04.05.34;	author dinoex;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.6;

1.6
date	2004.03.20.20.35.25;	author dinoex;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.5;

1.5
date	2001.11.20.22.33.58;	author lioux;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.4;

1.4
date	2000.10.10.04.31.37;	author kevlo;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.3;

1.3
date	99.06.10.08.15.24;	author steve;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.2;

1.2
date	99.05.03.04.42.02;	author mharo;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.1;

1.1
date	98.06.28.12.42.09;	author andreas;	state Exp;
branches
	1.1.1.1;
next	;

1.1.1.1
date	98.06.28.12.42.09;	author andreas;	state Exp;
branches;
next	;


desc
@@


1.10
log
@The vast majority of pkg-descr files had the following format when they
had both lines:

Author: ...
WWW: ....

So standardize on that, and move them to the end of the file when necessary.

Also fix some more whitespace, and remove more "signature tags" of varying
forms, like -- name, etc.

s/AUTHOR/Author/

A few other various formatting issues
@
text
@What is The Webalizer?
----------------------

A fast, free web server log file analysis program.  Produces
HTML output for viewing with a web browser.  Written in C on
a Linux platform, however designed to be as ANSI/POSIX
compliant as possible so porting to other UNIX platforms should
be painless.  Binary distributions for most popular platforms
are available.  Features multiple language support, incremental
processing capabilities, reverse DNS lookup support, export via
tab separated ascii files to popular databases and spreadsheets,
and much more.  Supports standard CLF and combined logs, as well
as wu-ftpd xferlog and squid proxy logs, which can be either in
standard text format or gzip compressed.

Keywords:      Web Analysis, Log Analysis, Usage Statistics, Linux, Unix 

LICENSE: GPL2 or later

Author: Bradford L. Barrett 
WWW: http://www.mrunix.net/webalizer/
@


1.9
log
@- add LICENSE:
@
text
@a16 1
Author:        Bradford L. Barrett 
d20 1
@


1.8
log
@- update URL
Submitted by:	Andrey Chernov
@
text
@d18 3
a20 2
Maintained-by: Bradford L. Barrett 
Copying-policy: GPL
a21 1
WWW: http://sysd.org/stas/node/10
@


1.7
log
@- updated urls
@
text
@d21 1
a21 1
WWW: http://sysd.org/proj/log.php#glzr
@


1.6
log
@- fix spelling
Submitted by:	olgeni
@
text
@d19 1
d21 1
a21 4
Alternate-site:http://samhain.unix.cslab.tuwien.ac.at/webalizer/
FTP: ftp://www.mrunix.net/pub/webalizer/
Platforms:     Linux, SCO, other UNIX's 
Copying-policy: GPL
@


1.5
log
@Style police: remove trailing space in WWW tag
@
text
@d11 1
a11 1
tab seperated ascii files to popular databases and spreadsheets,
@


1.4
log
@Update to version 2.1.5

PR: 21876
Submitted by: MAINTAINER
@
text
@d19 1
a19 1
WWW: http://www.mrunix.net/webalizer/ 
@


1.3
log
@Update to version 1.22.6.

PR:		12101
Submitted by:	maintainer
@
text
@d4 11
a14 11
The Webalizer is a web server log file analysis program which produces
usage statistics in HTML format for viewing with a browser.  The results
are presented in both columnar and graphical format, which facilitates
interpretation.  Yearly, monthly, daily and hourly usage statistics are
presented, along with the ability to display usage by site, URL, referrer,
user agent (browser) and country (user agent and referrer are only
available if your web server procduces Combined log format files).

The Webalizer supports CLF (common log format) log files, as well as
Combined log formats as defined by NCSA and others, and variations
of these which it attempts to handle intelligently.
d20 1
@


1.2
log
@Yet more WWW: fun.
@
text
@d19 2
a20 2
WWW:  http://www.mrunix.net/webalizer/ 
Original-site: ftp://www.mrunix.net/pub/webalizer/
@


1.1
log
@Initial revision
@
text
@d19 1
a19 2
Primary-site:  http://www.mrunix.net/webalizer/ 
Alternate-site:
@


1.1.1.1
log
@Import of new port webalizer 1.12.09
The Webalizer is a web server log file analysis program which produces
usage statistics in HTML format for viewing with a browser.  The results
are presented in both columnar and graphical format, which facilitates
interpretation.  Yearly, monthly, daily and hourly usage statistics are
presented, along with the ability to display usage by site, URL, referrer,
user agent (browser) and country (user agent and referrer are only
available if your web server procduces Combined log format files).
PR:		closes 7000
Submitted by:	dirk.meyer@@dinoex.sub.org
@
text
@@
