BeatLog
GoAccess
BeatLog | GoAccess | |
---|---|---|
5 | 76 | |
23 | 17,523 | |
- | - | |
4.0 | 9.2 | |
about 1 year ago | 3 days ago | |
Python | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
BeatLog
- Show up your code and and get a thoughtful feedback from 25+ years developer
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Creosote - Identify unused dependencies and avoid a bloated virtual environment
I could give it a test with one of my projects, if scanning my local, development venv yields some changes.
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Looking to help out with Flask web app projects!
I'll throw this on here for any help/collaboration welcome: https://github.com/NBPub/BeatLog
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NGINX / fail2ban Log Reader - for YOU
all docker images built via Github workflows
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Parse your NGINX logs with BeatLog -- silly name, serious data
Github: https://github.com/NBPub/BeatLog Installation, Setup Guide Map Demo Report Demo
GoAccess
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You don't need analytics on your blog
If one wants server-side metrics with a little more info than the author's "hacky little script", there's always goaccess [1], which functions in broadly the same way. I even use it with Firebase Hosting-hosted sites via [2] (which I wrote).
[1] http://goaccess.io/
[2] https://github.com/Silicon-Ally/gcp-clf
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Using Analytics on My Website
> Just use GoAcces for fuck's sake.
GoAccess seems pretty cool and is probably a good task for the job, when you need something simple, thanks for recommending it: https://goaccess.io/
Even if you have analytics of some sort already in place, I think it'd probably still be a nice idea to run GoAccess on your server, behind some additional auth, so you can check up on how the web servers are performing.
That said, I'd still say that the analytics solutions out there, especially self-hostable ones like Matomo, are quite nice and can have both UIs that are very easy to interact with for the average person (e.g. filtering data by date range, or by page/view that was interacted with), as well as have a plethora of different datasets: https://matomo.org/features/
I think it can be useful to have a look at what sorts of devices are mostly being used to interact with your site, what operating systems and browsers are in use, how people navigate through the site, where do they enter the site from and how they find it, what the front end performance is like, or even how your e-commerce site is doing, at a glance, in addition to seeing how this changes over time.
People have also said good things about Plausible Analytics as well: https://plausible.io/
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How do {you} analyze apache log files?
Maybe, if it's just local and need just information, maybe https://goaccess.io is an option.
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Show HN: Why Google Analytics May Not Be the Best Option for Your Website (2023)
I run goaccess on a cron job and have paired it with a MaxMind GeoIP database so that you can see where people are coming from etc.
https://goaccess.io/
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Working on Ubuntu: File does not exist on the server, how to create it
file on GitHub.
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Display real time visitors statistics of a website
There is small programm for linux https://goaccess.io/
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Monitoring traefik access logs easily
I heard about https://goaccess.io/ (and even tested it) but first, nothing about tracing logs, and I think that the provided HTML dashboard isn't enough security-oriented for me but it's more about monitoring your customer volume... It does -partially- fit my case.
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Google Analytics alternative that protects your data and your customers' privacy
Loved AWStats! Still can be useful — but bots, client side caching, CDNs, and did I mention bots..? have made the data hard to rely on for much. A while ago I switched from AWStats to GoAccess (https://goaccess.io/) for this kind of thing. I prefer its interface, and it's way way faster to churn through big log files (C vs. Perl).
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Show HN: Google Analytics alternative with the most generous free tier
matomo and goatcounter are nice, but there are even solutions which don't need any extra CPU or any extra client request:
• https://goaccess.io/
• https://www.awstats.org/
Both of them are free/open-source.
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Setup GoAccess in Ubuntu/Linux with Docker and Real-Cad & access over domain/sub-domain
GoAccess is a powerful web log analyzer that generates real-time web traffic statistics.
What are some alternatives?
creosote - Identify unused dependencies and avoid a bloated virtual environment.
AWStats - AWStats Log Analyzer project (official sources)
quilly - A simple privacy-first, self-hosted, markdown based note taking webapp, written in python.
Elasticsearch - Free and Open, Distributed, RESTful Search Engine
pip-licenses - Dump the license list of packages installed with pip.
Matomo - Empowering People Ethically with the leading open source alternative to Google Analytics that gives you full control over your data. Matomo lets you easily collect data from websites & apps and visualise this data and extract insights. Privacy is built-in. Liberating Web Analytics. Star us on Github? +1. And we love Pull Requests!
docker-swag - Nginx webserver and reverse proxy with php support and a built-in Certbot (Let's Encrypt) client. It also contains fail2ban for intrusion prevention.
Plausible Analytics - Simple, open source, lightweight (< 1 KB) and privacy-friendly web analytics alternative to Google Analytics.
athena - Open Source Sanity Checking framework
Open Web Analytics - Official repository for Open Web Analytics which is an open source alternative to commercial tools such as Google Analytics. Stay in control of the data you collect about the use of your website or app. Please consider sponsoring this project.
graylog - Free and open log management
nginx-proxy-manager-goaccess - NGINX Proxy Manager and Goaccess docker file