944 lines (831 with data), 32.5 kB
# sarg.conf
#
# TAG: access_log file
# Where is the access.log file
#
# This option can be repeated multiple times to list rotated files or
# files from different sources.
#
# The files named here must exists or sarg aborts. It is intended as a
# safety against incomplete reporting due to problems occuring with the
# logs.
#
# If the file globbing was compiled in, the file name can contain shell
# wildcards such as * and ?. Tilde expension and variable expension are
# not supported. Special characters can be escaped with a backslash.
#
# If some files are passed on the command line with "sarg -l file" or
# "sarg file", the files listed here are ignored.
#
#access_log /usr/local/squid/var/logs/access.log
# TAG: graphs yes|no
# Use graphics where is possible.
# graph_days_bytes_bar_color blue|green|yellow|orange|brown|red
#
#graphs yes
#graph_days_bytes_bar_color orange
# TAG: graph_font
# The full path to the TTF font file to use to create the graphs. It is required
# if graphs is set to yes.
#
#graph_font /usr/share/fonts/truetype/ttf-dejavu/DejaVuSans.ttf
# TAG: title
# Especify the title for html page.
#
#title "Squid User Access Reports"
# TAG: font_face
# Especify the font for html page.
#
#font_face Tahoma,Verdana,Arial
# TAG: header_color
# Especify the header color
#
#header_color darkblue
# TAG: header_bgcolor
# Especify the header bgcolor
#
#header_bgcolor blanchedalmond
# TAG: font_size
# Especify the text font size
#
#font_size 9px
# TAG: header_font_size
# Especify the header font size
#
#header_font_size 9px
# TAG: title_font_size
# Especify the title font size
#
#title_font_size 11px
# TAG: background_color
# TAG: background_color
# Html page background color
#
# background_color white
# TAG: text_color
# Html page text color
#
#text_color #000000
# TAG: text_bgcolor
# Html page text background color
#
#text_bgcolor lavender
# TAG: title_color
# Html page title color
#
#title_color green
# TAG: logo_image
# Html page logo.
#
#logo_image none
# TAG: logo_text
# Html page logo text.
#
#logo_text ""
# TAG: logo_text_color
# Html page logo texti color.
#
#logo_text_color #000000
# TAG: logo_image_size
# Html page logo image size.
# width height
#
#image_size 80 45
# TAG: background_image
# Html page background image
#
#background_image none
# TAG: password
# User password file used by Squid authentication scheme
# If used, generate reports just for that users.
#
#password none
# TAG: temporary_dir
# Temporary directory name for work files
# sarg -w dir
#
#temporary_dir /tmp
# TAG: temporary_dir_path
# Path to append after the temporary_dir.
# For historical reasons it used to be /sarg before v2.4. The full temporary
# dir was, therefore, always the predicatble path /tmp/sarg. As it was considered
# unsafe to use a predictable name in the world writable /tmp directory, the path
# now used is a random unique name.
# When this parameter is left empty, sarg uses a unique temporary path such as
# sargXXXXXX where XXXXXX is replaced with a string to make the temporary dir unique
# on the system.
# The main drawback is that any temporary directory left over by a previous run of sarg
# pollutes /tmp and may fill the disk up if sarg tends to crash often.
# If you want to use a known fixed temporary path as it used to be prior to v2.4, you are
# advised to set temporary_dir to /var/lib and set temporary_dir_path to /sarg. Sarg must
# run as a user with the right to write to /var/lib/sarg.
#
#temporary_dir_path /sarg
# TAG: output_dir
# The reports will be saved in that directory
# sarg -o dir
#
#output_dir /var/www/html/squid-reports
# TAG: anonymous_output_files yes/no
# Use anonymous file and directory names in the report. If it is set to
# no (the default), the user id/ip/name is slightly mangled to create a
# suitable file name to store the report of the user but the user's
# identity can easily be guessed from the mangled name. If this option is
# set, any file or directory belonging to the user is replaced by a short
# number. The purpose is to hide the identity of the user when looking
# at the report file names but it may serve to shorten the path too.
#
#anonymous_output_files no
# TAG: output_email
# Email address to send the reports. If you use this tag, no html reports will be generated.
# sarg -e email
#
#output_email none
# TAG: resolve_ip modulelist
# List the modules to use to convert IP addresses into names.
# Each named module is tried in sequence until one returns a result. Therefore
# the order of the modules is relevant.
# The modules must be listed on one line each separated from the previous one with
# a space.
#
# The possible modules are
# dns Use the DNS.
# exec Call an external program with the IP address as argument.
#
# For compatibility with previous versions, yes is a synonymous for dns and
# no does nothing.
# sarg -n forces the use of the dns module.
#resolve_ip no
# TAG: resolve_ip_exec command
# If resolve_ip selects the exec module, this is the command to run to
# resolve an IP address. The command must contain a placeholder where the
# IP address is inserted. The placeholder must be %IP in uppercases. The
# placeholder may be repeated multiple times if necessary.
#
# The command is expected to return the host name without frills on its
# standard output. If the command returns nothing, it is assumed that the
# command could not resolve the IP address and the next module in the
# chain is given a try with the same address.
#
# This option can only be used once. Therefore there is only one command
# available to resolve an IP address but the program can do anything it
# deems fit including attempting several strategies.
#
# Beware that running an external program is exceedingly slow. So you
# should try the DNS first and only call an external program if the DNS
# fails.
#resolve_ip_exec nmblookup -A %IP | sed -n -e 's/^ *\(.*\) *<00> - *B.*/\1/p'
# TAG: user_ip yes/no
# Use Ip Address instead userid in reports.
# sarg -p
#user_ip no
# TAG: topuser_sort_field field normal/reverse
# Sort field for the Topuser Report.
# Allowed fields: USER CONNECT BYTES TIME
#
#topuser_sort_field BYTES reverse
# TAG: user_sort_field field normal/reverse
# Sort field for the User Report.
# Allowed fields: SITE CONNECT BYTES TIME
#
#user_sort_field BYTES reverse
# TAG: exclude_users file
# Users within the file will be excluded from reports.
# Write one user per line. Lines beginning with # are ignored.
#
#exclude_users none
# TAG: exclude_hosts file
# Hosts, domains or subnets will be excluded from reports.
#
# Eg.: 192.168.10.10 - exclude ip address only
# 192.168.10.0/24 - exclude full C class
# s1.acme.foo - exclude hostname only
# *.acme.foo - exclude full domain name
#
#exclude_hosts none
# TAG: useragent_log file
# useragent.log file to generate useragent report.
#
# This option may be repeated multiple times to process several files.
#
# Wildcards are allowed (see access_log).
#
# When this option is used the user_agent report is implicitly
# selected in report_type.
#
#useragent_log none
# TAG: date_format
# Date format in reports: e (European=dd/mm/yy), u (American=mm/dd/yy), w (Weekly=yy.ww)
#
#date_format u
# TAG: per_user_limit file MB ip/id
# Write the user's ID (if last flag is 'id') or the user's IP address (if last flag is 'ip')
# in file if download exceed n MB.
# This option allows you to disable user access if users exceed a download limit.
# The option may be repeated up to 16 times to generate several files with
# different content type or limit.
#
# Examples:
# per_user_limit userlimit_1G.txt 1000 ip
# per_user_limit /var/log/sarg/userlimit_500M.log 500 id
#
#per_user_limit none
# TAG: per_user_limit_file_create always/as_required
# When to create a per_user_limit file.
#
# Use 'always' to always create the file requested by per_user_limit
# even if it is empty.
#
# Use 'as_required' to create a per_user_limit file only if at least
# one user crosses the limit.
#
#per_user_limit_file_create always
# TAG: lastlog n
# How many reports files must be keept in reports directory.
# The oldest report file will be automatically removed.
# 0 - no limit.
#
#lastlog 0
# TAG: remove_temp_files yes
# Remove temporary files: geral, usuarios, top, periodo from root report directory.
#
#remove_temp_files yes
# TAG: index yes|no|only
# Generate the main index.html.
# only - generate only the main index.html
#
#index yes
# TAG: index_tree date|file
# How to generate the index.
#
#index_tree file
# TAG: index_fields
# The columns to show in the index of the reports
# Columns are: dirsize
#
#index_fields dirsize
# TAG: overwrite_report yes|no
# yes - if report date already exist then will be overwrited.
# no - if report date already exist then will be renamed to filename.n, filename.n+1
#
#overwrite_report no
# TAG: records_without_userid ignore|ip|everybody
# What can I do with records without user id (no authentication) in access.log file ?
#
# ignore - This record will be ignored.
# ip - Use ip address instead. (default)
# everybody - Use "everybody" instead.
#
#records_without_userid ip
# TAG: use_comma no|yes
# Use comma instead point in reports.
# Eg.: use_comma yes => 23,450,110
# use_comma no => 23.450.110
#
#use_comma no
# TAG: mail_utility
# Mail command to use to send reports via SMTP. Sarg calls it like this:
# mail_utility -s "SARG report, date" "output_email" <"mail_content"
#
# Therefore, it is possible to add more arguments to the command by specifying them
# here.
#
# If you need too, you can use a shell script to process the content of /dev/stdin
# (/dev/stdin is the mail_content passed by sarg to the script) and call whatever
# command you like. It is not limited to mailing the report via SMTP.
#
# Don't forget to quote the command if necessary (i.e. if the path contains
# characters that must be quoted).
#
#mail_utility mailx
# TAG: topsites_num n
# How many sites in topsites report.
#
#topsites_num 100
# TAG: topsites_sort_order CONNECT|BYTES|TIME|USER A|D
# Sort for topsites report, where A=Ascendent, D=Descendent
#
#topsites_sort_order CONNECT D
# TAG: index_sort_order A/D
# Sort for index.html, where A=Ascendent, D=Descendent
#
#index_sort_order D
# TAG: exclude_codes file
# Ignore records with these codes. Eg.: NONE/400
# Write one code per line. Lines starting with a # are ignored.
# Only codes matching exactly one of the line is rejected. The
# comparison is not case sensitive.
#
#exclude_codes /usr/local/sarg/etc/exclude_codes
# TAG: replace_index string
# Replace "index.html" in the main index file with this string
# If null "index.html" is used
#
#replace_index <?php echo str_replace(".", "_", $REMOTE_ADDR); echo ".html"; ?>
# TAG: max_elapsed milliseconds
# If elapsed time is recorded in log is greater than max_elapsed use 0 for elapsed time.
# Use 0 for no checking
#
#max_elapsed 28800000
# 8 Hours
# TAG: report_type type
# What kind of reports to generate.
# topusers - users, sites, times, bytes, connects, links to accessed sites, etc
# topsites - site, connect and bytes report
# sites_users - users and sites report
# users_sites - accessed sites by the user report
# date_time - bytes used per day and hour report
# denied - denied sites with full URL report
# auth_failures - autentication failures report
# site_user_time_date - sites, dates, times and bytes report
# downloads - downloads per user report
# user_agent - user agent identification strings report (this report is always selected
# if at least one file is provided with useragent option)
#
# Eg.: report_type topsites denied
#
#report_type topusers topsites sites_users users_sites date_time denied auth_failures site_user_time_date downloads user_agent
# TAG: usertab filename
# You can change the "userid" or the "ip address" to be a real user name on the reports.
# If resolve_ip is active, the ip address is resolved before being looked up into this
# file. That is, if you want to map the ip address, be sure to set resolv_ip to no or
# the resolved name will be looked into the file instead of the ip address. Note that
# it can be used to resolve any ip address known to the dns and then map the unresolved
# ip addresses to a name found in the usertab file.
# Table syntax:
# userid name or ip address name
# Eg:
# SirIsaac Isaac Newton
# vinci Leonardo da Vinci
# 192.168.10.1 Karol Wojtyla
#
# Each line must be terminated with '\n'
# If usertab have value "ldap" (case ignoring), user names
# will be taken from LDAP server. This method as approaches for reception
# of usernames from Active Didectory
#
#usertab none
# TAG: LDAPHost hostname
# FQDN or IP address of host with LDAP service or AD DC
# default is '127.0.0.1'
#LDAPHost 127.0.0.1
# TAG: LDAPPort port
# LDAP service port number
# default is '389'
#LDAPPort 389
# TAG: LDAPBindDN CN=username,OU=group,DC=mydomain,DC=com
# DN of LDAP user, who is authorized to read user's names from LDAP base
# default is empty line
#LDAPBindDN cn=proxy,dc=mydomain,dc=local
# TAG: LDAPBindPW secret
# Password of DN, who is authorized to read user's names from LDAP base
# default is empty line
#LDAPBindPW secret
# TAG: LDAPBaseSearch OU=users,DC=mydomain,DC=com
# LDAP search base
# default is empty line
#LDAPBaseSearch ou=users,dc=mydomain,dc=local
# TAG: LDAPFilterSearch (uid=%s)
# User search filter by user's logins in LDAP
# First founded record will be used
# %s - will be changed to userlogins from access.log file
# filter string can have up to 5 '%s' tags
# default value is '(uid=%s)'
#LDAPFilterSearch (uid=%s)
# TAG: LDAPTargetAttr attributename
# Name of the attribute containing a name of the user
# default value is 'cn'
#LDAPTargetAttr cn
# TAG: LDAPNativeCharset charset-iconv-style
# Character set to convert the LDAP string to.
# For the list of some available charsets use: "iconv -l".
# This option requires libiconv and sarg must have been built with --with-iconv.
# default is empty line (UTF-8)
#LDAPNativeCharset ISO-8859-1
# TAG: long_url yes|no
# If yes, the full url is showed in report.
# If no, only the site will be showed
#
# YES option generate very big sort files and reports.
#
#long_url no
# TAG: date_time_by bytes|elap
# Date/Time reports show the downloaded volume or the elapsed time or both.
#
#date_time_by bytes
# TAG: charset name
# ISO 8859 is a full series of 10 standardized multilingual single-byte coded (8bit)
# graphic character sets for writing in alphabetic languages
# You can use the following charsets:
# Latin1 - West European
# Latin2 - East European
# Latin3 - South European
# Latin4 - North European
# Cyrillic
# Arabic
# Greek
# Hebrew
# Latin5 - Turkish
# Latin6
# Windows-1251
# Japan
# Koi8-r
# UTF-8
#
#charset Latin1
# TAG: user_invalid_char "&/"
# Records that contain invalid characters in userid will be ignored by Sarg.
#
#user_invalid_char "&/"
# TAG: privacy yes|no
# privacy_string "***.***.***.***"
# privacy_string_color blue
# In some countries the sysadm cannot see the visited sites by a restrictive law.
# Using privacy yes the visited url will be changes by privacy_string and the link
# will be removed from reports.
#
#privacy no
#privacy_string "***.***.***.***"
#privacy_string_color blue
# TAG: include_users "user1:user2:...:usern"
# Reports will be generated only for listed users.
#
#include_users none
# TAG: exclude_string "string1:string2:...:stringn"
# Records from access.log file that contain one of listed strings will be ignored.
#
#exclude_string none
# TAG: show_successful_message yes|no
# Shows "Successful report generated on dir" at end of process.
#
#show_successful_message yes
# TAG: show_read_statistics yes|no
# Shows how many lines have been read from the current input log file.
#
#show_read_statistics no
# TAG: show_read_percent yes|no
# Shows how many percents have been read from the current input log file.
#
# Beware that this feature requires to read the input log file once to
# count the number of lines and then a second time to actually parse it.
# You can save some time by disabling it.
#
#show_read_percent no
# TAG: topuser_fields
# Which fields must be in Topuser report.
#
# Valid columns are
# NUM Report line number.
# DATE_TIME Icons to display the date and time reports.
# USERID Display the user's ID. It may be a name or the IP address depending on other settings.
# USERIP Display the user's IP address.
# CONNECT Number of connections made by the user.
# BYTES Number of bytes downloaded by the user.
# %BYTES Percent of the total downloaded volume.
# IN-CACHE-OUT Percent of cache hit and miss.
# USED_TIME How long it took to process the requests from that user.
# MILISEC The same in milliseconds
# %TIME Percent of the total processing time of the reported users.
# TOTAL Add a line to the report with the total of every column.
# AVERAGE Add a line to the report with the average of every column.
#topuser_fields NUM DATE_TIME USERID CONNECT BYTES %BYTES IN-CACHE-OUT USED_TIME MILISEC %TIME TOTAL AVERAGE
# TAG: user_report_fields
# Which fields must be in User report.
#
#user_report_fields CONNECT BYTES %BYTES IN-CACHE-OUT USED_TIME MILISEC %TIME TOTAL AVERAGE
# TAG: bytes_in_sites_users_report yes|no
# Bytes field must be in Site & Users Report ?
#
#bytes_in_sites_users_report no
# TAG: topuser_num n
# How many users in topsites report. 0 = no limit
#
#topuser_num 0
# TAG: datafile file
# Save the report results in a file to populate some database
#
#datafile none
# TAG: datafile_delimiter ";"
# ascii character to use as a field separator in datafile
#
#datafile_delimiter ";"
# TAG: datafile_fields all
# Which data fields must be in datafile
# user;date;time;url;connect;bytes;in_cache;out_cache;elapsed
#
#datafile_fields user;date;time;url;connect;bytes;in_cache;out_cache;elapsed
# TAG: datafile_url ip|name
# Saves the URL as ip or name in datafile
#
#datafile_url ip
# TAG: weekdays
# The weekdays to take into account ( Sunday->0, Saturday->6 )
# Example:
#weekdays 1-3,5
# Default:
#weekdays 0-6
# TAG: hours
# The hours to take into account
# Example:
#hours 7-12,14,16,18-20
# Default:
#hours 0-23
# TAG: dansguardian_conf file
# DansGuardian.conf file path
# Generate reports from DansGuardian logs.
# Use 'none' to disable it.
# dansguardian_conf /usr/dansguardian/dansguardian.conf
#
#dansguardian_conf none
# TAG: dansguardian_filter_out_date on|off
# This option replaces dansguardian_ignore_date whose name was not appropriate with respect to its action.
# Note the change of parameter value compared with the old option.
# 'off' use the record even if its date is outside of the range found in the input log file.
# 'on' use the record only if its date is in the range found in the input log file.
#
#dansguardian_filter_out_date on
# TAG: squidguard_conf file
# path to squidGuard.conf file
# Generate reports from SquidGuard logs.
# Use 'none' to disable.
# You can use sarg -L filename to use an alternate squidGuard log.
# squidguard_conf /usr/local/squidGuard/squidGuard.conf
#
#squidguard_conf none
# TAG: redirector_log file
# the location of the web proxy redirector log such as one created by squidGuard or Rejik. The option
# may be repeated up to 64 times to read multiple files.
# If this option is specified, it takes precedence over squidguard_conf.
# The command line option -L override this option.
#
#redirector_log /usr/local/squidGuard/var/logs/urls.log
# TAG: redirector_filter_out_date on|off
# This option replaces squidguard_ignore_date and redirector_ignore_date whose names were not
# appropriate with respect to their action.
# Note the change of parameter value compared with the old options.
# 'off' use the record even if its date is outside of the range found in the input log file.
# 'on' use the record only if its date is in the range found in the input log file.
#
#redirector_filter_out_date on
# TAG: redirector_log_format
# Format string for web proxy redirector logs.
# This option was named squidguard_log_format before sarg 2.3.
# REJIK #year#-#mon#-#day# #hour# #list#:#tmp# #ip# #user# #tmp#/#tmp#/#url#/#end#
# SQUIDGUARD #year#-#mon#-#day# #hour# #tmp#/#list#/#tmp# #url# #ip#/#tmp# #user# #end#
#redirector_log_format #year#-#mon#-#day# #hour# #tmp#/#list#/#tmp# #url# #ip#/#tmp# #user# #end#
# TAG: show_sarg_info yes|no
# shows sarg information and site path on each report bottom
#
#show_sarg_info yes
# TAG: show_sarg_logo yes|no
# shows sarg logo
#
#show_sarg_logo yes
# TAG: parsed_output_log directory
# Saves the processed log in a sarg format after parsing the squid log file.
# This is a way to dump all of the data structures out, after parsing from
# the logs (presumably this data will be much smaller than the log files themselves),
# and pull them back in for later processing and merging with data from previous logs.
#
#parsed_output_log none
# TAG: parsed_output_log_compress /bin/gzip|/usr/bin/bzip2|nocompress
# Command to run to compress sarg parsed output log. It may contain
# options (such as -f to overwrite existing target file). The name of
# the file to compresse is provided at the end of this
# command line. Don't forget to quote things appropriately.
#
#parsed_output_log_compress /bin/gzip
# TAG: displayed_values bytes|abbreviation
# how the values will be displayed in reports.
# eg. bytes - 209.526
# abbreviation - 210K
#
#displayed_values bytes
# Report limits
# TAG: authfail_report_limit n
# TAG: denied_report_limit n
# TAG: siteusers_report_limit n
# TAG: squidguard_report_limit n
# TAG: user_report_limit n
# TAG: dansguardian_report_limit n
# TAG: download_report_limit n
# report limits (lines).
# '0' no limit
#
#authfail_report_limit 10
#denied_report_limit 10
#siteusers_report_limit 0
#squidguard_report_limit 10
#dansguardian_report_limit 10
#user_report_limit 0
#download_report_limit 50
# TAG: www_document_root dir
# Where is your Web DocumentRoot
# Sarg will create sarg-php directory with some PHP modules:
# - sarg-squidguard-block.php - add urls from user reports to squidGuard DB
#
#www_document_root /var/www/html
# TAG: block_it module_url
# This tag allow you to pass urls from user reports to a cgi or php module,
# to be blocked by some Squid acl
#
# Eg.: block_it /sarg-php/sarg-block-it.php
# sarg-block-it is a php that will append a url to a flat file.
# You must change /var/www/html/sarg-php/sarg-block-it to point to your file
# in $filename variable, and chown to a httpd owner.
#
# sarg will pass http://module_url?url=url
#
#block_it none
# TAG: external_css_file path
# Provide the path to an external css file to link into the HTML reports instead of
# the inline css written by sarg when this option is not set.
#
# In versions prior to 2.3, this used to be an absolute file name to
# a file to include verbatim in each HTML page but, as it takes a lot of
# space, version 2.3 switched to a link to an external css file.
# Therefore, this option must contain the HTTP server path on which a client
# browser may find the css file.
#
# Sarg use theses style classes:
# .logo logo class
# .info sarg information class, align=center
# .title_c title class, align=center
# .header_c header class, align:center
# .header_l header class, align:left
# .header_r header class, align:right
# .text text class, align:right
# .data table text class, align:right
# .data2 table text class, align:left
# .data3 table text class, align:center
# .link link class
#
# Sarg can be instructed to output the internal css it inline
# into the reports with this command:
#
# sarg --css
#
# You can redirect the output to a file of your choice and edit
# it to your liking.
#
#external_css_file none
# TAG: user_authentication yes|no
# Allow user authentication in User Reports using .htaccess
# Parameters:
# AuthUserTemplateFile - The template to use to create the
# .htaccess file. In the template, %u is replaced by the
# user's ID for which the report is generated. The path of the
# template is relative to the directory containing sarg
# configuration file.
#
# user_authentication no
# AuthUserTemplateFile sarg_htaccess
# TAG: download_suffix "suffix,suffix,...,suffix"
# file suffix to be considered as "download" in Download report.
# Use 'none' to disable.
#
#download_suffix "zip,arj,bzip,gz,ace,doc,iso,adt,bin,cab,com,dot,drv$,lha,lzh,mdb,mso,ppt,rtf,src,shs,sys,exe,dll,mp3,avi,mpg,mpeg"
# TAG: ulimit n
# The maximum number of open file descriptors to avoid "Too many open files" error message.
# You need to run sarg as root to use ulimit tag.
# If you run sarg with a low privilege user, set to 'none' to disable ulimit
#
#ulimit 20000
# TAG: ntlm_user_format user|domainname+username
# NTLM users format.
#
#ntlm_user_format domainname+username
# TAG: strip_user_suffix suffix
# Remove a suffix from the user name. The suffix may be
# a Kerberos domain name. It must be at the end of the
# user name (as is implied by a suffix).
#
# This is a lightweight easy to configure option. For a
# more complete solution, see useralias.
#strip_user_suffix @example.com
# TAG: realtime_refresh_time num sec
# How many time to auto refresh the realtime report
# 0 = disable
#
# realtime_refresh_time 3
# TAG: realtime_access_log_lines num
# How many last lines to get from access.log file
#
# realtime_access_log_lines 1000
# TAG: realtime_types: GET,PUT,CONNECT,ICP_QUERY,POST
# Which records must be in realtime report.
#
# realtime_types GET,PUT,CONNECT,POST
# TAG: realtime_unauthenticated_records: ignore|show
# What to do with unauthenticated records in realtime report.
#
# realtime_unauthenticated_records: show
# TAG: squid24 on|off
# Compatilibity with squid version <= 2.4 when using emulate_http_log on
#
# squid24 off
# TAG: sorttable path
# The path to a javascript script to dynamically sort the tables.
# The path is the link a browser must follow to find the script. For instance,
# it may be http://www.myproxy.org/sorttable.js or just /sorttable.js if the script
# is at the root of your web site.
#
# If the path starts with "../" then it is assumed to be a relative
# path and sarg adds as many "../" as necessary to locate the js script from
# the output directory. Therefore, ../../sorttable.js links to the javascript
# one level above output_dir.
#
# If this entry is set, each sortable table will have the "sortable" class set.
# You may have a look at http://www.kryogenix.org/code/browser/sorttable/
# for the implementation on which sarg is based.
#
# sorttable /sorttable.js
# TAG: hostalias
# The name of a text file containing the host names one per line and the
# optional alias to use in the report instead of that host name. If the
# alias is missing, the host name is replaced by the matching pattern
# (that is, including the wildcard). For instance, in the example below,
# any host matching *.gstatic.com is grouped, in the report, under the
# text "*.gstatic.com".
#
# Host names may contain up to one wildcard denoted by a *. The wildcard
# must not end the host name.
#
# The host name may be followed by an optional alias but if no alias is
# provided, the host name, including the wildcard, replaces any matching
# host name found in the log.
#
# Host names replaced by identical aliases are grouped together in the
# reports.
#
# IP addresses are supported and accept the CIDR notation both for IPv4 and
# IPv6 addresses.
#
# Regular expressions can also be used if sarg was compiled with libpcre.
# A regular expression is formated as re:/regexp/ alias
# The regexp is a perl regular expression (see man perlre).
# Subpatterns are allowed in the alias. Sarg recognizes sed (\1) or perl ($1)
# subpatterns. Only 9 subpatterns are allowed in the replacement string.
# Regex are case sensitive by default. To have a case insensitive regex,
# defined it like this: re:/regexp/i alias
# The option "i" must be written with a lower case.
#
# Example:
# *.gstatic.com
# mt*.google.com
# *.myphone.microsoft.com
# *.myphone.microsoft.com:443 *.myphone.microsoft.com:secure
# *.freeav.net antivirus:freeav
# *.mail.live.com
# 65.52.00.00/14 *.mail.live.com
# re:/\.dropbox\.com(:443)?/ dropbox
# re:/([\w-]+)\.(\w*[a-zA-Z]\w*)(?::\d+)?$/ \1.\2
#hostalias /usr/local/sarg/hostalias
# TAG: useralias
# The name of a text file containing the user names one per line and the
# optional alias to use in the report instead of that user name.
# See the description of hostalias. It uses the same file format as the
# useralias option.
#
# Example:
# user454 John
# admin* Administrator
# re:/^(.*)@example.com$/i \1
#useralias /usr/local/sarg/useralias
# TAG: keep_temp_log yes|no
# Keep temporary files created by sarg to produce its reports. The normal
# operation mode is to delete those files when they are not necessary any more.
#
# Never leave that option to "yes" for normal operation as temporary files
# left over by previous run can be included in subsequent reports.
#
# Use this option only to diagnose a problem with your reports. A better
# alternative is to run sarg from the command line with optino -k.
#keep_temp_log no
# TAG: max_successive_log_errors n
# Set the number of consecutive errors allowed in the input log file before
# the reading is aborted with an error.
#max_successive_log_errors 3
# TAG: max_total_log_errors n
# The reading of the input log file is interrupted if too many errors are found
# in the log file. This parameter set the number of errors before the reading
# is aborted. Set it to -1 to keep reading the logs irrespective of the
# errors found.
#
# Note that the max_successive_log_errors is still taken into account and
# cannot be disabled.
#max_total_log_errors 50
# TAG: include conffile
# Include the specified conffile. The full path must be provided to
# make sure the correct file is loaded.
#
# Use this option to store common options in one file and include it
# in multiple sarg.conf dedicated to various reporting tasks.
#
# Options declared last take precedence. Use it to include a file and
# then override some options after the include statement. Beware that
# some options are cumulative such as access_log, useragent_log or
# redirector_log. You can't override those options as explained here.
# Declaring them in the common file and the including file will merely
# add the latter to the list.
#include /etc/sarg/sarg-common.conf