De statistieken worden door verzorgd door Webalizer (version 2.01) en geven een getrouw beeld hoeveel bezoekers uw website heeft. Daarnaast beschikt u over de volgende overzichten: overzicht per dag; overzicht per uur; url's; eerste; laatste; hosts; verwijzers; zoekopdrachten; gebruikersnamen; browsers en landen.
Hieronder vindt u extra uitleg hoe u deze statistieken moet lezen:
Hits represent the total number of
requests made to the server during the given time period (month, day,
hour etc..).
Files
represent the total number of hits (requests) that actually resulted
in something being sent back to the user. Not all hits will send
data, such as 404-Not Found requests and requests for pages that
are already in the browsers cache.
Tip:
By looking at the difference between hits and files, you can get
a rough indication of repeat visitors, as the greater the difference
between the two, the more people are requesting pages they already
have cached (have viewed already).
Sites
is the number of unique IP addresses/hostnames that made requests
to the server. Care should be taken when using this metric for
anything other than that. Many users can appear to come from a
single site, and they can also appear to come from many ip addresses
so it should be used simply as a rough guage as to the number
of visitors to your server.
Visits
occur when some remote site makes a request for a page
on your server for the first time. As long as the same site keeps
making requests within a given timeout period, they will all be
considered part of the same Visit. If the site makes a
request to your server, and the length of time since the last
request is greater than the specified timeout period (default
is 30 minutes), a new Visit is started and counted,
and the sequence repeats. Since only pages will trigger
a visit, remotes sites that link to graphic and other non- page
URLs will not be counted in the visit totals, reducing the number
of false visits.
Pages
are those URLs that would be considered the actual page being
requested, and not all of the individual items that make it up
(such as graphics and audio clips). Some people call this metric
page views or page impressions, and defaults to
any URL that has an extension of .htm, .html or
.cgi. A KByte
(KB) is 1024 bytes (1 Kilobyte). Used to show the amount of data
that was transfered between the server and the remote machine,
based on the data found in the server log.