23,450,110 # use_comma no => 23.450.110 # use_comma {$use_comma} # TAG: mail_utility # Mail command to use to send reports via SMTP. Sarg calls it like this: # mail_utility -s "SARG report, date" "output_email" <"mail_content" # # Therefore, it is possible to add more arguments to the command by specifying them # here. # # If you need too, you can use a shell script to process the content of /dev/stdin # (/dev/stdin is the mail_content passed by sarg to the script) and call whatever # command you like. It is not limited to mailing the report via SMTP. # # Don't forget to quote the command if necessary (i.e. if the path contains # characters that must be quoted). # #mail_utility mailx # TAG: topsites_num n # How many sites in topsites report. # #topsites_num 100 # TAG: topsites_sort_order CONNECT|BYTES|TIME A|D # Sort for topsites report, where A=Ascendent, D=Descendent # #topsites_sort_order CONNECT D # TAG: index_sort_order A/D # Sort for index.html, where A=Ascendent, D=Descendent # #index_sort_order D # TAG: exclude_codes file # Ignore records with these codes. Eg.: NONE/400 # Write one code per line. Lines starting with a # are ignored. # Only codes matching exactly one of the line is rejected. The # comparison is not case sensitive. # exclude_codes /usr/local/etc/sarg/exclude_codes # TAG: replace_index string # Replace "index.html" in the main index file with this string # If null "index.html" is used # #replace_index # TAG: max_elapsed milliseconds # If elapsed time is recorded in log is greater than max_elapsed use 0 for elapsed time. # Use 0 for no checking # #max_elapsed 28800000 # 8 Hours max_elapsed {$max_elapsed} # 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 # # Eg.: report_type topsites denied # #report_type topusers topsites sites_users users_sites date_time denied auth_failures site_user_time_date downloads report_type {$report_type} # TAG: usertab filename # You can change the "userid" or the "ip address" to be a real user name on the reports. # If resolve_ip is active, the ip address is resolved before being looked up into this # file. That is, if you want to map the ip address, be sure to set resolv_ip to no or # the resolved name will be looked into the file instead of the ip address. Note that # it can be used to resolve any ip address known to the dns and then map the unresolved # ip addresses to a name found in the usertab file. # Table syntax: # userid name or ip address name # Eg: # SirIsaac Isaac Newton # vinci Leonardo da Vinci # 192.168.10.1 Karol Wojtyla # # Each line must be terminated with '\ n' # If usertab have value "ldap" (case ignoring), user names # will be taken from LDAP server. This method as approaches for reception # of usernames from Active Didectory # #usertab none usertab {$usertab} # 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 {$LDAPHost} # TAG: LDAPPort port # LDAP service port number # default is '389' #LDAPPort 389 {$LDAPPort} # 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 {$LDAPBindDN} # TAG: LDAPBindPW secret # Password of DN, who is authorized to read user's names from LDAP base # default is empty line #LDAPBindPW secret {$LDAPBindPW} # TAG: LDAPBaseSearch OU=users,DC=mydomain,DC=com # LDAP search base # default is empty line #LDAPBaseSearch ou=users,dc=mydomain,dc=local {$LDAPBaseSearch} # TAG: LDAPFilterSearch (uid=%s) # User search filter by user's logins in LDAP # First founded record will be used # %s - will be changed to userlogins from access.log file # filter string can have up to 5 '%s' tags # default value is '(uid=%s)' #LDAPFilterSearch (uid=%s) {$LDAPFilterSearch} # TAG: LDAPTargetAttr attributename # Name of the attribute containing a name of the user # default value is 'cn' #LDAPTargetAttr cn {$LDAPTargetAttr} # TAG: long_url yes|no # If yes, the full url is showed in report. # If no, only the site will be showed # # YES option generate very big sort files and reports. # long_url {$long_url} # TAG: date_time_by bytes|elap # Date/Time reports show the downloaded volume or the elapsed time or both. # #date_time_by bytes date_time_by {$date_time_by} # TAG: charset name # ISO 8859 is a full series of 10 standardized multilingual single-byte coded (8bit) # graphic character sets for writing in alphabetic languages # You can use the following charsets: # Latin1 - West European # Latin2 - East European # Latin3 - South European # Latin4 - North European # Cyrillic # Arabic # Greek # Hebrew # Latin5 - Turkish # Latin6 # Windows-1251 # Japan # Koi8-r # UTF-8 # #charset Latin1 charset {$report_charset} # 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 {$privacy} #privacy_string "***.***.***.***" #privacy_string_color blue # TAG: include_users "user1:user2:...:usern" # Reports will be generated only for listed users. # #include_users none {$include_users} # TAG: exclude_string "string1:string2:...:stringn" # Records from access.log file that contain one of listed strings will be ignored. # #exclude_string none {$exclude_string} # TAG: show_successful_message yes|no # Shows "Successful report generated on dir" at end of process. # #show_successful_message yes # TAG: show_read_statistics yes|no # Shows some reading statistics. # #show_read_statistics yes # TAG: topuser_fields # Which fields must be in Topuser report. # #topuser_fields NUM DATE_TIME USERID CONNECT BYTES %BYTES IN-CACHE-OUT USED_TIME MILISEC %TIME TOTAL AVERAGE # TAG: user_report_fields # Which fields must be in User report. # #user_report_fields CONNECT BYTES %BYTES IN-CACHE-OUT USED_TIME MILISEC %TIME TOTAL AVERAGE # TAG: bytes_in_sites_users_report yes|no # Bytes field must be in Site & Users Report ? # #bytes_in_sites_users_report no bytes_in_sites_users_report {$bytes_in_sites_users_report} # TAG: topuser_num n # How many users in topsites report. 0 = no limit # #topuser_num 0 topuser_num {$topuser_num} # TAG: datafile file # Save the report results in a file to populate some database # #datafile none # TAG: datafile_delimiter " " # ascii character to use as a field separator in datafile # #datafile_delimiter "" {$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 {$datafile_fields} # TAG: datafile_url ip|name # Saves the URL as ip or name in datafile # #datafile_url ip # TAG: weekdays # The weekdays to take into account ( Sunday->0, Saturday->6 ) # Example: #weekdays 1-3,5 # Default: #weekdays 0-6 # TAG: hours # The hours to take into account # Example: #hours 7-12,14,16,18-20 # Default: #hours 0-23 # TAG: dansguardian_conf file # DansGuardian.conf file path # Generate reports from DansGuardian logs. # Use 'none' to disable it. # dansguardian_conf /usr/dansguardian/dansguardian.conf # dansguardian_conf {$dansguardian_conf} # 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. # {$dansguardian_filter_out_date} # TAG: squidguard_conf file # path to squidGuard.conf file # Generate reports from SquidGuard logs. # Use 'none' to disable. # You can use sarg -L filename to use an alternate squidGuard log. # squidguard_conf /usr/local/squidGuard/squidGuard.conf # {$squidguard_conf} # 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#/#tmp#/#url#/#tmp# #ip#/#tmp# #user# #end# #redirector_log_format #year#-#mon#-#day# #hour# #tmp#/#list#/#tmp#/#tmp#/#url#/#tmp# #ip#/#tmp# #user# #end# {$redirector_log_format} # TAG: show_sarg_info yes|no # shows sarg information and site path on each report bottom # show_sarg_info no # TAG: show_sarg_logo yes|no # shows sarg logo # show_sarg_logo no # TAG: parsed_output_log directory # Saves the processed log in a sarg format after parsing the squid log file. # This is a way to dump all of the data structures out, after parsing from # the logs (presumably this data will be much smaller than the log files themselves), # and pull them back in for later processing and merging with data from previous logs. # #parsed_output_log none # TAG: parsed_output_log_compress /bin/gzip|/usr/bin/bzip2|nocompress # Command to run to compress sarg parsed output log. It may contain # options (such as -f to overwrite existing target file). The name of # the file to compresse is provided at the end of this # command line. Don't forget to quote things appropriately. # #parsed_output_log_compress /bin/gzip # TAG: displayed_values bytes|abbreviation # how the values will be displayed in reports. # eg. bytes - 209.526 # abbreviation - 210K # #displayed_values bytes displayed_values {$displayed_values} # 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 authfail_report_limit {$authfail_report_limit} #denied_report_limit 10 denied_report_limit {$denied_report_limit} #siteusers_report_limit 0 #squidguard_report_limit 10 #dansguardian_report_limit 10 #user_report_limit 10 #user_report_limit 50 {$user_report_limit} # 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 www_document_root /usr/local/www # 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 username|domainname+username # NTLM users format. # #ntlm_user_format domainname+username ntlm_user_format {$ntlm_user_format} # TAG: realtime_refresh_time num sec # How many time to auto refresh the realtime report # 0 = disable # realtime_refresh_time 0 # 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 # TAG: realtime_unauthenticated_records: ignore|show # What to do with unauthenticated records in realtime report. # # realtime_unauthenticated_records show # TAG: byte_cost value no_cost_limit # Cost per byte. # Eg. byte_cost 0.01 100000000 # per byte cost = 0.01 # bytes with no cost = 100 Mb # 0 = disable # # byte_cost 0.01 50000000 # 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 /sarg_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. # 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. # # 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 hostalias /usr/local/etc/sarg/hostalias EOF; ?>