## Language file for analog3.0. May not work with any other version. ## ## This is a language file for analog. Most languages need two, one for HTML ## output and one for plain text output. Lines beginning with ## are comments. ## If your language doesn't seem to fit into this pattern, explain the problem ## to me, and I can adjust the source code if necessary. ## ## First, abbreviations for the day and month names. Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec ## Next some standard common words. ## Abbreviation for "week beginning" week beg. month day days ## Abbreviation for "hour" hr minute minutes second seconds byte bytes request requests date ## This has the right spacing for a column like 23/Mar/98 15:00-15:05 date time last date last time file files host hosts virtual host virtual hosts directory directories domain domains extension extensions URL URLs browser browsers size site sites user users status code status codes Web Server Statistics for ## Now the names of reports General Summary ## The time reports, plus "busiest" strings (at the bottom of each report) Monthly Report Busiest month: Weekly Report Busiest week: week beginning Daily Summary Daily Report Busiest day: Hourly Report Hourly Summary Busiest hour: Quarter-Hour Report Busiest quarter of an hour: Five-Minute Report Busiest five minutes: ## The non-time reports. In each case, we have the name of the report, ## followed by the type of item in the report, once in the singular and once ## in the plural. These are used in phrases like "including all ??? with at ## least 200 requests". (The words higher up are used for column headings.) ## Finally we have the gender of this type of object, which can be m, f or n. ## ## So for example, in German a directory is Verzeichnis (neuter gender), which ## was given above. But "including the first directory" is "Ausgabe des ersten ## Verzeichnisses" and "including the first two directories" is "Ausgabe der ## ersten zwei Verzeichnisse". So here, we would have for the directory report: ## ## Verzeichnis-Bericht ## Verzeichnisses ## Verzeichnisse ## n ## ## I hope that makes sense! Host Report host hosts n Directory Report directory directories n File Type Report extension extensions n Request Report file files n Redirection Report file files n Failure Report file files n Referrer Report referring URL referring URLs n Referring Site Report referring site referring sites n Redirected Referrer Report referring URL referring URLs n Failed Referrer Report referring URL referring URLs n Virtual Host Report virtual host virtual hosts n User Report user users n User Failure Report user users n Browser Summary browser browsers n Browser Report browser browsers n Domain Report domain domains n Status Code Report status code status codes n File Size Report ## Used at the bottom of the report This analysis was produced by Running time Less than 1 ## Used in the time reports Each unit represents or part thereof request for a page requests for pages ## Used at the bottom of each non-time report: need m, f & n genders * * not listed ## Used at the top of the report Program started at Analysed requests from to ## Used in the General Summary Successful requests Average successful requests per day Successful requests for pages Average successful requests for pages per day Logfile lines without status code Failed requests Redirected requests Requests with informational status code Distinct files requested Distinct hosts served Corrupt logfile lines Unwanted logfile entries Data transferred Average data transferred per day Figures in parentheses refer to the 7 days to last 7 days Go To Top ## Column headings for requests, pages and bytes #reqs %reqs pages %pages bytes %bytes ## Now we need to know how to say "listing the first ", "listing ## the first ", and "listing ". The %s and %d ## will be replaced by the appropriate things. There may be three of each of ## these statements, for the genders m, f and n. Any genders that aren't used, ## you can just put a * there instead. So, for example, French starts ## Affichage du premier %s ## Affichage de la première %s ## * ## with entries for m & f, but not n * * Listing the first %s * * Listing the first %d %s * * Listing %s ## "by" in the phrase "listing the first 3 files BY number of requests" by ## All requests WITH AT LEAST 10 requests with at least ## Different ways of doing floors redirected request redirected requests failed request failed requests %% of the traffic %% of the maximum amount of traffic bytes of traffic requested since with a redirected request since with a failed request since ## Now "sorted by": again, in m, f & n (only needed in plural though) * * sorted by ## different ways of sorting the amount of traffic %% of the requests %% of the maximum number of requests the number of requests %% of the requests for pages %% of the maximum number of requests for pages the number of requests for pages %% of the redirected requests %% of the maximum number of redirected requests the number of redirected requests %% of the failed requests %% of the maximum number of failed requests the number of failed requests the time of the last request the time of the last redirected request the time of the last failed request ## 3 other ways of sorting in m, f, & n * * sorted alphabetically * * sorted numerically * * unsorted ## There's a colon here, because the French like to put a space before a colon, ## so they have space-colon instead here. : ## Some date formats. E.g. for 9am on 1st January 1997 use ## %d for date " 1" ## %D for 0-padded date "01" ## %m for month "Jan" ## %y for short year "97" ## %Y for long year "1997" ## %h for hour " 9" ## %H for 0-padded hour "09" ## %n for minute "00" ## %i for hour at end of time interval (where this makes sense) ## %I for 0-padded hour ditto ## %o for minute ditto ## %w for weekday "Wed" ## So for a date, English might have %d/%m/%y for 1/Jan/97, whereas German ## would have %d.%m %y for 1.Jan 97). Note: the month number is not available ## because it can produce ambiguous dates. ## ## The different date formats are as follows ## "refer to the 7 days to [date]" %D-%m-%Y %H:%n ## "Programme started at" and "Analysed requests from" %w-%D-%m-%Y %H:%n ## In Daily Report %d/%m/%y ## In Hourly Report %d/%m/%y %H:%n-%I:%o ## In Quarter-Hour and Five-Minute Reports %d/%m/%y %H:%n-%I:%o ## In Weekly Report %d/%m/%y ## In Monthly Report %m %Y ## The date column in non-time reports %d/%m/%y %H:%n ## In non-time reports: "including all files with requests since [date]" %d/%m/%y at %H:%n