goaccess

GoAccess is a real-time web log analyzer and interactive viewer that runs in a terminal in *nix systems or through your browser.

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GoAccess Build Status GoAccess

What is it?

GoAccess is an open source real-time web log analyzer and interactive
viewer that runs in a terminal on *nix systems or through your
browser. It provides fast and valuable HTTP statistics for system
administrators that require a visual server report on the fly.
More info at: https://goaccess.io.

GoAccess Terminal Dashboard
GoAccess HTML Dashboard

Features

GoAccess parses the specified web log file and outputs the data to the X
terminal. Features include:

  • Completely Real Time
    All panels and metrics are timed to be updated every 200 ms on the terminal
    output and every second on the HTML output.

  • Minimal Configuration needed
    You can just run it against your access log file, pick the log format and let
    GoAccess parse the access log and show you the stats.

  • Track Application Response Time
    Track the time taken to serve the request. Extremely useful if you want to
    track pages that are slowing down your site.

  • Nearly All Web Log Formats
    GoAccess allows any custom log format string. Predefined options include,
    Apache, Nginx, Amazon S3, Elastic Load Balancing, CloudFront, etc.

  • Incremental Log Processing
    Need data persistence? GoAccess has the ability to process logs incrementally
    through the on-disk B+Tree database.

  • Only one dependency
    GoAccess is written in C. To run it, you only need ncurses as a dependency.
    That's it. It even features its own Web Socket server — http://gwsocket.io/.

  • Visitors
    Determine the amount of hits, visitors, bandwidth, and metrics for slowest
    running requests by the hour, or date.

  • Metrics per Virtual Host
    Have multiple Virtual Hosts (Server Blocks)? It features a panel that
    displays which virtual host is consuming most of the web server resources.

  • Color Scheme Customizable
    Tailor GoAccess to suit your own color taste/schemes. Either through the
    terminal, or by simply applying the stylesheet on the HTML output.

  • Support for Large Datasets
    GoAccess features an on-disk B+Tree storage for large datasets where it is not
    possible to fit everything in memory.

  • Docker Support
    Ability to build GoAccess' Docker image from upstream. You can still fully
    configure it, by using Volume mapping and editing goaccess.conf. See
    Docker section below.

Nearly all web log formats...

GoAccess allows any custom log format string. Predefined options include, but
not limited to:

  • Amazon CloudFront (Download Distribution).
  • Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3)
  • AWS Elastic Load Balancing
  • Combined Log Format (XLF/ELF) Apache, Nginx
  • Common Log Format (CLF) Apache
  • Google Cloud Storage.
  • Apache virtual hosts
  • Squid Native Format.
  • W3C format (IIS).

Why GoAccess?

GoAccess was designed to be a fast, terminal-based log analyzer. Its core idea
is to quickly analyze and view web server statistics in real time without
needing to use your browser (great if you want to do a quick analysis of your
access log via SSH, or if you simply love working in the terminal
).

While the terminal output is the default output, it has the capability to
generate a complete, self-contained, real-time HTML
report, as well as a JSON, and
CSV report.

You can see it more of a monitor command tool than anything else.

Installation

Build from release

GoAccess can be compiled and used on *nix systems.

Download, extract and compile GoAccess with:

$ wget https://tar.goaccess.io/goaccess-1.3.tar.gz
$ tar -xzvf goaccess-1.3.tar.gz
$ cd goaccess-1.3/
$ ./configure --enable-utf8 --enable-geoip=legacy
$ make
# make install

Build from GitHub (Development)

$ git clone https://github.com/allinurl/goaccess.git
$ cd goaccess
$ autoreconf -fiv
$ ./configure --enable-utf8 --enable-geoip=legacy
$ make
# make install

Distributions

It is easiest to install GoAccess on Linux using the preferred package manager
of your Linux distribution. Please note that not all distributions will have
the lastest version of GoAccess available.

Debian/Ubuntu

# apt-get install goaccess

Note: It is likely this will install an outdated version of GoAccess. To
make sure that you're running the latest stable version of GoAccess see
alternative option below.

Official GoAccess Debian & Ubuntu repository

$ echo "deb https://deb.goaccess.io/ $(lsb_release -cs) main", sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/goaccess.list
$ wget -O - https://deb.goaccess.io/gnugpg.key, sudo apt-key add -
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install goaccess

Note:

  • For on-disk support (Trusty+ or Wheezy+), run: sudo apt-get install goaccess-tcb
  • .deb packages in the official repo are available through HTTPS as well. You may need to install apt-transport-https.

Fedora

# yum install goaccess

Arch Linux

# pacman -S goaccess

Gentoo

# emerge net-analyzer/goaccess

OS X / Homebrew

# brew install goaccess

FreeBSD

# cd /usr/ports/sysutils/goaccess/ && make install clean
# pkg install sysutils/goaccess

OpenBSD

# cd /usr/ports/www/goaccess && make install clean
# pkg_add goaccess

openSUSE

# zypper ar -f obs://server:http
# zypper ref && zypper in goaccess

OpenIndiana

# pkg install goaccess

pkgsrc (NetBSD, Solaris, SmartOS, ...)

# pkgin install goaccess

Windows

GoAccess can be used in Windows through Cygwin.
See Cygwin's packages. Or
through the Linux Subsystem on Windows 10.

Distribution Packages

GoAccess has minimal requirements, it's written in C and requires only ncurses.
However, below is a table of some optional dependencies in some distros to
build GoAccess from source.

Distro, NCurses, GeoIP (opt), Tokyo Cabinet (opt), OpenSSL (opt), gettext
----------------------, -----------------, ------------------, -------------------------, -------------------, -------------------
Ubuntu/Debian, libncursesw5-dev, libgeoip-dev, libtokyocabinet-dev, libssl-dev, gettext
RHEL/CentOS, ncurses-devel, geoip-devel, tokyocabinet-devel, openssl-devel, gettext-devel
Arch Linux, ncurses, geoip, compile from source, openssl, gettext
Gentoo, sys-libs/ncurses, dev-libs/geoip, dev-db/tokyocabinet, dev-libs/openssl, Slackware, ncurses, GeoIP, tokyocabinet, openssl, #### Docker ####

A Docker image has been updated, capable of directing output from an access log. If you only want to output a report, you can pipe a log from the external environment to a Docker-based process:

cat access.log, docker run --rm -i -e LANG=$LANG allinurl/goaccess -a -o html --log-format COMBINED - > report.html

You can read more about using the docker image in DOCKER.md.

Storage

There are three storage options that can be used with GoAccess. Choosing one
will depend on your environment and needs.

Default Hash Tables

In-memory storage provides better performance at the cost of limiting the
dataset size to the amount of available physical memory. By default GoAccess
uses in-memory hash tables. If your dataset can fit in memory, then this will
perform fine. It has very good memory usage and pretty good performance.

Tokyo Cabinet On-Disk B+ Tree

Use this storage method for large datasets where it is not possible to fit
everything in memory. The B+ tree database is slower than any of the hash
databases since data has to be committed to disk. However, using an SSD greatly
increases the performance. You may also use this storage method if you need
data persistence to quickly load statistics at a later date.

Tokyo Cabinet On-Memory Hash Database

An alternative to the default hash tables. It uses generic typing and thus it's
performance in terms of memory and speed is average.

Command Line / Config Options

See options that can be supplied to the command or
specified in the configuration file. If specified in the configuration file, long
options need to be used without prepending --.

Usage / Examples

Note: Piping data into GoAccess won't prompt a log/date/time
configuration dialog, you will need to previously define it in your
configuration file or in the command line.

Getting Started

To output to a terminal and generate an interactive report:

# goaccess access.log

To generate an HTML report:

# goaccess access.log -a > report.html

To generate a JSON report:

# goaccess access.log -a -d -o json > report.json

To generate a CSV file:

# goaccess access.log --no-csv-summary -o csv > report.csv

GoAccess also allows great flexibility for real-time filtering and parsing. For
instance, to quickly diagnose issues by monitoring logs since goaccess was
started:

# tail -f access.log, goaccess -

And even better, to filter while maintaining opened a pipe to preserve
real-time analysis, we can make use of tail -f and a matching pattern tool
such as grep, awk, sed, etc:

# tail -f access.log, grep -i --line-buffered 'firefox', goaccess --log-format=COMBINED -

or to parse from the beginning of the file while maintaining the pipe opened
and applying a filter

# tail -f -n +0 access.log, grep -i --line-buffered 'firefox', goaccess -o report.html --real-time-html -

Multiple Log files

There are several ways to parse multiple logs with GoAccess. The simplest is to
pass multiple log files to the command line:

# goaccess access.log access.log.1

It's even possible to parse files from a pipe while reading regular files:

# cat access.log.2, goaccess access.log access.log.1 -

Note: the single dash is appended to the command line to let GoAccess
know that it should read from the pipe.

Now if we want to add more flexibility to GoAccess, we can do a series of
pipes. For instance, if we would like to process all compressed log files
access.log.*.gz in addition to the current log file, we can do:

# zcat access.log.*.gz, goaccess access.log -

Note: On Mac OS X, use gunzip -c instead of zcat.

Real-time HTML outputs

GoAccess has the ability the output real-time data in the HTML report. You can
even email the HTML file since it is composed of a single file with no external
file dependencies, how neat is that!

The process of generating a real-time HTML report is very similar to the
process of creating a static report. Only --real-time-html is needed to make
it real-time.

# goaccess access.log -o /usr/share/nginx/html/your_site/report.html --real-time-html

To view the report you can navigate to http://your_site/report.html.

By default, GoAccess will use the host name of the generated report.
Optionally, you can specify the URL to which the client's browser will connect
to. See FAQ for a more detailed example.

# goaccess access.log -o report.html --real-time-html --ws-url=goaccess.io

By default, GoAccess listens on port 7890, to use a different port other than
7890, you can specify it as (make sure the port is opened):

# goaccess access.log -o report.html --real-time-html --port=9870

And to bind the WebSocket server to a different address other than 0.0.0.0, you
can specify it as:

# goaccess access.log -o report.html --real-time-html --addr=127.0.0.1

Note: To output real time data over a TLS/SSL connection, you need to use
--ssl-cert=<cert.crt> and --ssl-key=<priv.key>.

Filtering

Working with dates

Another useful pipe would be filtering dates out of the web log

The following will get all HTTP requests starting on 05/Dec/2010 until the
end of the file.

# sed -n '/05\/Dec\/2010/,$ p' access.log, goaccess -a -

or using relative dates such as yesterdays or tomorrows day:

# sed -n '/'$(date '+%d\/%b\/%Y' -d '1 week ago')'/,$ p' access.log, goaccess -a -

If we want to parse only a certain time-frame from DATE a to DATE b, we can do:

# sed -n '/5\/Nov\/2010/,/5\/Dec\/2010/ p' access.log, goaccess -a -

Virtual hosts

Assuming your log contains the virtual host field. For instance:

vhost.io:80 8.8.4.4 - - [02/Mar/2016:08:14:04 -0600] "GET /shop HTTP/1.1" 200 615 "-" "Googlebot-Image/1.0"

And you would like to append the virtual host to the request in order to see
which virtual host the top urls belong to:

awk '$8=$1$8' access.log, goaccess -a -

To do the same, but also use real-time filtering and parsing:

tail -f  access.log, unbuffer -p awk '$8=$1$8', goaccess -a -

To exclude a list of virtual hosts you can do the following:

# grep -v "`cat exclude_vhost_list_file`" vhost_access.log, goaccess -

Files, status codes and bots

To parse specific pages, e.g., page views, html, htm, php, etc. within a
request:

# awk '$7~/\.html, \.htm, \.php/' access.log, goaccess -

Note, $7 is the request field for the common and combined log format,
(without Virtual Host), if your log includes Virtual Host, then you probably
want to use $8 instead. It's best to check which field you are shooting for,
e.g.:

# tail -10 access.log, awk '{print $8}'

Or to parse a specific status code, e.g., 500 (Internal Server Error):

# awk '$9~/500/' access.log, goaccess -

Or multiple status codes, e.g., all 3xx and 5xx:

# tail -f -n +0 access.log, awk '$9~/3[0-9]{2}, 5[0-9]{2}/', goaccess -o out.html -

And to get an estimated overview of how many bots (crawlers) are hitting your server:

# tail -F -n +0 access.log, grep -i --line-buffered 'bot', goaccess -

Tips

Also, it is worth pointing out that if we want to run GoAccess at lower
priority, we can run it as:

# nice -n 19 goaccess -f access.log -a

and if you don't want to install it on your server, you can still run it from
your local machine!

# ssh root@server 'cat /var/log/apache2/access.log', goaccess -a -

Troubleshooting

We receive many questions and issues that have been answered previously.

Incremental log processing

GoAccess has the ability to process logs incrementally through the on-disk
B+Tree database. It works in
the following way:

  1. A data set must be persisted first with --keep-db-files, then the same
    data set can be loaded with --load-from-disk.
  2. If new data is passed (piped or through a log file), it will append it to
    the original data set.
  3. To preserve the data at all times, --keep-db-files must be used.
  4. If --load-from-disk is used without --keep-db-files, database files will
    be deleted upon closing the program.
Examples
// last month access log
# goaccess access.log.1 --keep-db-files

then, load it with

// append this month access log, and preserve new data
# goaccess access.log --load-from-disk --keep-db-files

To read persisted data only (without parsing new data)

# goaccess --load-from-disk --keep-db-files

Contributing

Any help on GoAccess is welcome. The most helpful way is to try it out and give
feedback. Feel free to use the Github issue tracker and pull requests to
discuss and submit code changes.

Enjoy!

主要指標

概覽
名稱與所有者allinurl/goaccess
主編程語言C
編程語言C (語言數: 9)
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許可證MIT License
所有者活动
創建於2013-07-14 03:42:08
推送於2025-04-18 23:16:44
最后一次提交2025-04-19 02:47:22
發布數58
最新版本名稱v1.9.4 (發布於 2025-03-31 21:08:52)
第一版名稱v0.6 (發布於 2013-10-06 22:14:11)
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