Edit file File name : uk12.lng Content :## Language file for analog 6.0. May not work with any other version. ## ## This is a language file for analog. Lines beginning with ## are comments. ## Each language should have one language file in its own character set, ## and can have an additional one for ASCII (7 bit) output. ## ## 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. ## ## The character set of this language file. Prefix with a * to indicate a ## multibyte character set: e.g. *ISO-2022-JP ISO-8859-1 ## 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. year ## Quarter of a year quarter month day days hour minute minutes second seconds byte bytes ## ?bytes represents kbytes, Mbytes etc. ?bytes request requests date ## This has the right spacing for a column like 23/Mar/98 15:00-15:05 date time time first date first time last date last time file files host hosts virtual host virtual hosts directory directories domain domains organisation organisations extension extensions URL URLs browser browsers OS OS's ## (= operating system, operating systems) size search term search terms site sites user users status code status codes Web Server Statistics for ## Prefixes kilo, mega etc. to make kilobytes, megabytes etc. kilo mega giga tera peta exa zeta yotta ## Shorter versions of the same prefixes for column headings k M G T P E Z Y ## Names for the rows in the File Size Report. Note that changing these will ## NOT change the boundaries! These are just labels for predetermined buckets. ## They should line up nicely when right-aligned. 0 1B- 10B 11B- 100B 101B- 1kB 1kB- 10kB 10kB-100kB 100kB- 1MB 1MB- 10MB 10MB-100MB 100MB- 1GB > 1GB ## Now the names of reports General Summary ## The time reports, plus "busiest" strings (at the bottom of each report) Yearly Report Busiest year: Quarterly Report Busiest quarter: Monthly Report Busiest month: Weekly Report Busiest week: week beginning Daily Summary Daily Report Busiest day: Hourly Report Hourly Summary Hour of the Week Summary Busiest hour: Quarter-Hour Report Quarter-Hour Summary Busiest quarter of an hour: Five-Minute Report Five-Minute Summary 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 "listing ??? with at ## least 200 requests". (The words higher up are used for column headings and ## for the "not listed" lines at the bottom of the reports.) ## 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 "listing the top directory" is "Ausgabe des ersten ## Verzeichnisses" and "listing the top 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 Host Redirection Report host hosts n Host Failure 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 Search Query Report query queries n Search Word Report query word query words n Internal Search Query Report query queries n Internal Search Word Report query word query words n Virtual Host Report virtual host virtual hosts n Virtual Host Redirection Report virtual host virtual hosts n Virtual Host Failure Report virtual host virtual hosts n User Report user users n User Redirection Report user users n User Failure Report user users n Browser Summary browser browsers n Browser Report browser browsers n Operating System Report operating system operating systems n Domain Report domain domains n Organisation Report organisation organisations n Status Code Report status code status codes n Processing Time Report 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 on the pie charts: again need m, f & n genders * * Other ## Used at the top of the report Program started on 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-day period ending last 7 days Go To Top ## Some special phrases for particular reports. [unresolved numerical addresses] [domain not given] [unknown domain] [root directory] [no directory] [no extension] [directories] Unknown Windows Other Unix Known robots OS unknown ## Column headings for requests, pages, bytes and number (ie position in list) ## and percentages and last-7-day versions of these. ## Should be as short as possible -- abbreviate if necessary. ## (The ?bytes represents kbytes, Mbytes etc.) reqs 7-day reqs %reqs %7-day reqs pages 7-day pages %pages %7-day pages bytes ?bytes 7-day bytes 7-day ?bytes %bytes %7-day bytes no. ## Now we need to know how to say "listing the top <whatever>", "listing ## the top <n> <whatevers>", and "listing <whatevers>". 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 top %s * * Listing the top %d %s * * Listing %s ## "by" in the phrase "listing the top 3 files BY number of requests" by ## All requests WITH AT LEAST 10 requests with at least ## Different ways of doing floors request in the last 7 days requests in the last 7 days request for a page in the last 7 days requests for pages in the last 7 days redirected request redirected requests redirected request in the last 7 days redirected requests in the last 7 days failed request failed requests failed request in the last 7 days failed requests in the last 7 days % of the traffic % of the traffic in the last 7 days % of the maximum amount of traffic % of the maximum amount of traffic in the last 7 days byte of traffic bytes of traffic ## ?bytes represents kbytes, Mbytes etc. ?bytes of traffic byte of traffic in the last 7 days bytes of traffic in the last 7 days ?bytes of traffic in the last 7 days with a request since with a redirected request since with a failed request since with first request since with first redirected request since with first failed request since ## Now "sorted by": again, in m, f & n (only needed in plural though) * * sorted by ## Used at the top of each report This report contains data from ## Used in pie charts The wedges are plotted by ## different ways of sorting the amount of traffic the amount of traffic in the last 7 days % of the requests % of the requests in the last 7 days % of the maximum number of requests % of the maximum number of requests in the last 7 days the number of requests the number of requests in the last 7 days % of the requests for pages % of the requests for pages in the last 7 days % of the maximum number of requests for pages % of the maximum number of requests for pages in the last 7 days the number of requests for pages the number of requests for pages in the last 7 days % of the redirected requests % of the redirected requests in the last 7 days % of the maximum number of redirected requests % of the maximum number of redirected requests in the last 7 days the number of redirected requests the number of redirected requests in the last 7 days % of the failed requests % of the failed requests in the last 7 days % of the maximum number of failed requests % of the maximum number of failed requests in the last 7 days the number of failed requests the number of failed requests in the last 7 days the time of the last request the time of the last redirected request the time of the last failed request the time of the first request the time of the first redirected request the time of the first failed request ## 3 other ways of sorting in m, f, & n * * sorted alphabetically * * sorted numerically * * unsorted ## The separators to use between thousands, and as a decimal point. For ## example, English generally uses "3,000.25" so has , and . here. French uses ## "3 000,25", so has space and , instead. , . ## There's a colon here, because the French like to put a space before a colon, ## so they have space-colon instead here. : ## am and pm in the sense of morning and afternoon. am pm ## Some date formats. E.g. for 9am on 1st January 1997 use ## %d for date " 1" ## %D for 0-padded date "01" ## %e or %E for date at end of time interval (where this makes sense) ## %m for month "Jan" ## %l for month at end of time interval ## %q for quarter of the year "1" ## %y for short year "97" ## %Y for long year "1997" ## %z or %Z for year at end of time interval ## %X for ISO 8601 extended date format (yyyy-mm-dd) "1997-01-01" ## %h for hour in 24-hour clock " 9" ## %H for 0-padded hour "09" ## %j for hour in 12-hour clock " 9" ## %i, %I or %k for hour at end of time interval ## %n for minute "00" ## %o for minute at end of time interval ## %a for am or pm "am" ## %b for am or pm at end of time interval ## %w for weekday "Wed" ## %x for a dash in a range e.g. in 14:00-14:15. This is necessary because in ## proper typesetting, this should be an en-dash not a regular dash. ## ## 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 at %j:%n%a ## "Program started at" and "Analysed requests from" %w-%D-%m-%Y at %j:%n%a ## In Daily Report %d/%m/%y ## In Daily Summary %w ## In Hourly Report %d/%m/%y %j:%n%a%x%k:%o%b ## In Hourly Summary %h ## In Hour of the Week Summary %w %j:%n%a%x%k:%o%b ## In Quarter-Hour and Five-Minute Reports %d/%m/%y %j:%n%a%x%k:%o%b ## In Quarter-Hour and Five-Minute Summaries %j:%n%a%x%k:%o%b ## In Weekly Report %d/%m/%y ## In Monthly Report %m %Y ## In Quarterly Report %m%x%l %Y ## An alternative for Quarterly Report: %Y Q%q ## In Yearly Report %Y ## The date (d) column in non-time reports %d/%m/%y ## The date & time (D) column in non-time reports %d/%m/%y %j:%n%a ## In non-time reports: "listing files with requests since [date]" %d/%m/%y at %j:%n%a ## Finally, definitions of the HTTP status codes (see ## ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2616.txt). You're welcome to leave these in ## English if you think they look better that way. 100 Continue with request 101 Switching protocols 1xx [Miscellaneous informational] 200 OK 201 Created 202 Accepted for future processing 203 Non-authoritative information 204 OK, but nothing to send 205 Reset document 206 Partial content 2xx [Miscellaneous successes] 300 Multiple documents available 301 Document moved permanently 302 Document found elsewhere 303 See other document 304 Not modified since last retrieval 305 Use proxy 306 Switch proxy 307 Document moved temporarily 3xx [Miscellaneous redirections] 400 Bad request 401 Authentication required 402 Payment required 403 Access forbidden 404 Document not found 405 Method not allowed 406 Document not acceptable to client 407 Proxy authentication required 408 Request timeout 409 Request conflicts with state of resource 410 Document gone permanently 411 Length required 412 Precondition failed 413 Request too long 414 Requested filename too long 415 Unsupported media type 416 Requested range not valid 417 Expectation failed 4xx [Miscellaneous client/user errors] 500 Internal server error 501 Request type not supported 502 Error at upstream server 503 Service temporarily unavailable 504 Gateway timeout 505 HTTP version not supported 506 Redirection failed 5xx [Miscellaneous server errors] xxx [Unknown] Save