For those of you who has sites for sale and was tired grabbing a screenie of your awstats, here is a simple PHP code to make your awstats public. So, now you can show your site's awstats to your buyers or advertisers without having to give out cpanel info or the hassle of grabbing a screenshot. I hope you do find this code useful. The code was taken from other forum How to paste the code found below into a new text file and save, give it an original name Edit the variables that are bold, with the corresponding details for your account upload and you're done awpublicstats.php <?php /* dv at josheli.com Proxy for viewing Awstats outside of cpanel. I assume no liability. */ $user = 'username';//your cpanel username $pass = 'password';//your cpanel password $domain = 'mydomain.com';//do not include 'http://' or 'www.' /* Domain of the stats you wish to view, e.g. a subdomain like "cvs.mydomain.com". If left blank, defaults to the "domain" above Another option is to set the "config" parameter in the url of your browser, e.g.: http://www.domain.com/awstats.php?config=sub.domain.com */ $config_domain = ''; /* If you don't know what you're doing, set $dynamic_images equal to TRUE, and don't worry about the $image_directory variable. Otherwise, - Normally, this script will load images by proxy, i.e. awstats.php is called for each <img> tag and will send the correct image to the browser. This is not the way the web is designed to work. So, if you wish to improve performance and lower bandwidth, you can: 1. Set $dynamic_images to FALSE 2. Create an image directory in your webroot 3. Copy all of awstats image sub-directories to this new directory 4. Point the $image_directory variable to your new directory You will get all the benefits of cached, static images. In order to get the Awstats images and their directories, you will probably need to download an awstats distribution from awstats.sourceforge.net. The final layout will probably look like this: awstats_imagedir/ browser/ clock/ cpu/ flags/ mime/ os/ other/ Under each of those sub-directories will be dozens of .png files. */ $dynamic_images = true; $image_directory = './awstats_images/'; //lame attempt to combat referrer spam $spam_words = array('mortgage', 'sex', 'porn', 'cock', 'slut', 'facial', 'loving', 'gay', '.ro'); /*********** NO NEED TO TOUCH ANYTHING BELOW HERE ************/ //retrieves the file, either .pl or .png function get_file($fileQuery) { global $user, $pass, $domain; return file_get_contents("http://$user:$pass@$domain:2082/".$fileQuery); } $requesting_image = (strpos($_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'],'.png')===false)?false:true; if($requesting_image) //it's a .png file... { if(!$dynamic_images && !is_dir($image_directory)) { exit; } $fileQuery = $_SERVER['QUERY_STRING']; } elseif(empty($_SERVER['QUERY_STRING']))//probably first time to access page... { if(empty($config_domain)) { $config_domain = $domain; } $fileQuery = "awstats.pl?config=$config_domain"; } else //otherwise, all other accesses { $fileQuery = 'awstats.pl?'.$_SERVER['QUERY_STRING']; } $file = get_file($fileQuery); //check again to see if it was a .png file //if it's not, replace the links if(!$requesting_image) { $file = str_replace('awstats.pl', basename($_SERVER['PHP_SELF']), $file); if($dynamic_images) { $imgsrc_search = '="/images'; $imgsrc_replace = '="'.basename($_SERVER['PHP_SELF']).'?images'; } else { $imgsrc_search = 'src="/images/awstats/'; $imgsrc_replace = 'src="'.$image_directory; } $file = str_replace($imgsrc_search, $imgsrc_replace, $file); $file = str_replace($spam_words, 'SPAM', $file); } else //if it is a png, output appropriate header { header("Content-type: image/png"); } //output the file echo $file; ?> PHP: See it in action:
That is the whole idea.. So, rather than asking seller to prove traffic stats, you can just ask him to upload the code and can view the stats yourself..live! I use this method when selling my sites. Saves my time from taking screenshot.
Great idea and put into action well, I love it and will definetly be using it And @ Whitey: Not neccessarily, people could still copy the web page & put any numbers they want in it.
Awesome script for awstats viewing. I recommend you sell this tool in the SitePoint marketplace where this tool would be very useful.
On top of providing awstats, it would be a good idea to also have a secondary third party tracker to back up the traffic claims.
this is a pretty cool script, and even though you're typing in your UN/PW, seems relatively secure. someone correct me if i'm wrong.
Yes, you are required to write your UN/PW into the script, however, it won't be shown to anyone even he/she look on your code. try look at my demo up there. also, if you want to be safe, use the web based encrypter to encrypt the file thus making it much more safer.
I believe it is secure as so far there is now way that you can peek on the source code to see the details. Furthermore, you can encode your source into base64 or blowfish before making it live.