I’ve finally updated my server to Ubuntu 18.04 using do-release-upgrade
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upgrade posts page 2
I was getting a white screen with 200 status in production after updating Symfony to 3.4.
Continue reading post "#1696"Well, Firefox forced my hand by upgrading even though I had “Never check for updates” checked. So I now have Firefox ESR installed.
Continue reading post "#1675"Symfony 3.0 has finally been released. I hadn’t even noticed for almost a week. It took some time, but I’ve updated my boilerplate and related bundles to use it. I then updated my site. I haven’t delved too far into 3 yet, but I like the new directory structure and profiler / dev toolbar.
Upgrading my Awstats setup
I don’t really monitor analytics for my personal sites that often besides for my blogs, for which I use wordpress.com’s analytics. I do have three open-source analytics programs set up for my main sites though: piwik, owa, and awstats. Awstats is the one I’ve tended to look at the least, probably because its interface isn’t as nice as the others and it doesn’t have as much data about visits. However, it is the only one that looks at actual server logs, so it should be the most accurate about basic visit information. The other two use JavaScript, one having an image fallback, so there’s the potential for them to miss visits.
I have my awstats set up as I described in 2010. I keep the configuration and the data separate from the install to make updates easier. However, it had been so long since I upgraded that I forgot how it was set up and fumbled a little before finding that article and figuring out what had to be done. In order to make it easier for next time, I created myself a simple little script to handle the upgrade for me:
Continue reading post "Upgrading my Awstats setup"