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How do I use awk to parse the Apache access log file to display information in the following format?

   Date     Time  Count   IP Address
2016-05-26  00:00  200    192.168.1.x
2016-05-26  00:00  152    172.17.100.x
2016-05-26  00:01   43    192.168.1.x

Let me be clear. I do not want to show total requests per hour. I do not want to show total requests per minute. I know how to write basic awk scripts to perform both of those tasks.

I want to see how many requests per minute each unique IP address is sending. I'm not savvy enough with awk to do this.

Apache Log Format

LogFormat "%h %l %u %{%F %T %z}t \"%r\" %>s %O \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-Agent}i\""

Sample

I tailed the end of the log file. Here's a small sample of what it contains. (We have over 100K entries for today. It's not feasible to share them all here. If more lines are needed please ask.)

54.213.236.39 - - 2016-05-26 14:38:51 -0400 "GET /p1077921.html HTTP/1.0" 403 400 "-" "Apache-HttpClient/4.5.2 (Java/1.8.0_77)"
54.213.236.39 - - 2016-05-26 14:38:51 -0400 "GET /p1060432.html HTTP/1.0" 403 398 "-" "Apache-HttpClient/4.5.2 (Java/1.8.0_77)"
54.213.254.166 - - 2016-05-26 14:38:51 -0400 "GET /p819757.html HTTP/1.0" 403 400 "-" "Apache-HttpClient/4.5.2 (Java/1.8.0_77)"
54.213.236.39 - - 2016-05-26 14:38:51 -0400 "GET /p1084269.html HTTP/1.0" 403 400 "-" "Apache-HttpClient/4.5.2 (Java/1.8.0_77)"
107.23.252.229 - - 2016-05-26 14:38:51 -0400 "GET /p305987.html HTTP/1.0" 403 399 "-" "Apache-HttpClient/4.5.2 (Java/1.8.0_77)"

Example 1:

grep '2016-05-26' access.log | awk '{print $1}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -n | tail -40 | awk '{print $2,$2,$1}' | logresolve | awk '{printf "%6d %s (%s)\n",$3,$1,$2}'

Produces the following output

307 135-23-174-138.cpe.pppoe.ca (135.23.174.138)
313 5265DCE5.cm-8.dynamic.ziggo.nl (82.101.220.229)
378 92-108-204-76.dynamic.upc.nl (92.108.204.76)
405 0191301456.0.fullrate.ninja (90.185.180.167)
632 ec2-52-58-151-132.eu-central-1.compute.amazonaws.com (52.58.151.132)
798 187.228.212.148 (187.228.212.148)
877 207.246.75.253 (207.246.75.253)
966 ec2-54-213-177-120.us-west-2.compute.amazonaws.com (54.213.177.120)
1116 ec2-54-186-148-0.us-west-2.compute.amazonaws.com (54.186.148.0)
1224 ppp121-44-247-209.bras2.syd2.internode.on.net (121.44.247.209)
1369 ec2-54-187-239-46.us-west-2.compute.amazonaws.com (54.187.239.46)
1584 45.55.189.64 (45.55.189.64)
2658 50-77-47-70-static.hfc.comcastbusiness.net (50.77.47.70)

Example 2:

grep "2016-05-26" access.log | awk '{ print $4, $5, $1}' | cut -f2 | awk -F: '{ print $1":"$2 }' | sort -nk1 -nk2 | uniq -c | awk '{ if ($1 > 10) print $0 }'

That gives the following output:

560 2016-05-26 00:00
534 2016-05-26 00:01
538 2016-05-26 00:02
554 2016-05-26 00:03
566 2016-05-26 00:04
534 2016-05-26 00:05
559 2016-05-26 00:06
531 2016-05-26 00:07
540 2016-05-26 00:08
435 2016-05-26 00:09
312 2016-05-26 00:10

All help is much appreciated.

11
  • 3
    Please post a minimal reproducible example.
    – sjsam
    May 26, 2016 at 16:13
  • 1
    Please show your coding efforts.
    – Cyrus
    May 26, 2016 at 16:21
  • 1
    we can't help you achieve a better understanding of awk without being able to assess your current understanding, which is best illustrated by code that shows your best attempt to solve your current problem. AND to do that in an efficient manner, we'll need some small sample data, required output from that sample data (which you have provided), but also your current output from your current code AND/OR any error messages that are being generated by your current code (hence a reasonable request for stackoverflow.com/help/mcve ). Please update your Q and people can help. Good luck.
    – shellter
    May 26, 2016 at 16:24
  • 1
    Stack Overflow is not a "please write code for me" site. Your requirements are reasonable but this is off-topic here.
    – tripleee
    May 26, 2016 at 16:26
  • 1
    edit your question to simply show some concise, testable sample input and expected output. Right now you've shown us a couple of command that reads an input file and apparently produce some output that is not what you want and you've told us what you want but you haven't shown us the input file. Telling us a format for it is fine if that's in addition to sample data but not instead of sample data.
    – Ed Morton
    May 26, 2016 at 17:39

1 Answer 1

1

here's a way:

first, convert this:

54.213.236.39 - - 2016-05-26 14:38:51 -0400 "GET /p1077921.html HTTP/1.0" 403 400 "-" "Apache-HttpClient/4.5.2 (Java/1.8.0_77)"

to this:

54.213.236.39 2016-05-26 14  # <- 14th hour

then sort | uniq -c that.

grep '2016-05-26' access.log |
  tr ':' ' ' |
  awk '{print $1,$4,$5}' |
  sort |
  uniq -c |
  sort -n

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