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W3C Extended Log File Format

Applies To: Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2003 with SP1

The W3C Extended log file format is the default log file format for IIS. It is a customizable ASCII text-based format. You can use IIS Manager to select which fields to include in the log file, which enables you to keep log files as small as possible. Because HTTP.sys handles the W3C Extended log file format, this format records HTTP.sys kernel-mode cache hits.

Table 10.1 lists and describes the available fields. Default fields are noted.

Table 10.1 W3C Extended Log File Fields

Field Appears As Description Default Y/N

Date

date

The date on which the activity occurred.

Y

Time

time

The time, in coordinated universal time (UTC), at which the activity occurred.

Y

Client IP Address

c-ip

The IP address of the client that made the request.

Y

User Name

cs-username

The name of the authenticated user who accessed your server. Anonymous users are indicated by a hyphen.

Y

Service Name and Instance Number

s-sitename

The Internet service name and instance number that was running on the client.

N

Server Name

s-computername

The name of the server on which the log file entry was generated.

N

Server IP Address

s-ip

The IP address of the server on which the log file entry was generated.

Y

Server Port

s-port

The server port number that is configured for the service.

Y

Method

cs-method

The requested action, for example, a GET method.

Y

URI Stem

cs-uri-stem

The target of the action, for example, Default.htm.

Y

URI Query

cs-uri-query

The query, if any, that the client was trying to perform. A Universal Resource Identifier (URI) query is necessary only for dynamic pages.

Y

HTTP Status

sc-status

The HTTP status code.

Y

Win32 Status

sc-win32-status

The Windows status code.

N

Bytes Sent

sc-bytes

The number of bytes that the server sent.

N

Bytes Received

cs-bytes

The number of bytes that the server received.

N

Time Taken

time-taken

The length of time that the action took, in milliseconds.

N

Protocol Version

cs-version

The protocol version see commentHTTP or FTP see commentthat the client used.

N

Host

cs-host

The host header name, if any.

N

User Agent

cs(User-Agent)

The browser type that the client used.

Y

Cookie

cs(Cookie)

The content of the cookie sent or received, if any.

N

Referrer

cs(Referrer)

The site that the user last visited. This site provided a link to the current site.

N

Protocol Substatus

sc-substatus

The substatus error code.

Y

You can select as many of the W3C Extended log file fields as you want. Some fields may not contain information. When a select field does not contain information, a hyphen (-) appears as a placeholder. If a field contains a nonprintable character, HTTP.sys replaces it with a plus sign (+) to preserve the log file format. Nonprintable characters can appear as a result of virus attacks such as when a malicious user sends carriage returns and line feeds that could break the log file format. You can avoid this problem if you replace nonprintable characters with the plus sign (+).

Fields are separated by spaces. Field prefixes have the following meanings:

  • s- Server actions

  • c- Client actions

  • cs- Client-to-server actions

  • sc- Server-to-client actions

Note

FTP log files do not record the following fields:

  • cs-uri-query

  • cs-host

  • cs(User-Agent)

  • cs(Cookie)

  • cs(Referrer)

  • sc-substatus

Note

For the Time Taken field, the client-request time stamp is initialized when HTTP.sys starts parsing the request. If the response size is less than or equal to 2 kilobytes and from memory, or the force buffer flag is set, the Time Taken value usually does not include network time. Otherwise, the TimeTaken value generally includes network time. For more information about the Time Taken field in IIS, see Description of the time-taken field in IIS 6.0 and IIS 7.0 HTTP logging.

For information about status codes, see IIS Status Codes.

For more information about the W3C Extended log file format, see Extended Log File Format.

For information about HTTP request buffering that uses the HTTP Server API Version 1, see HttpSendHttpResponse Function.