[heroes] Question about download.o.o stats
Hello everybody, I have a question about download.o.o statistics. So the question is: Is there anyway for our current environment to know how many times *any* file is being downloaded? I am asking because I have created some ad-hoc virtual-machine appliances and it would be very beneficial to know how many times an appliance gets downloaded (and if possible dissect "new comers" vs "previous users"). The appliances live in one of the following folders, depending whether it is for Leap15.2 or Tumbleweed: 1) https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Virtualization:/Appliances:/Image... 2) https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Virtualization:/Appliances:/Image... and the file names follow the following convention: machinelearning-appliance.x86_64-* Beside, in general I would think that even knowing how many times RPMs are being downloaded (via zypper) could be beneficial to understand better end-users needs/trends. Is there anything that could be extrapolated from logs/metrics for statistics purposes as per my initial question? Thank you for your consideration. Best regards, -- Marco Varlese Architect Developer Technologies & AI/ML SUSE Labs SUSE Software Solutions Italy S.r.l. (T) +39 02.947.570.06 (M) +39 345.591.51.01 (E) marco.varlese@suse.com (W) https://gotomeet.me/marcovarlese -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
Marco Varlese wrote:
Beside, in general I would think that even knowing how many times RPMs are being downloaded (via zypper) could be beneficial to understand better end-users needs/trends.
Is there anything that could be extrapolated from logs/metrics for statistics purposes as per my initial question?
Hello Marco I can easily grep through the last 30 days worth of logs and look for whatever you need. -- Per Jessen, Zürich (7.7°C) Member, openSUSE Heroes -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
Hello Marco, best person to talk to would be Doug. Lubos On Thu, 2020-03-05 at 14:08 +0100, Marco Varlese wrote:
Hello everybody,
I have a question about download.o.o statistics.
So the question is: Is there anyway for our current environment to know how many times *any* file is being downloaded?
I am asking because I have created some ad-hoc virtual-machine appliances and it would be very beneficial to know how many times an appliance gets downloaded (and if possible dissect "new comers" vs "previous users").
The appliances live in one of the following folders, depending whether it is for Leap15.2 or Tumbleweed:
1) https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Virtualization:/Appliances:/Image...
2) https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Virtualization:/Appliances:/Image...
and the file names follow the following convention: machinelearning-appliance.x86_64-*
Beside, in general I would think that even knowing how many times RPMs are being downloaded (via zypper) could be beneficial to understand better end-users needs/trends.
Is there anything that could be extrapolated from logs/metrics for statistics purposes as per my initial question?
Thank you for your consideration.
Best regards, -- Best regards
Luboš Kocman Release Manager openSUSE Leap SUSE Software Solutions Germany GmbH Maxfeldstr. 5 90409 Nuremberg Germany (HRB 36809, AG Nürnberg) Managing Director: Felix Imendörffer
Hello Lubos, On 3/6/20 11:35 AM, Lubos Kocman wrote:
Hello Marco,
best person to talk to would be Doug.
Actually, somebody (Per Jessen) from the heroes community is already looking into this.
Lubos
Thanks, Marco
On Thu, 2020-03-05 at 14:08 +0100, Marco Varlese wrote:
Hello everybody,
I have a question about download.o.o statistics.
So the question is: Is there anyway for our current environment to know how many times *any* file is being downloaded?
I am asking because I have created some ad-hoc virtual-machine appliances and it would be very beneficial to know how many times an appliance gets downloaded (and if possible dissect "new comers" vs "previous users").
The appliances live in one of the following folders, depending whether it is for Leap15.2 or Tumbleweed:
1) https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Virtualization:/Appliances:/Image...
2) https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Virtualization:/Appliances:/Image...
and the file names follow the following convention: machinelearning-appliance.x86_64-*
Beside, in general I would think that even knowing how many times RPMs are being downloaded (via zypper) could be beneficial to understand better end-users needs/trends.
Is there anything that could be extrapolated from logs/metrics for statistics purposes as per my initial question?
Thank you for your consideration.
Best regards,
-- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
Hello Per, Apologies for top-posting but I didn't get your reply via email, and only noticed it on the ML archives. To answer your question, the appliances have just gone live few days ago, so I am not expecting to find anything meaningful in the past 30 days. That said I would be interested to know the download stats for the appliances and the packages below: 1) machinelearning-appliance.* 2) tensorflow*.rpm 3) *torch*.rpm 4) *onnx*.rpm 5) *caffe*.rpm Do you think the above could be possible? I am wondering, is it easy enough to have something running monthly to extrapolate this sort of information? It would be really cool if it could be made generic enough and become an useful tool for release managers and developers. What do you think? Thanks again for any help on this!!! Best regards, Marco On 3/5/20 2:08 PM, Marco Varlese wrote:
Hello everybody,
I have a question about download.o.o statistics.
So the question is: Is there anyway for our current environment to know how many times *any* file is being downloaded?
I am asking because I have created some ad-hoc virtual-machine appliances and it would be very beneficial to know how many times an appliance gets downloaded (and if possible dissect "new comers" vs "previous users").
The appliances live in one of the following folders, depending whether it is for Leap15.2 or Tumbleweed:
1) https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Virtualization:/Appliances:/Image...
2) https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Virtualization:/Appliances:/Image...
and the file names follow the following convention: machinelearning-appliance.x86_64-*
Beside, in general I would think that even knowing how many times RPMs are being downloaded (via zypper) could be beneficial to understand better end-users needs/trends.
Is there anything that could be extrapolated from logs/metrics for statistics purposes as per my initial question?
Thank you for your consideration.
Best regards,
-- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
Marco Varlese wrote:
To answer your question, the appliances have just gone live few days ago, so I am not expecting to find anything meaningful in the past 30 days.
Aha, okay.
That said I would be interested to know the download stats for the appliances and the packages below:
1) machinelearning-appliance.* 2) tensorflow*.rpm 3) *torch*.rpm 4) *onnx*.rpm 5) *caffe*.rpm
Do you think the above could be possible?
I'll be happy to grep the logs for you, that's no big deal.
I am wondering, is it easy enough to have something running monthly to extrapolate this sort of information? It would be really cool if it could be made generic enough and become an useful tool for release managers and developers. What do you think?
Maybe start by having a look at http://metrics.o.o, maybe also http://release-tools.o.o. I don't know if they are current though. -- Per Jessen, Zürich (8.8°C) Member, openSUSE Heroes -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
On 3/6/20 11:58 AM, Per Jessen wrote:
Marco Varlese wrote:
To answer your question, the appliances have just gone live few days ago, so I am not expecting to find anything meaningful in the past 30 days.
Aha, okay.
That said I would be interested to know the download stats for the appliances and the packages below:
1) machinelearning-appliance.* 2) tensorflow*.rpm 3) *torch*.rpm 4) *onnx*.rpm 5) *caffe*.rpm
Do you think the above could be possible?
I'll be happy to grep the logs for you, that's no big deal.
I am wondering, is it easy enough to have something running monthly to extrapolate this sort of information? It would be really cool if it could be made generic enough and become an useful tool for release managers and developers. What do you think?
Maybe start by having a look at http://metrics.o.o, maybe also http://release-tools.o.o. I don't know if they are current though. Yes, I did have a look at metrics.o.o but that does not provide the level of details I need. It basically stops at the macro-categories represented by the openSUSE releases. :(
That's why I was asking if we could create or extend existing tools to provide a deeper level of details.
Thanks, Marco -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
Marco Varlese wrote:
On 3/6/20 11:58 AM, Per Jessen wrote:
Marco Varlese wrote:
To answer your question, the appliances have just gone live few days ago, so I am not expecting to find anything meaningful in the past 30 days.
Aha, okay.
That said I would be interested to know the download stats for the appliances and the packages below:
1) machinelearning-appliance.* 2) tensorflow*.rpm 3) *torch*.rpm 4) *onnx*.rpm 5) *caffe*.rpm
Do you think the above could be possible?
I'll be happy to grep the logs for you, that's no big deal.
I am wondering, is it easy enough to have something running monthly to extrapolate this sort of information? It would be really cool if it could be made generic enough and become an useful tool for release managers and developers. What do you think?
Maybe start by having a look at http://metrics.o.o, maybe also http://release-tools.o.o. I don't know if they are current though.
Yes, I did have a look at metrics.o.o but that does not provide the level of details I need. It basically stops at the macro-categories represented by the openSUSE releases. :(
Yeah, I _did_ wonder about the level of detail.
That's why I was asking if we could create or extend existing tools to provide a deeper level of details.
In principle yes, the data is there, we only need to gather, analyse and present. In practice, someone needs to do it :-) Until then, if you need me to, I'll be happy to grab some numbers from the logs for you. -- Per Jessen, Zürich (7.4°C) Member, openSUSE Heroes -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
Hi Per, On 3/6/20 1:48 PM, Per Jessen wrote:
Marco Varlese wrote:
On 3/6/20 11:58 AM, Per Jessen wrote:
Marco Varlese wrote:
To answer your question, the appliances have just gone live few days ago, so I am not expecting to find anything meaningful in the past 30 days.
Aha, okay.
That said I would be interested to know the download stats for the appliances and the packages below:
1) machinelearning-appliance.* 2) tensorflow*.rpm 3) *torch*.rpm 4) *onnx*.rpm 5) *caffe*.rpm
Do you think the above could be possible?
I'll be happy to grep the logs for you, that's no big deal.
I am wondering, is it easy enough to have something running monthly to extrapolate this sort of information? It would be really cool if it could be made generic enough and become an useful tool for release managers and developers. What do you think?
Maybe start by having a look at http://metrics.o.o, maybe also http://release-tools.o.o. I don't know if they are current though.
Yes, I did have a look at metrics.o.o but that does not provide the level of details I need. It basically stops at the macro-categories represented by the openSUSE releases. :(
Yeah, I _did_ wonder about the level of detail.
That's why I was asking if we could create or extend existing tools to provide a deeper level of details.
In principle yes, the data is there, we only need to gather, analyse and present. In practice, someone needs to do it :-)
Until then, if you need me to, I'll be happy to grab some numbers from the logs for you.
I am just following up on this thread as I am in need of your help. Do you think you could spare some time to dig out some numbers about the list of packages/images I listed above? It's been roughly a month since we initially published those artifacts so I would be really curious to see how many downloads we got. A very basic mapping of "X downloads --> Package" would be more than enough. Thanks in advance for any help you will be able to provide.
Cheers, Marco -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
Marco Varlese wrote:
I am just following up on this thread as I am in need of your help.
Do you think you could spare some time to dig out some numbers about the list of packages/images I listed above?
It's been roughly a month since we initially published those artifacts so I would be really curious to see how many downloads we got.
A very basic mapping of "X downloads --> Package" would be more than enough.
Thanks in advance for any help you will be able to provide.
Hi Marco Sure, let me have a look. Number of unique accesses per pattern, for March and April, excluding robots ? -- Per Jessen, Zürich (18.2°C) Member, openSUSE Heroes -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
On 4/17/20 11:54 AM, Per Jessen wrote:
Marco Varlese wrote:
I am just following up on this thread as I am in need of your help.
Do you think you could spare some time to dig out some numbers about the list of packages/images I listed above?
It's been roughly a month since we initially published those artifacts so I would be really curious to see how many downloads we got.
A very basic mapping of "X downloads --> Package" would be more than enough.
Thanks in advance for any help you will be able to provide.
Hi Marco
Sure, let me have a look. Number of unique accesses per pattern, for March and April, excluding robots ?
If you can even have that level of details (eg. human unique vs robots) and include both into 2 distincted categories then... I guess I'll owe you something :) Yes please, March and April will do for now; it would be totally awesome if you could gather those into 2 different "views" rather than as aggregate. Once again: THANK YOU!
-- To unsubscribe, e-mail: heroes+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: heroes+owner@opensuse.org
participants (3)
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Lubos Kocman
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Marco Varlese
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Per Jessen