web tracking tool [closed] - tracking

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can any one sugest me which is the best but free web tracking tool ?
I want to know the statics, traffics, hits and area of hits etc...

Google Analytics is an obvious suggestion. However, if you prefer to host your own solution (because you don't want to send private data to Google for example), then have a look at Open Web Analytics, a very impressive alternative (see the features list).
Open Web Analytics (OWA) is an open source web analytics framework written in PHP. OWA was born out of the need for an open source framework that could be used to easily add web analytics features to web sites and applications. The OWA framework also comes with built-in support for popular web applications such as Wordpress and MediaWiki. As a generic web analytics framework, OWA can be extended to track and analyze any web application.
(source: openwebanalytics.com)
Another very decent alternative is Piwik:
Piwik is a downloadable, open source
(GPL licensed) web analytics software
program. It provides you with detailed
real time reports on your website
visitors: the search engines and
keywords they used, the language they
speak, your popular pages… and so much
more.
Piwik aims to be an open source
alternative to Google Analytics.
Piwik is a PHP MySQL software program
that you download and install on your
own webserver. At the end of the five
minute installation process you will
be given a JavaScript tag. Simply copy
and paste this tag on websites you
wish to track (or use an existing
plugin to do it automatically for
you).
(source: piwik.org)
Personally, I prefer OWA over Piwik and don't have anything negative to say about it.

Google Analytics has got all the features you specify.
You need a Google account but you don't have to sign up for their advertising programme. If you are already enrolled, Analytics is hooked into other Google products so you can get reports on Ad Sense hits, etc.

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Which tool and framework to use RestAPI Automation Testing? [closed]

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I am looking for RestAPI automation tool which should be open source tool.
Not getting which tool and framework should go.
Can anyone suggest for me good tool and framework for API automation testing?
It depends on your requirements and your skills.
The most obvious choice would be SoapUI, it normally doesn't require any developer background and has limited load testing capabilities.
Apache JMeter can be also used for API testing, it has Logic Controllers to design the test, Assertions to set pass/fail criteria and if you will need to run tests in multithreaded manner - JMeter is designed for load testing. See Testing SOAP/REST Web Services Using JMeter for more details.
Any programming language / library / framework which can send HTTP requests and has good support of XML or JSON or both. However it assumes some underlying programming language knowledge, besides when it comes to client SSL certificates, protocol-based and other security types it can be a headache. The most popular framework seems to be REST-assured, it's Java-based, if you're not comfortable with Java you can try searching for equivalent for programming language(s) you know better.
You Can go for SOAPUI opensource https://www.soapui.org/
You can create your own framework , using groovy or Java language, can use lot of plugins
Soaupi has lot options , easy learning curve ,and lot of online support , and large userbase.
Soap UI scripts can be maintained easily.
Soapui scripts can run through , JUNIT,TESTNG, ANT, GRADLE, MAVEN and reports can be generated.
For load testing/mini stress on your REST API, its easy ,just right click on existing test case and add to load test .
All the best , Happy Testing

Chrome Web Store: Public API for app/extension info retrieval [closed]

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The Chrome Web Store API allows you to perform a bunch of operations as an app/extension developer, for example uploading or updating an extension.
Is there an (unauthenticated) API that allows GETting information about app/extensions, for example their publishing date or their version number?
I'm afraid that short of scrapping the pages, there isn't such a public API.
If you already have the extension/app installed on your device, you can use chrome.app.getDetails() in the console of that extension/app to retrieve a lot of the same information available in the Chrome Web Store. This isn't exactly what you'd asked for, but you could potentially setup an automated service to install an extension on a device, query its information, then uninstall it, which would only require permissions for your device and not the Chrome Web Store. Convoluted, yes, I know.

How to do cross browser testing for a web site [closed]

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when we develop a web site then we do not know how web site behave in other browser and also in a specific browser with different version. i have seen few web site is there where we can put our web site url and it generate image of our web site. those functionality is not good. so i like to know is there any free tool exist which give me browser like feeling where we can put our web site url and do the interaction with our web site.
i am looking for best free tool to test web site functionality and UI look. share the idea. thanks
One tool i know is Browserstack. It offers free trial for half an hour. If you need more, just register again with new email or support them and buy this product. It also offers you to test local links on different platforms and browsers.
There is also saucelabs that offers free testing for some browsers, but if you want to test local link then you need to buy it.
Also crosbrowsertesting offers free trial. But it only supports mac osx 10.8 and windows 7 in free trial and a bunch of browsers and different versions.
Hope this info helped.
Have you already tried this: https://spoon.net/browsers ?
There are of course more containers than browsers.
If you need that feature in a long term purposes I would consider to setup your own containers e.g with help of Docker (https://www.docker.com/) or with Selenium Grid. If you automate UI tests, Selenium Grid will help you with parallel run and its distributions.
There are lot of tools available on internet but really I do not trust on result which they produce. They are good but not perfect.
If you really want to do pixel precise testing of UI in diff.browsers then do manually testing OR you can make it automate using selenium web driver & TestNG framework. You can also use selenium grid for this purpose.
Kindly refer : Cross browser testing
There is a couple of another sites. Maybe someone will find it helpful.
cloudtesting
browserling
saucelabs
crossbrowsertesting
browsera
https://www.equafy.com also has a free version.
Only MacOs is not available for free, but if it is for open source project this is included
I am affiliated with equafy.com.
Cross browser testing tools have progressed a lot in the past couple of years with some of the tools now offering automated solutions.
We've recently researched the market and put together our list of the top tools which are available today.
If you have any feedback or know of any additional ones which should be added, please do let me know.

Is there any way of delivering server-based Help without a Web server? [closed]

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We want to provide Help for a client/server system. In the current version of the system this is done client side with traditional HTML Help (i.e. lots of .chm files sitting on each client machine). For a variety of reasons (e.g. to allow quick/easy updates to the Help) we want to move the Help content (i.e. the actual topic files) onto a server.
The client-side desktop app that the Help relates to already connects to a server, so it seems like we should be able to have a client-side help viewer doing a similar thing - i.e. pulling it's topic files off a server.
However, we don't want to reinvent the wheel and code something if there's already something out there that does this.
The obvious solution would be to use WebHelp, but there's some resistance to requiring our customers to run a Web server. And hosting ourselves, or via a 3rd party, is not an option.
So does anyone know of a way of providing Help where the content resides on the server?
What sort of server are you running? Is there any reason you couldn't host a web server within your server product, potentially on a "normally unused" port? You don't need to ask the customer to install and manage a web server if you bundle it yourself.
What platform is this on, btw?
EDIT: As suggested by David in the comments, there's a related question about a embedding lightweight web server.
You should be able to do this without too much trouble.
I built a CHM-to-Web converter that slurps in a CHM and spits out a web site.
This is an example website produced from the converter tool.
The CHM creation takes a loooooong time, through Sandcastle Helpfile Builder, but the transformation from CHM to web happens in about 6 seconds. It is totally automated.
You could take this magic and tweak it to fit your rich client app. The client could query the server for an index or topic list, and then retrieve the help content as desired by the user, from the server, on demand.
Maybe I've got the wrong end of the stick, but if this all resides on an intranet then maybe you can use a mapped network drive which is shared between all your client machines, e.g. H:/ (you could make it part of their login script). You can then use a file link to get to the HTML pages, e.g. file:///H:/help_folder/index.html
If the rest of your app is delivered across the web, then you'll have to use a web server. There is very cheap and easy web hosting available.

Looking for a wiki-style, standalone, version-control-"safe" documentation package [closed]

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My team and I have found that documenting our project (a development platform w/ API) with a wiki is both useful to us and useful to the users. Due to some organizational issues, we're forced to do multi-site development without network connectivity. We've switched to a DVCS (Mercurial) and had great success with this. The wiki documentation proves to be a problem as the central site is setup with MediaWiki. The offsite people have no way to access or edit the wiki.
Is there any sort of wiki-style package which doesn't not require a server/database and will be useable in a DVCS environment?
Update: Should be open-source and cross-platform
I can recommend TiddlyWiki. It does not need any web servers, only a browser, stores the entire Wiki documentation in a single HTML page. This can easily be shared through Mercurial.
Edit: Check this page, it discusses how to use TiddlyWiki with DVCS. It involves using an extension dubbed SynchroTiddly.
DokuWiki stores all data in plain text files. You could install local web servers for every developer and use your VC system to sync between developers.
ikiwiki: http://ikiwiki.info/ stores the info directly in the VCS (it supports mercurial as backend).
http://zim-wiki.org/
It's a desktop wiki (WYSIWYG editing, though not very sophisticated formatting) which stores everything in plain-text files. That means you can hold the files in version control, and have a friendly editing experience.
It even has builtin Bazaar support UPDATE: also Git, Mercurial, and Fossil.
[I know, late to the party - writing for benefit of others reading this question...]
Perhaps you should look at auto-generation of documentation from source. This way, the documentation will automatically be version controlled.
A lot of generators support adding additional documentation via plain-text files which can be added to the repository.
Look into Fossil it is a DVCS that contains a built in wiki and bug tracking system. This may be just what your looking for. Read the site, there is a built in webserver. You can use a CGI script to open up the connection to people (the fossil website is the fossil DVCS). After using it you may decide to move your code over to it as well. It is open source, and does have cross platform builds.
Ended up writing my own system using python,cherrpy, and mercurial. Perhaps one day it will end up open-source. Thanks for all the suggestions.
http://hatta-wiki.org/ is a wiki running on a Mercurial repository.
It's interesting to note how it handles conflicts: simultaneous edits are silently merged on commit, even if conflicting and committed with the conflict markers! That's OK because:
it's text, not software
you see the result of your edit immediately after commiting
it treats conflict markers as valid wiki syntax (resulting in diff -u like highlighting of the conflict)!
This arrangement motivates you to edit again to resolve the conflict immediately - but doesn't force you to.
Github's gollum is open-source, git based, eats many popular syntaxes.
But the most important selling point of course is that it's built into github.
Bitbucket similarly has a mercurial based wiki. Not sure if the code is open source though (i.e. you can edit the text offline, but not sure that you can see it rendered).
MoinMoin supports storing your pages in a Mercurial repository: http://moinmo.in/Storage2009/HelpOnStorageConfiguration#Mercurial_Backend_.28hg.29
This is quite interesting because MoinMoin has been around for a while, is rather well supported, and a rich set of features (but that's just my opinion; don't take my word for it and see for yourself ;-)).