Error Log Viewer
What role does the Error Log Viewer serve? How precisely does it function? What information does it contain?
An error log is a list of the error messages and warnings that appeared for one reason or another while your visitors were browsing your Internet site. Such a log provides raw information about the way the hosting server has addressed requests a number of situations. An error message might appear if, for instance, a link leads to a page or a file that is not on the server, if the code on a particular page cannot be processed, if somebody is trying to access the site or its back office using an IP address that is blocked by an .htaccess rule and so on. The data within the error log includes the IP of the site visitor, what error message showed up and the reason for the server to show it, the entire path to the file that triggered the error and the specific time of the event. Having this information will permit you to learn if any part of your website has a problem, which you could then resolve. As a result, your site visitors will have a better experience and you may optimize the website for maximum performance.
Error Log Viewer in Shared Hosting
You can activate the generation of error logs effortlessly when you buy a shared hosting package from our company. A complete section in the Hepsia Control Panel, which comes with the accounts, is devoted to the logs and enabling this feature requires literally only a mouse click. Once you check out this section, you shall see all the hosts which you have inside the account, including your domain names and subdomains, even the ones that you may have created to test a website just before it goes live. You just need to click on the On button for the ones that you want to be monitored by our system and it'll start generating error logs right away. To deactivate the function, you will only have to click the same button once more. Each and every error log can be downloaded and saved to your laptop or computer whenever you want, even if you have deactivated the feature.