redis_analytics
A ruby gem that uses redis to track web analytics for your rails apps
Why should I use it?
It gives you detailed analytics about visitors, unique visitors, browsers, OS, visitor recency, traffic sources, etc
Does it have a cool dashboard?
Yes, It uses the excellent Morris.js for graphs/charts
Cool! So how do I install it?
In your Gemfile
gem 'redis_analytics'
Make sure your redis server is running! Redis configuration is outside the scope of this README, but
check out the Redis documentation.
How do I enable tracking in my rails apps?
require 'redis_analytics'
RedisAnalytics.configure do |configuration|
configuration.redis_connection = Redis.new(:host => 'localhost', :port => '6379')
configuration.redis_namespace = 'ra'
end
Where can I see the dashboard?
The Dashboard is a Rails::Engine
. Just mount it into your routes.rb
file at your favorite endpoint
Rails.application.routes.draw do
mount RedisAnalytics::Dashboard::Engine => "/dashboard"
end
and navigate to /dashboard
in your app
What if I have multiple rails apps that I want to track as one single website?
Just make sure you use the same redis_connection
and redis_namespace
in the configuration for all your rails apps
RedisAnalytics.configure do |configuration|
configuration.redis_connection = Redis.new(:host => 'localhost', :port => '6379')
configuration.redis_namespace = 'mywebsite.org'
end
Why is the Geolocation tracking giving me wrong results?
IP based Geolocation works using MaxMind's GeoLite database. The free version is not as accurate as their commercial version.
Also it is recommended to regularly get an updated binary of 'GeoLite Country' database from here and extract the GeoIP.dat file into a local directory.
You will then need to point to the GeoIP.dat file in your configuration.
RedisAnalytics.configure do |configuration|
configuration.redis_connection = Redis.new(:host => 'localhost', :port => '6379')
configuration.redis_namespace = 'mywebsite.org'
configuration.geo_ip_data_path = '/path/to/GeoIP.dat'
end
Customizing & Extending
Tracking custom metrics
You can define how to track custom metrics by creating an instance method inside the RedisAnalytics::Metrics
module
module RedisAnalytics::Metrics
end
RedisAnalytics only looks for method names which conform to the following format:
[abc]_[x]_per_[y]
where
abc
is a metric namex
can be any one of ratio
or count
and defines the type of the metricy
can be any one of hit
or visit
and defines how the metric will be tracked (once per hit or once per visit)
The return value of the method is important and should be Fixnum
for count
and String
for ratio
failing which, your metric might not work!
If the return value is an error
or nil
the metric won't be tracked at all
You can access the Rack::Request
object via @rack_request
and the Rack::Response
object via @rack_response
in your methods
You are free to define other methods that do not have the above format in the Metrics
module as helper methods
module RedisAnalytics::Metrics
def user_product_views_ratio_per_hit
if @rack_request.path == '/product/info'
return "#{@rack_request.params['product_id']}_#{@rack_request.params['user_id']}"
end
end
def product_sales_ratio_per_hit
if @rack_request.path =~ Regexp.new("\/product\/([0-9]+)\/sale")
return $1
end
end
def payment_step_count_per_hit
return 1 if @rack_request.path == '/payment'
end
end
Customizing the dashboard
Coming soon
Using filters
RedisAnalytics.configure do |configuration|
configuration.add_path_filter('/robots.txt')
configuration.add_path_filter(/^\/favicon.ico$/)
configuration.add_filter do |request, response|
request.params['layout'] == 'print'
end
configuration.add_filter do |request, response|
request.ip =~ /^172.16/ or request.ip =~ /^192.168/
end
end
Contributors Wanted
I may not be able to devote much time to this gem, but you are welcome to send me pull requests. See CONTRIBUTING.md to get started
License
Since redis_analytics is licensed under MIT, you can use redis_analytics for free, provided you leave the attribution as is, in code as well as on the dashboard pages
Copyright (c) 2012-2014 Schubert Cardozo. See MIT-LICENSE! for further details.