Project

rakwik

0.01
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Rakwik is a server-side tracker integration for the Piwik opensource web statistics software. It's easy to integrate into rack-based applications and does not require frontend Javascript inclusion.
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 Dependencies

Development

>= 0

Runtime

 Project Readme

Rakwik

Build Status

Server-side integration of web tracking methods does not require Javascript snippets or tracking images to be includd in the actual frontend. Rakwik implements asynchronous tracking, so it tries to keep the time low that is needed to count a particular request.

Server-side tracking

Unlike client-side tracking, server-side tracking can be used independently of frontend encryption. Your application requires SSL encryption, but your installation of Piwik does not support it? That's what Rakwik ist built for: It can track a request using http while the original request came in over https, without the browser having to warn the user about mixed content.

Pros and cons

Using server-side tracking, you can track all kinds of information that are visible to your server. Most certainly the URL, IP address and referrer are used, also session information to identify subsequent requests from the same client.

However, it's hard to track client-specific information like screen resolution and plugin support since the server has no way to detect details like such.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'rakwik'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install rakwik

Usage

Rakwik comes as a Rack-compatible middleware which needs to be added to your application's middleware stack on startup.

config.middleware.use Rakwik::Tracker,
    :piwik_url  => 'http://your.piwik.host/piwik.php',
    :site_id    => 'your_site_id', # eg. 1
    :token_auth => 'yoursecrettoken'

The :token_auth is needed since Rakwik will tell Piwik to record hits from another IP than its own. The token_auth must be either the Super User token_auth, or a user with "admin" permission for this website ID.

Action names

Piwik allows to set a custom action name which will be used in reports instead of the original URL. To use it from your Rails application, include it into your controller like such:

require 'rakwik/helpers'

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  # ...
  include Rakwik::Helpers
end

In the particular controller activate it by using the action_name class method:

class BooksController < ApplicationController
  action_name :page_title
  
  # GET /books
  # GET /books.xml
  def index
    @books = Book.all
    @page_title = "Books"

    respond_with @books
  end
end

Currently, action_name points to a instance variable.

Warden integration

Since version 0.4.0 Rakwik detects Warden based credentials, eg. from Devise. It'll create a MD5 hash of the current user instance to reliably identify subsequent requests of the same user.

TODO

  • Handle tracking cookies no way to do this asynchronously
  • Implement a helper to set the action title from the controller or view
  • Implement a way to provide custom variables from the controller or view
  • Implement a way to detect client capabilities without a separate request
  • Detect Warden based credentials, eg. from Devise
  • Track 404 responses
  • Implement meaningful specs

Reference

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Added some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request