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Ahoy

🔥 Simple, powerful analytics for Rails

Track visits and events in Ruby, JavaScript, and native apps. Data is stored in your database by default so you can easily combine it with other data.

Ahoy 2.0 was recently released! See how to upgrade

📮 To track emails, check out Ahoy Email, and for A/B testing, check out Field Test

🍊 Battle-tested at Instacart

Installation

Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:

gem 'ahoy_matey'

And run:

bundle install
rails generate ahoy:install
rails db:migrate

Restart your web server, open a page in your browser, and a visit will be created 🎉

Track your first event from a controller with:

ahoy.track "My first event", {language: "Ruby"}

JavaScript & Native Apps

First, enable the API in config/initializers/ahoy.rb:

Ahoy.api = true

And restart your web server.

For JavaScript, add to app/assets/javascripts/application.js:

//= require ahoy

And track an event with:

ahoy.track("My second event", {language: "JavaScript"});

For native apps, see the API spec.

How It Works

Visits

When someone visits your website, Ahoy creates a visit with lots of useful information.

  • traffic source - referrer, referring domain, landing page, search keyword
  • location - country, region, and city
  • technology - browser, OS, and device type
  • utm parameters - source, medium, term, content, campaign

Use the current_visit method to access it.

Prevent certain Rails actions from creating visits with:

skip_before_action :track_ahoy_visit

This is typically useful for APIs.

You can also defer visit tracking to JavaScript. This is useful for preventing bots (that aren’t detected by their user agent) and users with cookies disabled from creating a new visit on each request. :when_needed will create visits server-side only when needed by events, and false will disable server-side creation completely, discarding events without a visit.

Ahoy.server_side_visits = :when_needed

Events

Each event has a name and properties.

There are three ways to track events.

JavaScript

ahoy.track("Viewed book", {title: "The World is Flat"});

or track events automatically with:

ahoy.trackAll();

See Ahoy.js for a complete list of features.

Ruby

ahoy.track "Viewed book", title: "Hot, Flat, and Crowded"

or track actions automatically with:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  after_action :track_action

  protected

  def track_action
    ahoy.track "Ran action", request.path_parameters
  end
end

Native Apps

See the API spec.

Associated Models

Say we want to associate orders with visits. Just add visitable to the model.

class Order < ApplicationRecord
  visitable
end

When a visitor places an order, the visit_id column is automatically set 🎉

See where orders are coming from with simple joins:

Order.joins(:visit).group("referring_domain").count
Order.joins(:visit).group("city").count
Order.joins(:visit).group("device_type").count

Here’s what the migration to add the visit_id column should look like:

class AddVisitIdToOrders < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.1]
  def change
    add_column :orders, :visit_id, :bigint
  end
end

Customize the column and class name with:

visitable :sign_up_visit, class_name: "Visit"

Users

Ahoy automatically attaches the current_user to the visit. With Devise, it attaches the user even if he or she signs in after the visit starts.

With other authentication frameworks, add this to the end of your sign in method:

ahoy.authenticate(user)

To see the visits for a given user, create an association:

class User < ApplicationRecord
  has_many :visits, class_name: "Ahoy::Visit"
end

And use:

User.find(123).visits

Custom User Method

Use a method besides current_user

Ahoy.user_method = :true_user

or use a proc

Ahoy.user_method = ->(controller) { controller.true_user }

Doorkeeper

To attach the user with Doorkeeper, be sure you have a current_resource_owner method in ApplicationController.

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  private

  def current_resource_owner
    User.find(doorkeeper_token.resource_owner_id) if doorkeeper_token
  end
end

Exclusions

Bots are excluded from tracking by default. To include them, use:

Ahoy.track_bots = true

Add your own rules with:

Ahoy.exclude_method = lambda do |controller, request|
  request.ip == "192.168.1.1"
end

Visit Duration

By default, a new visit is created after 4 hours of inactivity. Change this with:

Ahoy.visit_duration = 30.minutes

Multiple Subdomains

To track visits across multiple subdomains, use:

Ahoy.cookie_domain = :all

Geocoding

Disable geocoding with:

Ahoy.geocode = false

Change the job queue with:

Ahoy.job_queue = :low_priority

Geocoding Performance

To avoid calls to a remote API, download the GeoLite2 City database and configure Geocoder to use it.

Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:

gem 'maxminddb'

And create an initializer at config/initializers/geocoder.rb with:

Geocoder.configure(
  ip_lookup: :geoip2,
  geoip2: {
    file: Rails.root.join("lib", "GeoLite2-City.mmdb")
  }
)

Token Generation

Ahoy uses random UUIDs for visit and visitor tokens by default, but you can use your own generator like Druuid.

Ahoy.token_generator = -> { Druuid.gen }

Throttling

You can use Rack::Attack to throttle requests to the API.

class Rack::Attack
  throttle("ahoy/ip", limit: 20, period: 1.minute) do |req|
    if req.path.start_with?("/ahoy/")
      req.ip
    end
  end
end

Exceptions

Exceptions are rescued so analytics do not break your app. Ahoy uses Safely to try to report them to a service by default. To customize this, use:

Safely.report_exception_method = ->(e) { Rollbar.error(e) }

Development

Ahoy is built with developers in mind. You can run the following code in your browser’s console.

Force a new visit

ahoy.reset(); // then reload the page

Log messages

ahoy.debug();

Turn off logging

ahoy.debug(false);

Debug API requests in Ruby

Ahoy.quiet = false

Data Stores

Data tracked by Ahoy is sent to your data store. Ahoy ships with a data store that uses your Rails database by default. You can find it in config/initializers/ahoy.rb:

class Ahoy::Store < Ahoy::DatabaseStore
end

There are four events data stores can subscribe to:

class Ahoy::Store < Ahoy::BaseStore
  def track_visit(data)
    # new visit
  end

  def track_event(data)
    # new event
  end

  def geocode(data)
    # visit geocoded
  end

  def authenticate(data)
    # user authenticates
  end
end

Data stores are designed to be highly customizable so you can scale as you grow. Check out examples for Kafka, RabbitMQ, Fluentd, NATS, NSQ, and Amazon Kinesis Firehose.

Track Additional Data

class Ahoy::Store < Ahoy::DatabaseStore
  def track_visit(data)
    data[:accept_language] = request.headers["Accept-Language"]
    super(data)
  end
end

Two useful methods you can use are request and controller.

Use Different Models

class Ahoy::Store < Ahoy::DatabaseStore
  def visit_model
    MyVisit
  end

  def event_model
    MyEvent
  end
end

Explore the Data

Blazer is a great tool for exploring your data.

With ActiveRecord, you can do:

Ahoy::Visit.group(:search_keyword).count
Ahoy::Visit.group(:country).count
Ahoy::Visit.group(:referring_domain).count

Chartkick and Groupdate make it easy to visualize the data.

<%= line_chart Ahoy::Visit.group_by_day(:started_at).count %>

Querying Events

Ahoy provides two methods on the event model to make querying easier.

To query on both name and properties, you can use:

Ahoy::Event.where_event("Viewed product", product_id: 123).count

Or just query properties with:

Ahoy::Event.where_props(product_id: 123).count

Funnels

It’s easy to create funnels.

viewed_store_ids = Ahoy::Event.where(name: "Viewed store").distinct.pluck(:user_id)
added_item_ids = Ahoy::Event.where(user_id: viewed_store_ids, name: "Added item to cart").distinct.pluck(:user_id)
viewed_checkout_ids = Ahoy::Event.where(user_id: added_item_ids, name: "Viewed checkout").distinct.pluck(:user_id)

The same approach also works with visitor tokens.

Tutorials

API Spec

Visits

Generate visit and visitor tokens as UUIDs, and include these values in the Ahoy-Visit and Ahoy-Visitor headers with all requests.

Send a POST request to /ahoy/visits with Content-Type: application/json and a body like:

{
  "visit_token": "<visit-token>",
  "visitor_token": "<visitor-token>",
  "platform": "iOS",
  "app_version": "1.0.0",
  "os_version": "11.2.6"
}

After 4 hours of inactivity, create another visit (use the same visitor token).

Events

Send a POST request to /ahoy/events with Content-Type: application/json and a body like:

{
  "visit_token": "<visit-token>",
  "visitor_token": "<visitor-token>",
  "events": [
    {
      "id": "<optional-random-id>",
      "name": "Viewed item",
      "properties": {
        "item_id": 123
      },
      "time": "2018-01-01T00:00:00-07:00"
    }
  ]
}

Webpacker

For Webpacker, use Yarn to install the JavaScript library:

yarn add ahoy.js

Then include it in your pack.

import ahoy from "ahoy.js";

History

View the changelog

Contributing

Everyone is encouraged to help improve this project. Here are a few ways you can help:

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