Site tracking and analytics storage
Hummingbird serves a 1x1 tracking pixel to users. In the browser's GET request it sends back tracking data generated by javascript.
- node.js v0.2.0
- npm v0.2.4
- mongodb
git clone git://github.com/mnutt/hummingbird.git
cd hummingbird
# Use npm to install the dependencies
npm install
# Copy the default configuration file
cp config/app.json.sample config/app.json
# To use the map, download MaxMind's GeoIP database and extract to the root directory:
wget http://geolite.maxmind.com/download/geoip/database/GeoLiteCity.dat.gz
gunzip GeoLiteCity.dat.gz
To start the analytics server, run the following:
mongod & (or start mongo some other way)
node server.js
By default a dashboard will be run on port 8080. You can disable it for production use in config/app.json. The dashboard is just html served out of public/; you can serve it using any webserver.
Make sure to properly secure the dashboard if you don't want outside people to see it. The dashboard httpServer's 'listen' function takes a second argument that is the interface to bind; typically you would choose "127.0.0.1" to only allow access from localhost, or "0.0.0.0" to listen on all interfaces. In production you should change the instances of "localhost:8000" in public/index.html to point to the server where you're hosting the dashboard.
Hummingbird is organized into two parts: a node.js-based tracking server that records user activity via a tracking pixel, and a collection of javascript-based widgets that display that activity. The server records all activity in MongoDB and broadcasts it to the clients using WebSockets if possible, and falling back to Flash sockets if necessary.
The Hummingbird.WebSocket object receives websocket events from the server in the form of JSON objects. Individual widgets subscribe to a property in the JSON tree and register handler functions to be called whenever that property is present.
Metrics are stored in lib/metrics and auto-loaded. Each metric contains a handler function that is
called every time a new user event occurs. Metrics store data in the data
object property which
gets emitted to clients in intervals specified by the metric. A basic example can be found in
lib/metrics/total_views.js. An example of how a metric can filter based on urls is in
lib/metric/sales.js.
Hummingbird comes with some stock widgets (Counter, Logger, Graph) that demonstrate how to hook into the data provided by the node.js server. For the minimum amount required to create a widget, see public/js/widgets/logger.js. A widget is an object whose prototype extends Hummingbird.Base and implements onMessage.
sudo gem install jspec
jspec run --node
- To run the UI locally but stream data from your production server, use the url http://localhost:8080/?ws_server=your-host.com&ws_port=12345
- Michael Nutt [email protected]
- Benny Wong [email protected]
Hummingbird is licensed under the MIT License. (See LICENSE)