:fire: Simple, powerful, first-party analytics for Rails
Track visits and events in Ruby, JavaScript, and native apps. Data is stored in your database by default, and you can customize it for any data store as you grow.
:postbox: Check out Ahoy Email for emails and Field Test for A/B testing
:tangerine: Battle-tested at Instacart
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 :tada:
Track your first event from a controller with:
ahoy.track "My first event", language: "Ruby"
Enable the API in config/initializers/ahoy.rb
:
Ahoy.api = true
And restart your web server.
For Importmap (Rails 7+ default), add to config/importmap.rb
:
pin "ahoy", to: "ahoy.js"
And add to app/javascript/application.js
:
import "ahoy"
For Bun, esbuild, rollup.js, or Webpack, run:
bun add ahoy.js
# or
yarn add ahoy.js
And add to app/javascript/application.js
:
import ahoy from "ahoy.js"
For Sprockets, add to app/assets/javascripts/application.js
:
//= require ahoy
Track an event with:
ahoy.track("My second event", {language: "JavaScript"});
Check out Ahoy iOS and Ahoy Android.
To enable geocoding, see the Geocoding section.
Ahoy provides a number of options to help with GDPR compliance. See the GDPR section for more info.
When someone visits your website, Ahoy creates a visit with lots of useful information.
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. If your entire Rails app is an API, you can use:
Ahoy.api_only = true
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
Each event has a name
and properties
. There are several ways to track events.
ahoy.track "Viewed book", title: "Hot, Flat, and Crowded"
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
ahoy.track("Viewed book", {title: "The World is Flat"});
See Ahoy.js for a complete list of features.
See the docs for Ahoy iOS and Ahoy Android.
<head>
<script async custom-element="amp-analytics" src="https://cdn.ampproject.org/v0/amp-analytics-0.1.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<%= amp_event "Viewed article", title: "Analytics with Rails" %>
</body>
Say we want to associate orders with visits. Just add visitable
to the model.
class Order < ApplicationRecord
visitable :ahoy_visit
end
When a visitor places an order, the ahoy_visit_id
column is automatically set :tada:
See where orders are coming from with simple joins:
Order.joins(:ahoy_visit).group("referring_domain").count
Order.joins(:ahoy_visit).group("city").count
Order.joins(:ahoy_visit).group("device_type").count
Here’s what the migration to add the ahoy_visit_id
column should look like:
class AddAhoyVisitToOrders < ActiveRecord::Migration[8.0]
def change
add_reference :orders, :ahoy_visit
end
end
Customize the column with:
visitable :sign_up_visit
Ahoy automatically attaches the current_user
to the visit. With Devise, it attaches the user even if they sign 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
Use a method besides current_user
Ahoy.user_method = :true_user
or use a proc
Ahoy.user_method = ->(controller) { controller.true_user }
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
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
By default, a new visit is created after 4 hours of inactivity. Change this with:
Ahoy.visit_duration = 30.minutes
By default, a new visitor_token
is generated after 2 years. Change this with:
Ahoy.visitor_duration = 30.days
To track visits across multiple subdomains, use:
Ahoy.cookie_domain = :all
Set other cookie options with:
Ahoy.cookie_options = {same_site: :lax}
You can also disable cookies
Ahoy uses random UUIDs for visit and visitor tokens by default, but you can use your own generator like ULID.
Ahoy.token_generator = -> { ULID.generate }
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 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) }
Ahoy uses Geocoder for geocoding. We recommend configuring local geocoding or load balancer geocoding so IP addresses are not sent to a 3rd party service. If you do use a 3rd party service and adhere to GDPR, be sure to add it to your subprocessor list. If Ahoy is configured to mask IPs, the masked IP is used (this can reduce accuracy but is better for privacy).
To enable geocoding, add this line to your application’s Gemfile:
gem "geocoder"
And update config/initializers/ahoy.rb
:
Ahoy.geocode = true
Geocoding is performed in a background job so it doesn’t slow down web requests. The default job queue is :ahoy
. Change this with:
Ahoy.job_queue = :low_priority
For privacy and performance, we recommend geocoding locally.
For city-level geocoding, download the GeoLite2 City database.
Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:
gem "maxminddb"
And create config/initializers/geocoder.rb
with:
Geocoder.configure(
ip_lookup: :geoip2,
geoip2: {
file: "path/to/GeoLite2-City.mmdb"
}
)
For country-level geocoding, install the geoip-database
package. It’s preinstalled on Heroku. For Ubuntu, use:
sudo apt-get install geoip-database
Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:
gem "geoip"
And create config/initializers/geocoder.rb
with:
Geocoder.configure(
ip_lookup: :maxmind_local,
maxmind_local: {
file: "/usr/share/GeoIP/GeoIP.dat",
package: :country
}
)
Some load balancers can add geocoding information to request headers.
Update config/initializers/ahoy.rb
with:
Ahoy.geocode = false
class Ahoy::Store < Ahoy::DatabaseStore
def track_visit(data)
data[:country] = request.headers["<country-header>"]
data[:region] = request.headers["<region-header>"]
data[:city] = request.headers["<city-header>"]
super(data)
end
end
Ahoy provides a number of options to help with GDPR compliance.
Update config/initializers/ahoy.rb
with:
class Ahoy::Store < Ahoy::DatabaseStore
def authenticate(data)
# disables automatic linking of visits and users
end
end
Ahoy.mask_ips = true
Ahoy.cookies = :none
This:
If you use JavaScript tracking, also set:
ahoy.configure({cookies: false});
Ahoy can mask IPs with the same approach Google Analytics uses for IP anonymization. This means:
8.8.4.4
becomes 8.8.4.0
)2001:4860:4860:0:0:0:0:8844
becomes 2001:4860:4860::
)Ahoy.mask_ips = true
IPs are masked before geolocation is performed.
To mask previously collected IPs, use:
Ahoy::Visit.find_each do |visit|
visit.update_column :ip, Ahoy.mask_ip(visit.ip)
end
Ahoy can switch from cookies to anonymity sets. Instead of cookies, visitors with the same IP mask and user agent are grouped together in an anonymity set.
Ahoy.cookies = :none
Note: If Ahoy was installed before v5, add an index before making this change.
Previously set cookies are automatically deleted. If you use JavaScript tracking, also set:
ahoy.configure({cookies: false});
Data should only be retained for as long as it’s needed. Delete older data with:
Ahoy::Visit.where("started_at < ?", 2.years.ago).find_in_batches do |visits|
visit_ids = visits.map(&:id)
Ahoy::Event.where(visit_id: visit_ids).delete_all
Ahoy::Visit.where(id: visit_ids).delete_all
end
You can use Rollup to aggregate important data before you do.
Ahoy::Visit.rollup("Visits", interval: "hour")
Delete data for a specific user with:
user_id = 123
visit_ids = Ahoy::Visit.where(user_id: user_id).pluck(:id)
Ahoy::Event.where(visit_id: visit_ids).delete_all
Ahoy::Visit.where(id: visit_ids).delete_all
Ahoy::Event.where(user_id: user_id).delete_all
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 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.
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
.
You can pass additional visit data from JavaScript with:
ahoy.configure({visitParams: {referral_code: 123}});
And use:
class Ahoy::Store < Ahoy::DatabaseStore
def track_visit(data)
data[:referral_code] = request.parameters[:referral_code]
super(data)
end
end
class Ahoy::Store < Ahoy::DatabaseStore
def visit_model
MyVisit
end
def event_model
MyEvent
end
end
Blazer is a great tool for exploring your data.
With Active Record, 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 %>
Ahoy provides a few 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, category: "Books").count
Group by properties with:
Ahoy::Event.group_prop(:product_id, :category).count
Note: MySQL and MariaDB always return string keys (including "null"
for nil
) for group_prop
.
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.
Improve query performance by pre-aggregating data with Rollup.
Ahoy::Event.where(name: "Viewed store").rollup("Store views")
This is only needed if you have a lot of data.
To forecast future visits and events, check out Prophet.
daily_visits = Ahoy::Visit.group_by_day(:started_at).count # uses Groupdate
Prophet.forecast(daily_visits)
To detect anomalies in visits and events, check out AnomalyDetection.rb.
daily_visits = Ahoy::Visit.group_by_day(:started_at).count # uses Groupdate
AnomalyDetection.detect(daily_visits, period: 7)
To detect breakouts in visits and events, check out Breakout.
daily_visits = Ahoy::Visit.group_by_day(:started_at).count # uses Groupdate
Breakout.detect(daily_visits)
To make recommendations based on events, check out Disco.
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).
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": "2025-01-01T00:00:00-07:00"
}
]
}
Visits now expire with anonymity sets. If using Ahoy.cookies = false
, a new index is needed.
For Active Record, create a migration with:
add_index :ahoy_visits, [:visitor_token, :started_at]
For Mongoid, set:
class Ahoy::Visit
index({visitor_token: 1, started_at: 1})
end
Create the index before upgrading, and set:
Ahoy.cookies = :none
View the changelog
Everyone is encouraged to help improve this project. Here are a few ways you can help:
To get started with development:
git clone https://github.com/ankane/ahoy.git
cd ahoy
bundle install
bundle exec rake test
To test different adapters, use:
ADAPTER=postgresql bundle exec rake test
ADAPTER=mysql2 bundle exec rake test
ADAPTER=mongoid bundle exec rake test