footprinted
provides a simple way to track user activity with associated IP addresses and geolocation data in your Rails app.
It's good for tracking profile views, downloads, login attempts, or any user interaction where location matters.
Sometimes you need to know where your users are performing certain actions from.
For example, let's say your users have profiles. Where has a particular profile been viewed from?
This gem makes it trivial to track and analyze this kind of data:
# First, add this to your User model
has_trackable :profile_views
# Then, track the activity in the controller
@user.track_profile_view(ip: request.remote_ip)
# And finally, analyze the data
@user.profile_views.group(:country).count
# => { 'US'=>529, 'UK'=>291, 'CA'=>78... }
That's it! This is all you need for footprinted
to store the profile view along with the IP's geolocation data.
Note
By adding has_trackable :profile_views
to your model, footprinted
automatically creates a profile_views
association and a track_profile_view
method to your User model.
footprinted
does all the heavy lifting for you, so you don't need to define any models or associations. Just track and query.
footprinted
relies on a trackable_activities
table, and provides a model concern to interact with it.
This model concern allows you to define polymorphic associations to store activity data associated with any model.
For each activity, footprinted
stores:
- IP address
- Country
- City
- Activity type
- Event timestamp
- Optionally, an associated
performer
record, which could be auser
,admin
, or any other model. It answers the question: "who triggered this activity?"
footprinted
also provides named methods that interact with the trackable_activities
table to save and query this data.
For example, has_trackable :profile_views
will generate the profile_views
association and the track_profile_view
method. Similarly, has_trackable :downloads
will generate the downloads
association and the track_download
method.
Important
This gem depends on the trackdown
gem for locating IPs.
Start by following the trackdown
README to install and configure the gem, and make sure you have a valid installation with a working MaxMind database before continuing – otherwise we won't be able to get any geolocation data from IPs.
After trackdown
has been installed and configured, add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'footprinted'
And then execute:
bundle install
rails generate footprinted:install
rails db:migrate
This will create a migration file to create the polymorphic trackable_activities
table, and migrate the database.
Include the Footprinted::Model
concern and declare what you want to track:
class User < ApplicationRecord
include Footprinted::Model
# Track a single activity type
has_trackable :profile_views
# Track multiple activity types
has_trackable :downloads
has_trackable :login_attempts
end
footprinted
generates methods for you.
For example, the has_trackable :profile_views
association automatically provides you with a track_profile_view
method that you can use:
# Basic tracking with IP
user.track_profile_view(ip: request.remote_ip)
# Or track with a performer as well ("who triggered the activity?")
user.track_profile_view(
ip: request.remote_ip,
performer: current_user
)
# Basic queries
user.profile_views.recent
user.profile_views.last_days(7)
user.profile_views.between(1.week.ago, Time.current)
# Location queries
user.profile_views.by_country('US')
user.profile_views.countries # => ['US', 'UK', 'CA', ...]
# Performer queries
user.profile_views.performed_by(some_user)
Track multiple activity types:
class Resource < ApplicationRecord
include Footprinted::Model
has_trackable :downloads
has_trackable :previews
end
# Track activities
product.track_download(ip: request.remote_ip)
product.track_preview(ip: request.remote_ip)
# Query activities
product.downloads.count
product.previews.last_days(30)
product.downloads.between(1.week.ago, Time.current)
Time-based analysis:
# Daily activity for the last 30 days
resource.downloads
.where('created_at > ?', 30.days.ago)
.group("DATE(created_at)")
.count
.transform_keys { |k| k.strftime("%Y-%m-%d") }
# => {"2024-03-26" => 5, "2024-03-25" => 3, ...}
# Hourly distribution
resource.downloads
.group("HOUR(created_at)")
.count
# => {0=>10, 1=>5, 2=>8, ...}
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/rameerez/footprinted. Our code of conduct is: just be nice and make your mom proud of what you do and post online.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.