/Laravel-Posthog

Laravel Posthog implementation

Primary LanguagePHP

Laravel Posthog implementation

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This package provides a simple integration of Posthog in Laravel applications.

The package covers both Identify as Capture (events) requests which can be triggered manual or automatically using an Event Listener.

You can also easily integrate Feature Flags within your application.

This package uses the PostHog / posthog-php package. For more information about Posthog, check their documentation.

Installation

You can install the package via composer:

composer require qodenl/laravel-posthog

You can publish the config file with:

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="QodeNL\LaravelPosthog\PosthogServiceProvider"  

After publishing the content, set your API key and Host in your .env file:

POSTHOG_KEY=
POSTHOG_HOST=https://posthog.com
POSTHOG_ENABLED=true

Make sure you copy the correct host from Posthog.

Posthog is enabled by default, but you can disable it with the POSTHOG_ENABLED env variable.

Make sure to disable Posthog for local/testing environments.

Usage

Manual events

use QodeNL\LaravelPosthog\Facades\Posthog;

Posthog::capture('event name', ['property' => 'value']);

Automatic events

You can add the PosthogListener::class listener to your EventServiceProvider. The package will create an capture automatically when the event happens.

By default, all fillable attributes from a model (available in the event) will be sent to Posthog as properties.

You can specify which attributes you want to send to Posthog by adding a PosthogAttributes property to your Model.

public $posthogAttributes = [
    'first_name',
    'last_name',
];

Attributes in the hidden property will always be ignored.

Identify

Events will be sent to Posthog with a unique ID for anonymous users. When the user is recognized (usually on log in), you should trigger the identify method to link the unique ID to the user.

You can pass additional information about the user to be stored in his profile.

use QodeNL\LaravelPosthog\Facades\Posthog;

Posthog::identify('email@user.com', ['first_name' => 'John', 'last_name' => 'Doe']);

Alias

If you want to assign a session ID to a user (for example a front-end session ID) you can use the alias method.

The Session ID argument will be assigned to the auto-generated ID of the user.

Posthog::alias('Session ID here');

Feature flags

Get all feature flags

use QodeNL\LaravelPosthog\Facades\Posthog;

Posthog::getAllFlags();

Get all feature flags with boolean if enabled for user or not.

Check if feature is enabled

use QodeNL\LaravelPosthog\Facades\Posthog;

Posthog::isFeatureEnabled('myFeatureFlagKey');

Check if feature is enabled for user. Returns boolean.

Get feature flag

use QodeNL\LaravelPosthog\Facades\Posthog;

Posthog::getFeatureFlag('myFeatureFlagKey');

Get feature flag. Returns false if feature is disabled. Returns true (or payload if set).

Optional attributes

You can pass groups, personProperties and groupProperties to the isFeatureEnabled and getFeatureFlag functions.

Please check the Posthog PHP documentation for more information.

In the Posthog config you can configure if events should be sent to Posthog and if you want to evaluate events locally.

Queue / jobs

The capture, identify and alias actions are executed by jobs. Be sure you've enabled and configured queues for your applications.

Changelog

Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.

Credits

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.