Install Keen IO analytics support into your Node.JS Express.js app in mere seconds and instantly begin capturing data.
Once installed it creates Keen.IO events from HTTP requests based on data intercepted from the calls res.json()
, res.jsonp()
, res.send()
, res.render()
, res.redirect()
, res.sendfile()
and res.download()
.
Read about why the middleware was made and the use cases it solves here.
Sign up to Keen IO for free here. And then install the package from the command line with:
$ npm install express-keenio
It's possible to use the middleware with specific routes decorator-style, like so:
var express = require("express"),
keenio = require('express-keenio');
var app = express();
keenio.configure({ client: { projectId: '<test>', writeKey: '<test>'} });
keenio.on('error', console.warn); // There are 'error', 'info', 'warning', 'debug', 'track', and 'flush' events which are emitted.
app.get('/test', keenio.trackRoute('testCollection'), function (req, res) {
// You code goes here.
});
app.post('/payment', keenio.trackRoute("payments",
{ query: ['userId', 'itemId', 'type', 'quantity', 'price'],
reaction: ['receipt.status', 'receipt.tax'] }), function (req, res) {
// Your code goes here.
});
app.listen(3000);
It's also possible to make the middleware handle all routes by use
ing it against the app
:
var express = require("express"),
bodyParser = require("body-parser"),
keenio = require('express-keenio');
var app = express();
keenio.configure({ client: { projectId: '<test>', writeKey: '<test>' } });
app.configure(function () {
app.use(bodyParser.json());
app.use(keenio.handleAll());
});
app.get('/test', function (req, res) {
// Your code goes here.
});
app.listen(3000);
Additionally, the standard Keen.IO Node.JS client is exposed on middleware.keenClient
.
The middleware will create something that looks sort of like this:
{
"identity": {
"user": {
"name": "Joe Bloggs",
"email": "joe@example.com",
"age": 17
},
"session": {
"id": "some-identifier"
},
"userAgent": "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_9_1) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/32.0.1700.77 Safari/537.36"
},
"intention": {
"method": "POST",
"path": "/pay-user/5",
"params": {
"userId": 5
},
"body": {
"price": 5.00
},
"query": {},
"referer": "http://keen.io/"
},
"reaction": {
"success": true,
"userAddress": "..."
},
"httpStatus": 200,
"environment": {
"library": "express-keenio"
}
}
See KeenClient-Node#initialization.
{
client: {
projectId: '<test>',
writeKey: '<test>'
}
}
Keen.IO has a set limit of 1000 on the number of event properties belonging to an Event Collection and after this it will begin to drop events.
Once you are reliant on analytics I STRONGLY recommend switching to explicit whitelists.
However by default this middleware provides a fallback in the form of eventually rigid schemas. Firstly, by default we accept up to 30 properties in the intention.query
, 80 properties in a intention.body
, and 120 properties in a reaction
. Secondly, after a route receives 500 requests or exists for a week it stops accepting new event properties. Once these properties are discovered we cache them in a file given by options.defaults.eventualSchemas.cachePath
(normally, './route-schemas.cache') however this feature can be switched off by giving options.defaults.eventualSchemas.cache
the value false
or specifying a complete explicit whitelist against a route.
There are some default property whitelists in the form of whitelistProperties.query
, whitelistProperties.body
, whitelistProperties.reaction
. Whitelists can also exist against each route definition or be passed into the second argument of the keenio.trackRoute()
function.
Example 1:
{
client: {
projectId: '<test>',
writeKey: '<test>'
},
whitelistProperties: {
query: ['id', 'userId', 'name', 'type'],
body: [],
reaction: ['description']
}
}
NOTE 1: An empty array means nothing is whitelisted while a missing whitelist key means no whitelist should be applied to the data.
NOTE 2: whitelistProperties.query
, whitelistProperties.body
and whitelistProperties.reaction
can take deep property identifiers (e.g. 'deep.array[].name' or 'deep.property.value'.)
Example 2:
app.get('/test', keenio.trackRoute("testEventCollection", { query: ['id', 'userId', 'name', 'type'], body: [] }), function (req, res) {
// Your code goes here.
});
By default we delete any 'password' properties. If you wish you can pass in a list of other properties you wish to explicitly blacklist as shown below:
{
client: {
projectId: '<test>',
writeKey: '<test>'
},
blacklistProperties: ['passwordHash', 'apiKey', 'authToken', 'userKey']
}
NOTE: blacklistProperties
takes a property name that can be found anywhere inside an object. This means that 'passwordHash' would delete properties like intention.query.passwordHash
and reaction.passwordHash
. It does not allow you to specify exact properties at a particular depth like whitelistProperties.query
, whitelistProperties.body
and whitelistProperties.reaction
each allow.
If you are not using the decorator-style version of the middleware, and would like either (a) more control over which event collections exist or (b) the ability to disable specific event collections you may configure the routes upfront.
You must pick either 'routes' or 'excludeRoutes' but not both.
{
client: {
projectId: '<test>',
writeKey: '<test>'
},
excludeRoutes: [
{ method: 'GET', route: 'route-name' }
]
}
{
client: {
projectId: '<test>',
writeKey: '<test>'
}
routes: [
{ method: 'GET', route: 'route-name-1', eventCollectionName: '', whitelistProperties: {} },
{ method: 'POST', route: 'route-name-2', eventCollectionName: '' }
]
}
It's also possible to override some of the default values used by validators, route schemas, etc.
{
client: {
projectId: '<test>',
writeKey: '<test>'
},
defaults: {
addons: {
ipToGeo: false,
userAgentParser: false
},
MAX_PROPERTY_HIERARCHY_DEPTH: 10,
MAX_STRING_LENGTH: 1000,
MAX_PROPERTY_QUANTITY: 300,
eventualSchemas: {
cache: true,
cachePath: './route-schemas.cache',
query: {
MAX_PROPERTIES: 30,
NUMBER_OF_INSTANCES: 500,
NUMBER_OF_DAYS: 7
},
body: {
MAX_PROPERTIES: 80,
NUMBER_OF_INSTANCES: 500,
NUMBER_OF_DAYS: 7
},
reaction: {
MAX_PROPERTIES: 120,
NUMBER_OF_INSTANCES: 500,
NUMBER_OF_DAYS: 7
}
}
}
}
Keen IO supports two data enrichment addons: IP-to-GEO conversion and UserAgent parsing. If you would like to activate these addons for your project, just ask! The team is available in HipChat, IRC, or at contact@keen.io.
While not recommended it's possible to override some of the internal behaviours of the middleware like so:
{
client: {
projectId: '<test>',
writeKey: '<test>'
},
handlers: {
generateIdentity: function (req) {},
generateEventCollectionName: function (route) {},
parseRequestBody: function (body) {},
parseRequestObject: function (req) {},
parseResponseBody: function (body) {}
}
}
Feel free to submit issues and pull requests.
$ npm install --dev
$ npm test
Copyright (c) 2014, Seb Insua All rights reserved.
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