Observe your web applications in the wild!
The MOle is a rack application that monitors user interactions with your web site. We are not talking about counting page hits here. The MOle tracks all the information available to capture the essence of a user interaction with your application. Using the MOle, you are able to see which feature is a hit or a bust. As an added bonus, the MOle also track performance and exceptions that might have escaped your test suites or alpha env. To boot your managers will love you for it! Whether you are releasing a new application or improving on an old one, it is always a good thing to know if anyone is using your application and if they are, how they are using it. What features are your users most fond of and which features find their way into the abyss? You will be able to rapidly assess whether or not your application is a hit and if your coolest features are thought as such by your users. You will be able to elegantly record user interactions and leverage these findings for the next iteration of your application.
Developer: Fernand Galiana Blog: http://www.liquidrail.com Site: http://rackamole.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/rackamole Forum: http://groups.google.com/group/rackamole Git: git://github.com/derailed/rackamole.git
Monitors any rack based framework such as Rails and Sinatra Captures the essence of the request as well as user information Tracks performance issues based on your latency threshold Tracks exceptions that might occurred during a request
Logging Hitimes mongo + mongo_ext Chronic Erubis Twitter4r Mail Growl
sudo gem install rackamole
Edit your environments ruby files and add the following lines: config.middleware.use Rack::Mole, { :app_name => "My Cool App", :user_key => :user_name } This instructs the mole to start logging information to the console and look for the user name in the session using the :user_name key. In order to associate an action with a logged in user you must set a session env variable, in this case we use user_name. There are other options available, please take a look at the docs for more information.
Add the following lines in the config section and smoke it... require 'rackamole' configure do use Rack::Mole, { :app_name => "My Sinatra App", :user_key => :user_name } end This assumes that you have session enabled to identify a user if not the mole will log the user as 'Unknown'
Rackamole also comes with an option to specify a yaml config file to initialize the various settings. This comes in very handy when you need to specify different options depending on the environment you are operating in. Please see the spec/test_configs/rackamole_test.yml for an example.
Rackamole currently comes with a single storage strategy. More will come in the near future, but currently we are using MongoDb as our default storage. The idea here is to create a database for a given moled app per environment. For instance, for application 'Fred', you will need to use a separate store for Fred running in alpha mode and Fred running in production mode. In order to use a store, you will need to pass in the :store option. There currently 2 store types a logger and a mongo adapter. By default the store is set to log moled information to the console. To change to a mongo store simply add the following options: use Rack::Mole, { :app_name => "Fred", :store => Rackamole::Store::MongoDb.new( :db_name => 'mole_fred_alpha_mdb' ) } This expect a local mongo instance to be running on the default port. You can change the location by adding :host and :port options. NOTE: If you intend to use Wackamole please use the following mongo database naming convention mole_{app_name}_{environment}_mdb NOTE: Rackamole also provides for preventing certain sensitive params from being logged. You can specify param_excludes or session_excludes as array of symbols to exclude specific request or session params.
Rackamole provides 3 different kind of alerting mechanisms: twitter, email, growl Please see docs for the various configuration settings. For example to setup email alerts, add the following lines in your rackamole config file. # Email email: &email :from: '[email protected]' :to: - '[email protected]' - '[email protected]' :alert_on: - <%=Rackamole.perf%> - <%=Rackamole.fault%> Then # => Dev development: :app_name: Killer App :user_key: :user_name :email: *email This will setup email alerts when rackamole detect performance or uncaught exceptions
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Copyright © 2009
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