So I need a tiny bit of traffic analysis on my Ghost website, but like…tiny.
-
@ryanrandall Ooo thanks!
-
@kissane I’ve definitely run into the problem that never track anything means you can’t like, honestly purchase a font
-
-
@dingemansemark thank you!
-
@gilhova Thank you!
-
@simrob It's the silliest problem but I love the type designers and I want to do right!
-
@kissane You could go SUPER basic with https://www.goatcounter.com which is open source and comes with a hosted version.
-
@kissane how about just parsing your web servers logs? http://nginx.org/en/docs/syslog.html
-
@kissane I'm starting to think we were onto something with website hit counters.
-
@kissane I haven’t used all these, but researched a bit in the past. Could look at Countly, Piwik Pro”Core”, Umami.
-
@000panther I'm not self-hosting, so I don't have them, alas.
-
@kissane
Not sure if it's possible to add custom js to a GhostPro account, but perhaps this script might be worth a look:GitHub - berthubert/audience-minutes: generate statistics on the number of audience minutes your site is generating, and if readers make it to the end of your screeds
generate statistics on the number of audience minutes your site is generating, and if readers make it to the end of your screeds - berthubert/audience-minutes
GitHub (github.com)
Another option, if you can download logs is:
I've used it to analyse webserver logs offline & create statistical reports for other people. This might be a bit much for what seem to seek?
-
Fun factoid in my very first real computer job out of undergrad my title was "Web Master" (two words) and analyzing logs was a good chunk of what I did, along with faking a CMS in, iirc, Perl. (The real CMS was me.)
-
@BjornW Thank you!
-
@swacknificent Thank you!
-
@waldoj retvrn (to angelfire)
-
@blainsmith thank you! this looks about right, tbh!
-
@kissane My very first job had a similar task!
One of my responsibilities was babysitting an automatic build and test script written in Perl that I inherited.
The actual bulk of the script was the logic to colour the cells and insert the appropriate row and column spans so the table looked nice. The actual work I did was adding to an ever going switch block to handle the new ways the builds would break.
-
In retrospect, the fact that I came in knowing, like, HTML and very little else and they handed me the server keys for quite a large tech consultancy's websites and were like "Eh, go for it, kid," was indicative of The Times.
I'd literally never worked on a Windows machine and two weeks later I was administering the NT servers and then I led a redesign and built out a new CMS and then moved us to a new hosting company to save money and like…what a fundamentally hilarious series of events??
-
Dave Lane :flag_tino: 🇳🇿replied to Erin Kissane last edited by
@kissane I gather you're using Ghost's service? In which case you might be able to use Matamo (as a more venerable #FOSS analytics option than Plausible). If you were hosting it yourself, the easy thing would be to use GoAccess (https://goaccess.io/) to create reports from your webserver logs. Doubt you can do that on the Ghost service, though.