SimpleAnalytics gem provides accessing Google Analytics Export Api. It uses Version 3.0 of the Google Core Reporting API with JSON. You can find the google documentation here.
You can add it to your Gemfile with:
gem 'simple_analytics'
Authentication using the ClientLogin:
analytics = SimpleAnalytics::Api.authenticate('[email protected]', 'password')
The authenticate
method sets an auth_token
in the analytics service object. Then you can fetch the report data:
analytics.fetch(
'ids' => 'ga:id',
'metrics' => 'ga:visitors',
'dimensions' => 'ga:country',
'start-date' => '2012-01-01',
'end-date' => '2012-01-10'
)
# => [["United States","24451"], ["Brazil","15616"], ["Spain","3966"]]
The fetch
method sets and returns rows. Required query parameters are used to configure which data to return from the Google Analytics:
- ids — The profile IDs from which to access data.
- start-date — The beginning of the date range.
- end-date — The end of the date range.
- metrics — The numeric values to return.
For more detailed information about the parameters see google REST docs.
For the authentication it uses gem google_client_login based on the ClientLogin. You can also pass extra parameters which allows the gem (see the gem's README):
options = { :accountType => 'GOOGLE', :source => 'company-app-version' }
analytics = SimpleAnalytics::Api.authenticate('[email protected]', 'password', options)
You can set yourself the auth_token
to use it in the fetching:
analytics.auth_token = 'your-token-from-oauth'
All parameters are escaped before a request. For date format you can use the next tip: Date.today.strftime("%Y-%m-%d")
.
analytics = SimpleAnalytics::Api.authenticate('[email protected]', 'password')
analytics.fetch(
'ids' => 'ga:id',
'metrics' => 'ga:visitors',
'dimensions' => 'ga:country',
'start-date' => '2012-01-01',
'end-date' => '2012-01-10'
)
# => [["United States","24451"], ["Brazil","15616"], ["Spain","3966"]]
analytics.rows
# => [["United States","24451"], ["Brazil","15616"], ["Spain","3966"]]
analytics.body
# => returns the parsed response body (hash), where you can get other info, see google docs.
analytics.fetch(
'ids' => 'ga:another-id',
'metrics' => 'ga:visitors,ga:newVisits',
'dimensions' => 'ga:pagePath',
'filters' => 'ga:pagepath=~/articles/[\w-]+\z'
'start-date' => '2012-01-01',
'end-date' => '2012-01-10'
)
# => [["/articles/first-post","12", "2"], ["/articles/second-post","2", "1"]]
analytics.rows
# => [["/articles/first-post","12", "2"], ["/articles/second-post","2", "1"]]
- Ruby 1.8.7 or later