eklundkristoffer / laravel-analytics by cornex
forked from spatie/laravel-analytics

A Laravel 5 package to retrieve Google Analytics data.
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Package Data
Maintainer Username: cornex
Maintainer Contact: freek@spatie.be (Freek Van der Herten)
Package Create Date: 2017-07-03
Package Last Update: 2017-07-03
Home Page: https://murze.be/2016/06/retrieve-google-analytics-date-laravel/
Language: PHP
License: MIT
Last Refreshed: 2024-11-15 15:07:34
Package Statistics
Total Downloads: 18
Monthly Downloads: 0
Daily Downloads: 0
Total Stars: 1
Total Watchers: 1
Total Forks: 0
Total Open Issues: 0

Retrieve data from Google Analytics

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Using this package you can easily retrieve data from Google Analytics.

Here are a few examples of the provided methods:

use Spatie\Analytics\Period;

//fetch the most visited pages for today and the past week
Analytics::fetchMostVisitedPages(Period::days(7));

//fetch visitors and page views for the past week
Analytics::fetchVisitorsAndPageViews(Period::days(7));

Most methods will return an \Illuminate\Support\Collection object containing the results.

Spatie is a webdesign agency in Antwerp, Belgium. You'll find an overview of all our open source projects on our website.

If you're using v1 of this package, please refer to an older version of this readme for the installation and usage guide.

Postcardware

You're free to use this package (it's MIT-licensed), but if it makes it to your production environment you are required to send us a postcard from your hometown, mentioning which of our package(s) you are using.

Our address is: Spatie, Samberstraat 69D, 2060 Antwerp, Belgium.

All postcards are published on our website.

Installation

This package can be installed through Composer.

composer require spatie/laravel-analytics

You must install this service provider.

// config/app.php
'providers' => [
    ...
    Spatie\Analytics\AnalyticsServiceProvider::class,
    ...
];

This package also comes with a facade, which provides an easy way to call the the class.

// config/app.php
'aliases' => [
    ...
    'Analytics' => Spatie\Analytics\AnalyticsFacade::class,
    ...
];

Optionally, you can publish the config file of this package with this command:

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Spatie\Analytics\AnalyticsServiceProvider"

The following config file will be published in config/analytics.php

return [

    /*
     * The view id of which you want to display data.
     */
    'view_id' => env('ANALYTICS_VIEW_ID'),

    /*
     * Path to the client secret json file. Take a look at the README of this package
     * to learn how to get this file.
     */
    'service_account_credentials_json' => storage_path('app/analytics/service-account-credentials.json'),

    /*
     * The amount of minutes the Google API responses will be cached.
     * If you set this to zero, the responses won't be cached at all.
     */
    'cache_lifetime_in_minutes' => 60 * 24,
    
    /*
     * Here you may configure the "store" that the underlying Google_Client will
     * use to store it's data.  You may also add extra parameters that will
     * be passed on setCacheConfig (see docs for google-api-php-client).
     * 
     * Optional parameters: "lifetime", "prefix"
     */
    'cache' => [
        'store' => 'file',
    ],
];

How to obtain the credentials to communicate with Google Analytics

Getting credentials

The first thing you’ll need to do is to get some credentials to use Google API’s. I’m assuming that you’ve already created a Google account and are signed in. Head over to Google API’s site and click "Select a project" in the header.

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Next up we must specify which API’s the project may consume. In the list of available API’s click "Google Analytics API". On the next screen click "Enable".

2

Now that you’ve created a project that has access to the Analytics API it’s time to download a file with these credentials. Click "Credentials" in the sidebar. You’ll want to create a "Service account key".

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On the next screen you can give the service account a name. You can name it anything you’d like. In the service account id you’ll see an email address. We’ll use this email address later on in this guide. Select "JSON" as the key type and click "Create" to download the JSON file.

4

Save the json inside your Laravel project at the location specified in the service_account_credentials_json key of the config file of this package. Because the json file contains potentially sensitive information I don't recommend committing it to your git repository.

Granting permissions to your Analytics property

I'm assuming that you've already created a Analytics account on the Analytics site. Go to "User management" in the Admin-section of the property.

5

On this screen you can grant access to the email address found in the client_email key from the json file you download in the previous step. Read only access is enough.

6

Getting the view id

The last thing you'll have to do is fill in the view_id in the config file. You can get the right value on the Analytics site. Go to "View setting" in the Admin-section of the property.

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You'll need the View ID displayed there.

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Usage

When the installation is done you can easily retrieve Analytics data. Nearly all methods will return an Illuminate\Support\Collection-instance.

Here is an example to retrieve visitors and pageview data for the current day and the last seven days.

$analyticsData = Analytics::fetchVisitorsAndPageViews(Period::days(7));

$analyticsData is a Collection in which each item is an array that holds keys date, visitors and pageViews

If you want to have more control over the period you want to fetch data for, you can pass a startDate and an endDate to the period object.

$startDate = Carbon::now()->subYear();
$endDate = Carbon::now();

Period::create($startDate, $endDate);

Provided methods

Visitors and pageviews

public function fetchVisitorsAndPageViews(Period $period): Collection

The function returns a Collection in which each item is an array that holds keys date, visitors, pageTitle and pageViews.

Total visitors and pageviews

public function fetchTotalVisitorsAndPageViews(Period $period): Collection

The function returns a Collection in which each item is an array that holds keys date, visitors, and pageViews.

Most visited pages

public function fetchMostVisitedPages(Period $period, int $maxResults = 20): Collection

The function returns a Collection in which each item is an array that holds keys url, pageTitle and pageViews.

Top referrers

public function fetchTopReferrers(Period $period, int $maxResults = 20): Collection

The function returns a Collection in which each item is an array that holds keys url and pageViews.

Top browsers

public function fetchTopBrowsers(Period $period, int $maxResults = 10): Collection

The function returns a Collection in which each item is an array that holds keys browser and sessions.

All other Google Analytics queries

To perform all other queries on the Google Analytics resource use performQuery. Google's Core Reporting API provides more information on which metrics and dimensions might be used.

public function performQuery(Period $period, string $metrics, array $others = [])

You can get access to the underlying Google_Service_Analytics object:

Analytics::getAnalyticsService();

Testing

Run the tests with:

vendor/bin/phpunit

Contributing

Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.

Security

If you discover any security related issues, please email freek@spatie.be instead of using the issue tracker.

Credits

About Spatie

Spatie is a webdesign agency in Antwerp, Belgium. You'll find an overview of all our open source projects on our website.

License

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