Apache UserALE.js is part of the Apache Flagon Project. It is a client side instrumentation library written in JavaScript designed for easy deployment and lightweight configuration in gathering logs from your web applications for user behavioral analytics.
Once included in your project, Apache UserALE.js provides a comprehensive behavioral logging capability, capturing every event on every element rendered in your DOM.
Additional documentation and a demonstration can be found at the Apache Flagon website.
- Include UserALE.js in your project as either a module or script tag
- Set up a logging end-point. Try our example server utility or try out our Elasticsearch (ELK) stack example.
- Configure UserALE.js settings using our API, including where to POST logs to (port:8000 for UserALE example or port:8100 of ELK/Logstash)
- Further explore the UserALE.js API to customize your log feed, add filters, custom logs, and modify logs themselves. Explore a few examples here and a wider set in our example utility.
- Visualize and analyze your logs. See our sample kibana dahsboards for behavioral analytics.
What's New
Installation
Configure
Usage
Examples
Indexing, Storing, and Visualizing Logs
Modifying Source
Contributing
License
- Refactors Map and Filter APIs as generalized callbacks for functionality
- Adds additional UserALE.js API examples utilizing generalized callbacks
- Minor updates to update deprecated downstream dev dependencies
- Minor changes to documentation, updated examples
See our CHANGELOG for a complete list of changes.
Either through cloning our source repo or by using npm:
npm install flagon-userale
or
npm install flagon-userale --engine-strict (enforces supported Node.js versions)
To include UserALE.js as an object in your project, include as a module
:
import * as userale from 'flagon-userale';
or
const userale = require('flagon-userale');
Our webpack example illustrates this use-case.
You can also include UserALE.js as a script-tag
. A pre-built version of the userale script is included in our package and
repositories:
<script src="./node_modules/flagon-userale/build/userale-2.4.0.min.js"></script>
Our script tag example illustrates this use-case
If you include UserALE.js as a script-tag
, consider installing via npm as a development dependency:
npm install --save-dev flagon-userale
Or if you want to use a CDN, then you can use something like
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/flagon-userale@2.1.1/build/userale-2.4.0.min.js"></script>
We also support a WebExtension that can be added to your browser in developer mode. Follow the link for instructions.
Once UserALE.js is installed in your project, your application will start generating logs automatically.
Some configuration is necessary. At minimum you will need to provide UserALE.js an end-point to ship logs to; default behavior is to ship logs to localhost:8000
.
NOTE: In order to facilitate testing configuration and usage of UserALE.js, we have included an example logging server in our example directory. This is a very helpful utility that works with both included module examples and script-tag examples. We strongly recommend experimenting with it.
Configuration details follow:
If you have included UserALE.js in your project as a module
, you will need to use our userale.options()
function, which exposes library configuration options through our API.
For example, if you do not want UserALE.js to start logging automatically, you can modify this behavior through the userale.options()
API (autostart
config).
Then, you can use the userale.start()
API export to begin logging at the appropriate time during page load or triggered from an event:
const changeMe = "me";
userale.options({
"userId": changeMe,
"autostart": false,
"url": "http://localhost:8000/",
"version": "next",
"logDetails": false,
"sessionID": "this one"
});
userale.start();
Additional examples of userale.options()
can be found in our example directory.
The complete list of configurable parameters that can be configured via userale.options()
is:
Param | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
url | Logging URL | http://localhost:8000 |
autostart | Should UserALE.js start on page load | true |
transmitInterval | Delay between transmit checks | 5000 (ms) |
logCountThreshold | Minimum number of logs to send | 5 |
userId | User identifier | null |
sessionID | Session identifier | null |
version | Application version identifier | null |
logDetails | Toggle detailed logs (keys pressed and input/change values) | false |
resolution | Delay between instances of high frequency logs (mouseover, scroll, etc.) | 500 (ms) |
userFromParams | Query param in the page URL to fetch userId from | null |
toolName | Name of tool being logged | null |
authHeader | Authorization header to be passed to logging endpoint | null |
If you have included UserALE.js as a script-tag
in your project, you can use HTML data parameters to pass configuration options to the library through the script tag. For example:
<script
src="./node_modules/flagon-userale/build/userale-2.4.0.min.js"
data-url="http://localhost:8000/"
data-user="example-user"
data-version="2.4.0"
data-tool="Apache UserALE.js Example"
></script>
You have access to the same parameters listed above, however, naming conventions vary slightly for use in HTML:
Param | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
data-url | Logging URL | http://localhost:8000 |
data-autostart | Should UserALE.js start on page load | true |
data-interval | Delay between transmit checks | 5000 (ms) |
data-threshold | Minimum number of logs to send | 5 |
data-user | User identifier | null |
data-version | Application version identifier | null |
data-log-details | Toggle detailed logs (keys pressed and input/change values) | false |
data-resolution | Delay between instances of high frequency logs (mouseover, scroll, etc.) | 500 (ms) |
data-user-from-params | Query param in the page URL to fetch userId from | null |
data-tool | Name of tool being logged | null |
data-auth | Authorization header to be passed to logging endpoint | null |
If you are using our WebExtension,
you can modify some of these parameters via the extensions' options
page.
Including UserALE.js in your project as a module
attaches the UserALE.js script as an object to the page.
We have exposed a number of functions that assist you in modifying, filtering, and customizing logs
A complete list of available functions are as follows:
Function | Description | Notes |
---|---|---|
userale.options | modify userale's configuration option | see top level README for complete list of options |
[DEPRECATED] userale.filter | filters out logs from logging queue by keys or values | filters are callbacks with global scope |
[DEPRECATED] userale.map | modify/add log keys or values | mappings are callbacks with global scope |
userale.addCallbacks | add one or more callbacks to be executed during log packaging | callbacks have global scope |
userale.removeCallbacks | remove one or more callbacks by name | Removes callbacks added from userale.addCallbacks |
userale.log | appends a custom log to the log queue | the custom log object is an object key:value pairs |
userale.packageLog | transforms the provided event into a log and appends it to the log queue | designed for HTML events |
userale.packageCustomLog | packages the provided customLog to include standard meta data and appends it to the log queue | designed for non HTML events |
userale.details | defines the way information is extracted from various events | supports packageLog/packageCustomLog 'details' |
userale.getSelector | builds a string CSS selector from the provided HTML element id | populates 'target' field in packaged logs |
userale.buildPath | builds an array of elements from the provided event target, to the root element (DOM path) | populates the 'path' field in packaged logs |
userale.start | used to start the logging process if | unecessary if 'autostart' is set to true in initial setting (default) |
userale.stop | halts the logging process. Logs will no longer be sent | will need to invoke userale.start to restart logging |
Including UserALE.js as a script-tag
provides you access to the same functions listed above. However, UserALE.js essentially
becomes a property of the DOM. As such, you'll need to call functions as a window property:
userale.options = window.userale.options
We provide a number of examples to illustrate how the functions above can be used with sample webpages and logging servers. These are tailored for module examples and script-tag examples. Select examples are below:
Filter your logs with userale.filter
:
userale.filter(function (log) {
var type_array = ['mouseup', 'mouseover', 'mousedown', 'keydown', 'dblclick', 'blur', 'focus', 'input', 'wheel'];
var logType_array = ['interval'];
return !type_array.includes(log.type) && !logType_array.includes(log.logType);
});
Modify (add/remove) log fields with surgical precision using userale.map
:
userale.map(function (log) {
var targetsForLabels = ["button#test_button"];
if (targetsForLabels.includes(log.target)) {
return Object.assign({}, log, { CustomLabel: "Click me!" });
} else {
return log;
}
});
(Additional examples illustrate precision custom labeling, using a variety of functions.)
Generate custom logs with userale.log
:
document.addEventListener('change', function(e) {
if (e.target.value === 'log') {
userale.log({
target: userale.getSelector(e.target),
path: userale.buildPath(e),
type: e.type,
logType: 'custom',
userAction: false,
details: 'I can make this log look like anything I want',
customField1: 'foo',
customField2: 'bar',
userId: userale.options().userId,
toolVersion: userale.options().version,
toolName: userale.options().toolName,
useraleVersion: userale.options().useraleVersion,
sessionID: userale.options().sessionID,
customLabel: "(custom) Log Example"
});
}
});
User our own log packaging pipeline to streamline custom HTML event logging with userale.packageLog
:
document.addEventListener('change', function(e){
if (e.target.value === 'packageLog') {
/**You can then use the 'Mapping' API function to modify custom logs created with the packageLog function*/
userale.map(function (log) {
var targetsForLabels = ['change'];
if (targetsForLabels.includes(log.type)) {
return Object.assign({}, log, { logType: 'custom', customLabel: 'packageLog Example' });
} else {
return log;
}
});
/**You can also use the details function to package additional log meta data, or add custom details*/
userale.packageLog(e, userale.details(userale.options(),'change'));
} else {
return false
}
});
Again, see Usage for differences in invoking these functions with module
and script-tag
includes.
You can find additional examples on our website.
We recommend Elastic products, specifically an ELK cluster, for indexing and storing logs in productions.
You can find a 'sand-box' ELK build, configuration files, and visualization/dashboards tailored for UserALE.js in the Apache Flagon parent repository.
We also provide some documentation about stack-considerations on our project website.
You may wish to modify UserALE.js to suite your needs. After making modification to UserALE.js src, you will need to rebuild the UserALE.js script (and run tests).
To (re)build UserALE.js:
npm run build
To run UserALE.js unit tests:
npm run test
We use gulp-mocha for unit tests. The results will print to your terminal:
...
attachHandlers
✓ attaches all the event handlers without duplicates
✓ debounces bufferedEvents (505ms)
defineDetails
- configures high detail events correctly
...
45 passing (954ms)
1 pending
Any failing tests will also be logged in the terminal. If there are failing tests, please consider submitting an issue report.
For more guidance on modifying Flagon UserALE src code, check out the guide on our website.
Contributions are welcome! Simply submit an issue. Pull requests are welcome. The core team will review it and work with you to incorporate it into UserALE.js. If you want to become a contributor to the project, see our contribution guide.
Join the conversation: tell us your needs, wishes, and interests by joining our mailing list!
Apache Flagon UserALE.js is provided under Apache License version 2.0. See LICENSE and NOTICE files at MASTER for more details.