fortean/laravel-bitter

Laravel 4 Service Provider for Bitter, a PHP port of bitmapist (Python Redis analytics)

dev-master 2014-06-25 15:54 UTC

This package is not auto-updated.

Last update: 2024-11-05 02:15:44 UTC


README

laravel-bitter is a Laravel 4 service provider for free-agent/bitter which is a PHP port of the Python bitmapist library. Both libraries use Redis to implement real-time, highly scalable analytics that can answer following questions:

  • Has user 123 been online today? This week? This month?
  • Has user 123 performed action "X"?
  • How many users have been active have this month? This hour?
  • How many unique users have performed action "X" this week?
  • How many % of users that were active last week are still active?
  • How many % of users that were active last month are still active this month?

Using Redis bitmaps you can store events for millions of users in a very little amount of memory (megabytes). You should be careful about using huge ids (e.g. 2^32 or bigger) as this could require larger amounts of memory.

Contents

Installation

Add laravel-bitter to your composer.json file:

"require": {
  "laravel-bitter": "dev-master"
}

Use composer to install this package.

$ composer update

Registering the Package

Register the service provider within the providers array found in app/config/app.php:

'providers' => array(
	// ...
	
	'Fortean\Bitter\BitterServiceProvider'
)

Add an alias within the aliases array found in app/config/app.php:

'aliases' => array(
	// ...
	
	'Bitter' => 'Fortean\Bitter\Facade\Bitter',
)

Basic Usage

One you have registered the Bitter Service Provider and Facade in app/config/app.php, you can create a Bitter instance like so:

$bitter = Bitter::connection();

The Bitter instance returned will use the default Laravel Redis connection. If you want to use the 'foo' Redis connection, make sure the connection is defined in your app/config/database.php file:

	'redis' => array(

		'cluster' => true,

		// ...

		'foo' => array(
			'host'     => '127.0.0.1',
			'port'     => 6379,
			'database' => 2,
		),

	),

and pass the 'foo' connection name to the connection method:

$bitter = Bitter::connection('foo');

You can also pass a Redis client instance to connection:

$client = Redis::connection('foo');
$bitter = Bitter::connection($client);

Once you have a Bitter instance, you can do the following:

Mark user 123 as active and has played a song:

$bitter
	->mark('active', 123)
	->mark('song:played', 123);

Note: Please don't use huge ids (e.g. 2^32 or bigger) cause this will require large amounts of memory.

Pass a DateTime (or derviative, e.g. Carbon) as third argument:

$bitter->mark('song:played', 123, new \DateTime('yesterday'));
$bitter->mark('song:played', 123, new \Carbon\Carbon('yesterday'));

To facilitate easier use of the library, I've extended Bitter with a markEvent method that will take either DateTime objects as above, or a string which will be converted into a Carbon object automatically:

// These calls:
$yesterday = new \Carbon\Carbon('yesterday');
$bitter->markEvent('song:played', 123, $yesterday);
$bitter->markEvent('song:played', 123, new \Carbon\Carbon('yesterday'));
$bitter->markEvent('song:played', 123, 'yesterday');

// Are all equivalent to this:
$bitter->mark('song:played', 123, new \Carbon\Carbon('yesterday'));

To test if user 123 has played a song this week:

$currentWeek = Bitter::weekEvents('song:played');

if ($bitter->in(123, $currentWeek) {
	echo 'User with id 123 has played a song this week.';
} else {
	echo 'User with id 123 has not played a song this week.';
}

How many users were active yesterday:

$yesterday = new Bitter::dayEvents('active', new \DateTime('yesterday'));

echo $bitter->count($yesterday) . ' users were active yesterday.';

All of the Bitter *Events helpers can take either a DateTime object or a string date descriptor:

// Equivalent calls
$day = Bitter::dayEvents('active', new \DateTime('yesterday'));
$day = Bitter::dayEvents('active', 'yesterday');

Using BitOp

How many users that were active yesterday are also active today:

$today     = Bitter::dayEvents('active');
$yesterday = Bitter::dayEvents('active', new \DateTime('yesterday'));

$count = $bitter
	->bitOpAnd('bit_op_example', $today, $yesterday)
	->count('bit_op_example');

echo $count . ' users were active yesterday and today.';

Note: The bit_op_example key will expire after 60 seconds.

Test if user 123 was active yesterday and is active today:

$today     = new Bitter::dayEvents('active');
$yesterday = new Bitter::dayEvents('active', new \DateTime('yesterday'));

$active = $bitter
	->bitOpAnd('bit_op_example', $today, $yesterday)
	->in(123, 'bit_op_example');

if ($active) {
	echo 'User with id 123 was active yesterday and today.';
} else {
	echo 'User with id 123 was not active yesterday and today.';
}

Note: Please look at Redis BITOP Command for performance considerations.

Custom date period stats

How many users that were active during a given date period:

$from = new \DateTime('2010-02-14 20:15:30');
$to   = new \DateTime('2012-12-21 13:30:45');

$count = $bitter
	->bitDateRange('active', 'active_period_example', $from, $to)
	->count('active_period_example');

echo $count . ' users were active from "2010-02-14 20:15:30" to "2012-12-21 13:30:45".';

To facilitate easier use of the library, I've extended Bitter with a bitCustomDateRange method that will take either DateTime objects as above, or a string which will be converted into a Carbon object automatically:

$count = $bitter
	->bitCustomDateRange('active', 'active_period_example', '2010-02-14 20:15:30', '2012-12-21 13:30:45')
	->count('active_period_example');

echo $count . ' users were active from "2010-02-14 20:15:30" to "2012-12-21 13:30:45".';

Thanks

Thanks to both Amir Salihefendic for the original bitmapist library and Jérémy Romey for his PHP port.

License

This library is licensed under the MIT license.