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PostHog (Community Edition)
PostHog is open source product analytics, built for developers. Automate the collection of every event on your website or app, with no need to send data to 3rd parties. It's a 1 click to deploy on your own infrastructure, with full API/SQL access to the underlying data.
Quick start
1-click Heroku deploy:
See PostHog docs for in-depth walk throughs on functionality.
Join the PostHog Users Slack if you need help, want to chat, or are thinking of a new feature idea.
Features
- Event-based analytics at a user level - see which users are doing what in your application.
- Complete control over your data - host it yourself.
- Automatically capture clicks and page views to do analyze what your users are doing retroactively.
- Libraries for JS, Python, Ruby, Node, Go + API for anything else.
- Beautiful graphs, funnels, user cohorts, user paths and dashboards.
- Super easy deploy using Docker or Heroku.
Event autocapture
Philosophy
Many engineers find it painful to work out how their products are being used. This makes design decisions tough. PostHog solves that.
We also strongly believe 3rd party analytics don't work anymore in a world of Cookie laws, GDPR, CCPA and lots of other 4 letter acronyms. There should be an alternative to sending all of your users' personal information and usage data to 3rd parties.
PostHog gives you full control over all your users' data, while letting anyone easily perform powerful analytics.
It means you can know who is using your app, how they're using, and where you lose users in the sign up process.
What's cool about this?
PostHog is the only product-focused open source analytics library, with an event and user-driven architecture. That means tracking identifiable (where applicable) user behavior, and creating user profiles. We are an open source alternative to Mixpanel, Amplitude or Heap, designed to be more developer friendly.
There are a couple of session-based open source libraries that are nice alternatives to Google Analytics. That's not what we are focused on.
One-line docker preview
docker run -t -i --rm --publish 8000:8000 -v postgres:/var/lib/postgresql posthog/posthog:preview
This image has everything you need to try out PostHog locally! It will set up a server on http://127.0.0.1:8000.
Deploy to Heroku
Production deployment
See docs for production deployment
Development
Running PostHog
- Make sure you have python 3 installed
python3 --version
- Make sure you have redis installed and running
brew install redis && brew services start redis
- Make sure you have postgres installed and running
brew install postgres && brew services start postgresql
- Create Database
createdb posthog
- Navigate into the correct folder
cd posthog
- Run
python3 -m venv env
(creates virtual environment in current direction called 'env') - Run
source env/bin/activate
(activates virtual environment) - Run
pip install -r requirements.txt
. If you have problems with this step (TLS/SSL error), then run~ brew update && brew upgrade
followed bypython3 -m pip install --upgrade pip
, then retry the requirements.txt install. - Run migrations
DEBUG=1 python3 manage.py migrate
- Run
DEBUG=1 ./bin/start
to start the backend, worker and frontend simultaneously
Now open http://localhost:8000 to see the app.
To see some data on the frontend, you should go to the http://localhost:8000/demo
and play around with it, so you can see some data on dashboard
Running backend separately (Django)
Run DEBUG=1 ./bin/start-backend
Running background worker separately (Celery)
Run DEBUG=1 ./bin/start-worker
Running frontend separately (React)
If at any point, you get "command not found: nvm", you need to install nvm, then use that to install node.
Run ./bin/start-frontend
Running backend tests
Run ./bin/tests
Open source / Paid
This repo is entirely MIT licensed. We charge for things like user permissioning and auditability, a/b testing and dedicated support. Please email hey@posthog.com and we will gladly help with your implementation.