OxiTraffic

Self-hosted, simple and privacy respecting website traffic tracker 🌐

Features

Demonstration

My website mo8it.com is an example website that uses OxiTraffic. You can visit the OxiTraffic dashboard to see the call history of each page on the website. Here is an example for a specific blog post.

Try out the following API endpoints (with curl for example):

How it works

You add a Javascript snippet like oxitraffic.js which calls /register?path=PATH to receive a registration ID. PATH is the path of the page you are on.

This ID can be used after the minimum delay (configuration option min_delay_secs) to call /post-sleep/REGISTRATION_ID which leads to counting that visit.

How does OxiTraffic know if a newly requested path is a valid one for your tracked website?

Only for the first request to a new path, OxiTraffic sends a request to that path prefixed by the configuration option tracked_origin_callback. If the status code is in the range 200-299 (success), the path is added to the database. Otherwise, the request is rejected.

Setup

Data directory

The binary expects the environment variable OXITRAFFIC_DATA_DIR to point to a directory that stores the YAML configuration file config.yaml.

The log file oxitraffic.log will be also placed in that directory.

Hosting

If you want to host OxiTraffic in a container, check Containerfile and compose.yaml as a starting point. The container expects the data directory to be mounted as a volume at /volumes/data.

You can also host OxiTraffic directly with the binary that you can install with Cargo:

fish cargo install oxitraffic

Make sure to provide the environment variable OXITRAFFIC_DATA_DIR when using the binary directly.

In both cases (container or binary), you need a PostgreSQL database. There are many guides in the internet that explain how to host one either in a container or directly on the host. You could use my blog post about hosting PostgreSQL using Podman.

Configuration

| Parameter | Description | Default | | ------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------- | | socket_address | Use 127.0.0.1:8080 for testing on http://localhost:8080. 0.0.0.0 is important for usage in a container, but you can pick another port. | "0.0.0.0:80" | | tracked_origin | The origin of your tracked website that is used to allow CORS-requests from the Javascript snippet to OxiTraffic. | | | tracked_origin_callback | The origin of your tracked website that is used to verify a newly requested path as explained above. This option exists to be able to make these requests inside a local network. | tracked_origin | | min_delay_secs | Minimum delay between visiting the website and being able to call /post-sleep to count the visit. It is recommended to call /post-sleep one second after this value. A low value not only counts meaningless visits, but also makes it easier for visits by web bots to be counts. | 19 | | db.host | PostgreSQL host | | | db.port | PostgreSQL port | | | db.username | PostgreSQL username | | | db.password | PostgreSQL password | | | db.database | PostgreSQL database | | | utc_offset.hours | The hours of your UTC offset | 0 | | utc_offset.minutes | The minutes of your UTC offset | 0 |

Example configuration

```yaml

Can be omitted because this is the default.

socket_address: 0.0.0.0:80

tracked_origin: https://mo8it.com

In case both OxiTraffic and your website are in a local network and website can be resolved to the local IP address of the your website.

Omit this option to use tracked_origin instead.

trackedorigincallback: http://website

db: host: DATABASEHOST port: 5432 username: postgres password: CHANGEME database: postgres

utc_offset: hours: 2 # Can be omitted because 0 is the default. minutes: 0 ```

Usage

OxiTraffic has the following endpoints:

Questions?

Don't hesitate to open an issue ^^

Contributing

You are welcome to contribute to the project!

You can always open an issue. Wait for a response on the issue before starting with a pull request (Rejected pull request are very disappointing).

Use Clippy and rustfmt before submitting code :)