This package is meant to easily get usage statistics from the users of your program.
Statistics will be collected but won't be uploaded until the user opts in. A message will be printed on stderr asking the user to explicitly opt in or opt out.
You can easily collect information from your program by adding usagestats to your project's requirements and using the library. Here is an example:
import usagestats
import sys
optin_prompt = usagestats.Prompt(enable='cool_program --enable-stats',
disable='cool_program --disable-stats')
# Location where to store stats
# Also allocates a unique ID for the user
# The version is important, since the information you log (or the format)
# might change in later versions of your program
stats = usagestats.Stats('~/.myprog/usage_stats',
optin_prompt,
'https://usagestats.example.org/',
unique_user_id=True,
version='0.1')
def main():
if len(sys.argv) < 2:
pass
elif sys.argv.get(1) == '--enable-stats':
stats.enable_reporting()
sys.exit(0)
elif sys.argv.get(1) == '--disable-stats':
stats.disable_reporting()
sys.exit(0)
if sys.version_info < (3,):
# Stores some info, will be reported when submit() is called
stats.note({'mode': 'compatibility'})
# Report things
stats.submit(
# Dictionary containing the info
{'what': 'Ran the program'},
# Flags making usagestats insert more details
usagestats.OPERATING_SYSTEM, # Operating system/distribution
usagestats.PYTHON_VERSION, # Python version info
usagestats.SESSION_TIME, # Time since Stats object was created
)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
submit() will, by default, store the info in the specified directory. Nothing will be reported until the user opts in; a message will simply be printed to stderr:
Uploading usage statistics is currently DISABLED
Please help us by providing anonymous usage statistics; you can enable this
by running:
cool_program --enable-stats
If you do not want to see this message again, you can run:
cool_program --disable-stats
Nothing will be uploaded before you opt in.
To collect the reports, any server will do; the reports are uploaded via POST as a LF-separated list of key:value
pairs. A simple script for mod_wsgi is included; it writes each report to a separate file. Writing your own implementation in your language of choice (PHP, Java) with your own backend should be fairly straightforward.