The Matomo Java Tracker functions as the official Java implementation for the Matomo Tracking HTTP API. This versatile tracker empowers you to monitor visits, goals, and ecommerce transactions and items. Specifically designed for integration into server-side applications, it seamlessly integrates with Java-based web applications or web services.
Key features:
- Comprehensive tracking capabilities: Monitor page views, goals, ecommerce transactions, and items.
- Customization options: Support for custom dimensions and variables.
- Extensive tracking parameters: Capture data on campaigns, events, downloads, outlinks, site searches, devices, and visitors.
- Java compatibility: Supports Java 8 and higher, with a dedicated artifact (matomo-java-tracker-java11) for Java 11.
- SSL certificate flexibility: Option to skip SSL certificate validation (caution: not recommended for production).
- Minimal runtime dependencies: Relies solely on SLF4J.
- Asynchronous request support: Permits non-blocking requests.
- Compatibility with Matomo versions 4 and 5.
- Versatile request handling: Send both single and multiple requests.
- Robust documentation: Thoroughly documented with Javadoc for easy reference.
- Data accuracy assurance: Ensures correct values are transmitted to the Matomo Tracking API.
- Logging capabilities: Include debug and error logging for effective troubleshooting.
- Seamless integration: Easily integrates into frameworks such as Spring by creating the MatomoTracker Spring bean for use in other beans.
Please prefer the Java 11 version as the Java 8 will become obsolete in the future.
You can find our Developer Guide here
Further information on Matomo and Matomo HTTP tracking:
- Matomo PHP Tracker
- Matomo Tracking HTTP API
- Introducing the Matomo Java Tracker
- Tracking API User Guide
- Matomo Developer
- The Matomo project
Projects that use Matomo Java Tracker:
- Box-c - supports the UNC Libraries' Digital Collections Repository
- DSpace - provide durable access to digital resources
- Identifiers.org satellite Web SPA
- Cloud native Resolver Web Service for identifiers.org
- Resource Catalogue
- INCEpTION - A semantic annotation platform offering intelligent assistance and knowledge management
- QualiChain Analytics Intelligent Profiling
- Digitale Ehrenamtskarte
- skidfuscator-java-obfuscator
- DnA
- And many closed source projects that we are not aware of 😄
- What Is New?
- Javadoc
- Need help?
- Using this API
- Migration from Version 2 to 3
- Building and Testing
- Versioning
- Contribute
- License
We fixed a synchronization issue in the Java 8 sender (#168).
To consume the exact amount of space needed for the queries to send to Matomo, we need the collection size of the incoming
requests. So we changed Iterable
to Collection
in some MatomoTracker
. This could affect users, that use parameters
of type Iterable
in the tracker. Please use Collection
instead.
Do you still use Matomo Java Tracker 2.x? We created version 3, that is compatible with Matomo 4 and 5 and contains fewer dependencies. Release notes can be found here: https://github.com/matomo-org/matomo-java-tracker/releases
Here are the most important changes:
- Matomo Java Tracker 3.4.0 is compatible with Matomo 4 and 5
- less dependencies
- new dimension parameter
- special types allow to provide valid parameters now
- a new implementation for Java 11 uses the HttpClient available since Java 11
See also the Developer Guide here
The Javadoc for all versions can be found at javadoc.io. Thanks to javadoc.io for hosting it.
- Check the Developer Guide
- Open an issue in the Issue Tracker
- Use our GitHub discussions
- Ask your question on Stackoverflow with the tag
matomo
- Create a thread in the Matomo Forum
- Contact Matomo Support
See the following sections for information on how to use this API. For more information, see the Javadoc. We also recommend to read the Tracking API User Guide. The Matomo Tracking HTTP API is well documented and contains many examples.
This project contains the following Maven artifacts:
- matomo-java-tracker-core: This artifact is the core module of the Matomo Java Tracker project. It provides the main functionality of the Matomo Java Tracker, which is a Java implementation for the Matomo Tracking HTTP API. This module is designed to be used as a base for other modules in the project that provide additional functionality or integrations.
- matomo-java-tracker: This is a specific implementation of the core module designed for Java 8. It provides the main functionality of the Matomo Java Tracker and is built upon the core. This artifact is specifically designed for applications running on Java 8.
- matomo-java-tracker-java11: This artifact is a Java 11 implementation of the Matomo Java Tracker. It uses the HttpClient available since Java 11. It is recommended to use this version if you are using Java 11 or higher.
- matomo-java-tracker-spring-boot-starter: This artifact is a Spring Boot Starter for the Matomo Java Tracker. It provides auto-configuration for the Matomo Java Tracker in a Spring Boot application. By including this artifact in your project, you can take advantage of Spring Boot's auto-configuration features to automatically set up and configure the Matomo Java Tracker.
- matomo-java-tracker-servlet-jakarta: This artifact is specifically designed for applications using the Jakarta Servlet API (part of Jakarta EE).
- matomo-java-tracker-servlet-javax: This artifact is specifically designed for applications using the older Java Servlet API (part of Java EE).
- matomo-java-tracker-test: This artifact contains tools for manual testing against a local Matomo instance created with Docker. It contains a tester class that sends randomized requests to a local Matomo instance and a servlet that can be used to test the servlet integration.
Each of these artifacts serves a different purpose and can be used depending on the specific needs of your project and the Java version you are using.
Add a dependency on Matomo Java Tracker using Maven. For Java 8:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.piwik.java.tracking</groupId>
<artifactId>matomo-java-tracker</artifactId>
<version>3.4.0</version>
</dependency>
For Java 11:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.piwik.java.tracking</groupId>
<artifactId>matomo-java-tracker-java11</artifactId>
<version>3.4.0</version>
</dependency>
or Gradle (Java 8):
dependencies {
implementation("org.piwik.java.tracking:matomo-java-tracker:3.4.0")
}
or Gradle (Java 11):
dependencies {
implementation("org.piwik.java.tracking:matomo-java-tracker-java11:3.4.0")
}
or Gradle with Kotlin DSL (Java 8)
implementation("org.piwik.java.tracking:matomo-java-tracker:3.4.0")
or Gradle with Kotlin DSL (Java 11)
implementation("org.piwik.java.tracking:matomo-java-tracker-java11:3.4.0")
If you use Spring Boot 3, you can use the Spring Boot Starter artifact. It will create a MatomoTracker bean for you and allows you to configure the tracker via application properties. Add the following dependency to your build:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.piwik.java.tracking</groupId>
<artifactId>matomo-java-tracker-spring-boot-starter</artifactId>
<version>3.4.0</version>
</dependency>
or Gradle:
dependencies {
implementation("org.piwik.java.tracking:matomo-java-tracker-spring-boot-starter:3.4.0")
}
or Gradle with Kotlin DSL
implementation("org.piwik.java.tracking:matomo-java-tracker-spring-boot-starter:3.4.0")
The following properties are supported:
Property Name | Description |
---|---|
matomo.tracker.api-endpoint (required) | The URL to the Matomo Tracking API endpoint. Must be set. |
matomo.tracker.default-site-id | If you provide a default site id, it will be taken if the action does not contain a site id. |
matomo.tracker.default-token-auth | If you provide a default token auth, it will be taken if the action does not contain a token auth. |
matomo.tracker.enabled | The tracker is enabled per default. You can disable it per configuration with this flag. |
matomo.tracker.log-failed-tracking | Will send errors to the log if the Matomo Tracking API responds with an erroneous HTTP code |
matomo.tracker.connect-timeout | allows you to change the default connection timeout of 10 seconds. 0 is interpreted as infinite, null uses the system default |
matomo.tracker.socket-timeout | allows you to change the default socket timeout of 10 seconds. 0 is interpreted as infinite, null uses the system default |
matomo.tracker.user-agent | used by the request made to the endpoint is MatomoJavaClient per default. You can change it by using this builder method. |
matomo.tracker.proxy-host | The hostname or IP address of an optional HTTP proxy. proxyPort must be configured as well |
matomo.tracker.proxy-port | The port of an HTTP proxy. proxyHost must be configured as well. |
matomo.tracker.proxy-username | If the HTTP proxy requires a username for basic authentication, it can be configured with this method. Proxy host, port and password must also be set. |
matomo.tracker.proxy-password | The corresponding password for the basic auth proxy user. The proxy host, port and username must be set as well. |
matomo.tracker.disable-ssl-cert-validation | If set to true, the SSL certificate of the Matomo server will not be validated. This should only be used for testing purposes. Default: false |
matomo.tracker.disable-ssl-host-verification | If set to true, the SSL host of the Matomo server will not be validated. This should only be used for testing purposes. Default: false |
matomo.tracker.thread-pool-size | The number of threads that will be used to asynchronously send requests. Default: 2 |
matomo.tracker.filter.enabled | Enables a servlet filter that tracks every request within the application |
To ensure the MatomoTracker
bean is created by the auto configuration, you have to add the following property to
your application.properties
file:
matomo.tracker.api-endpoint=https://your-matomo-domain.tld/matomo.php
Or if you use YAML:
matomo:
tracker:
api-endpoint: https://your-matomo-domain.tld/matomo.php
You can automatically add the MatomoTrackerFilter
to your Spring Boot application if you add the following property:
matomo.tracker.filter.enabled=true
Or if you use YAML:
matomo:
tracker:
filter:
enabled: true
The filter uses ServletMatomoRequest
to create a MatomoRequest
from a HttpServletRequest
on every filter call.
To let the Matomo Java Tracker send a request to the Matomo instance, you need the following minimal code:
import java.net.URI;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoRequests;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoTracker;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.TrackerConfiguration;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.parameters.VisitorId;
/**
* Example for sending a request.
*/
public class SendExample {
/**
* Example for sending a request.
*
* @param args ignored
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
TrackerConfiguration configuration = TrackerConfiguration
.builder()
.apiEndpoint(URI.create("https://www.yourdomain.com/matomo.php"))
.defaultSiteId(1)
.defaultAuthToken("ee6e3dd9ed1b61f5328cf5978b5a8c71")
.logFailedTracking(true)
.build();
try (MatomoTracker tracker = new MatomoTracker(configuration)) {
tracker.sendRequestAsync(MatomoRequests
.event("Training", "Workout completed", "Bench press", 60.0)
.visitorId(VisitorId.fromString("[email protected]"))
.build()
);
} catch (Exception e) {
throw new RuntimeException("Could not close tracker", e);
}
}
}
This will send a request to the Matomo instance at https://www.yourdomain.com/matomo.php and track a page view for the
visitor [email protected] with the action name "Checkout" and action URL "https://www.yourdomain.com/checkout" for
the site with id 1. The request will be sent asynchronously, that means the method will return immediately and your
application will not wait for the response of the Matomo server. In the configuration we set the default site id to 1
and configure the default auth token. With logFailedTracking
we enable logging of failed tracking requests.
If you want to perform an operation after a successful asynchronous call to Matomo, you can use the completable future result like this:
import java.net.URI;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoRequest;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoRequests;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoTracker;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.TrackerConfiguration;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.parameters.VisitorId;
/**
* Example for sending a request and performing an action when the request was sent successfully.
*/
public class ConsumerExample {
/**
* Example for sending a request and performing an action when the request was sent successfully.
*
* @param args ignored
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
TrackerConfiguration configuration = TrackerConfiguration
.builder()
.apiEndpoint(URI.create("https://www.yourdomain.com/matomo.php"))
.defaultSiteId(1)
.defaultAuthToken("ee6e3dd9ed1b61f5328cf5978b5a8c71")
.logFailedTracking(true)
.build();
try (MatomoTracker tracker = new MatomoTracker(configuration)) {
MatomoRequest request = MatomoRequests
.event("Training", "Workout completed", "Bench press", 60.0)
.visitorId(VisitorId.fromString("[email protected]"))
.build();
tracker.sendRequestAsync(request)
.thenAccept(req -> System.out.printf("Sent request %s%n", req))
.exceptionally(throwable -> {
System.err.printf("Failed to send request: %s%n", throwable.getMessage());
return null;
});
} catch (Exception e) {
throw new RuntimeException("Could not close tracker", e);
}
}
}
If you have multiple requests to wish to track, it may be more efficient to send them in a single HTTP call. To do this, send a bulk request. Place your requests in an Iterable data structure and call
import java.net.URI;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoRequests;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoTracker;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.TrackerConfiguration;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.parameters.VisitorId;
/**
* Example for sending multiple requests in one bulk request.
*/
public class BulkExample {
/**
* Example for sending multiple requests in one bulk request.
*
* @param args ignored
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
TrackerConfiguration configuration = TrackerConfiguration
.builder()
.apiEndpoint(URI.create("https://www.yourdomain.com/matomo.php"))
.defaultSiteId(1)
.defaultAuthToken("ee6e3dd9ed1b61f5328cf5978b5a8c71")
.logFailedTracking(true)
.build();
try (MatomoTracker tracker = new MatomoTracker(configuration)) {
VisitorId visitorId = VisitorId.fromString("[email protected]");
tracker.sendBulkRequestAsync(
MatomoRequests.siteSearch("Running shoes", "Running", 120L)
.visitorId(visitorId).build(),
MatomoRequests.pageView("VelocityStride ProX Running Shoes")
.visitorId(visitorId).build(),
MatomoRequests.ecommerceOrder("QXZ-789LMP", 100.0, 124.0, 19.0, 10.0, 5.0)
.visitorId(visitorId)
.build()
);
} catch (Exception e) {
throw new RuntimeException("Could not close tracker", e);
}
}
}
This will send two requests in a single HTTP call. The requests will be sent asynchronously.
Per default every request has the following default parameters:
Parameter Name | Default Value |
---|---|
required | true |
visitorId | random 16 character hex string |
randomValue | random 20 character hex string |
apiVersion | 1 |
responseAsImage | false |
Overwrite these properties as desired. We strongly recommend your to determine the visitor id for every user using a unique identifier, e.g. an email address. If you do not provide a visitor id, a random visitor id will be generated.
Ecommerce requests contain ecommerce items, that can be fluently build:
import java.net.URI;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoRequests;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoTracker;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.TrackerConfiguration;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.parameters.EcommerceItem;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.parameters.EcommerceItems;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.parameters.VisitorId;
/**
* Example for sending an ecommerce request.
*/
public class EcommerceExample {
/**
* Example for sending an ecommerce request.
*
* @param args ignored
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
TrackerConfiguration configuration = TrackerConfiguration
.builder()
.apiEndpoint(URI.create("https://www.yourdomain.com/matomo.php"))
.defaultSiteId(1)
.defaultAuthToken("ee6e3dd9ed1b61f5328cf5978b5a8c71")
.logFailedTracking(true)
.build();
try (MatomoTracker tracker = new MatomoTracker(configuration)) {
tracker.sendBulkRequestAsync(MatomoRequests
.ecommerceCartUpdate(50.0)
.ecommerceItems(EcommerceItems
.builder()
.item(EcommerceItem
.builder()
.sku("XYZ12345")
.name("Matomo - The big book about web analytics")
.category("Education & Teaching")
.price(23.1)
.quantity(2)
.build())
.item(EcommerceItem
.builder()
.sku("B0C2WV3MRJ")
.name("Matomo for data visualization")
.category("Education & Teaching")
.price(15.0)
.quantity(1)
.build())
.build())
.visitorId(VisitorId.fromString("[email protected]"))
.build()
);
} catch (Exception e) {
throw new RuntimeException("Could not close tracker", e);
}
}
}
Note that if you want to be able to track campaigns using Referrers > Campaigns, you must add the correct URL parameters to your actionUrl. See Tracking Campaigns for more information. All HTTP query parameters denoted on the Matomo Tracking HTTP API can be set using the appropriate getters and setters. See MatomoRequest for the mappings of the parameters to their corresponding attributes.
Requests are validated prior to sending. If a request is invalid, a MatomoException
will be thrown.
In a Servlet environment, it might be easier to use the ServletMatomoRequest
class to create a MatomoRequest
from a
HttpServletRequest
:
import jakarta.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoRequest;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoRequests;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.MatomoTracker;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.parameters.VisitorId;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.servlet.JakartaHttpServletWrapper;
import org.matomo.java.tracking.servlet.ServletMatomoRequest;
public class ServletMatomoRequestExample {
private final MatomoTracker tracker;
public ServletMatomoRequestExample(MatomoTracker tracker) {
this.tracker = tracker;
}
public void someControllerMethod(HttpServletRequest request) {
MatomoRequest matomoRequest = ServletMatomoRequest
.addServletRequestHeaders(
MatomoRequests.contentImpression(
"Latest Product Announced",
"Main Blog Text",
"https://www.yourdomain.com/blog/2018/10/01/new-product-launches"
),
JakartaHttpServletWrapper.fromHttpServletRequest(request)
).visitorId(VisitorId.fromString("[email protected]"))
// ...
.build();
tracker.sendRequestAsync(matomoRequest);
// ...
}
}
The ServletMatomoRequest
automatically sets the action URL, applies browser request headers, corresponding Matomo
cookies and the visitor IP address. It sets the visitor ID, Matomo session ID, custom variables and heatmap
if Matomo cookies are present. Since there was a renaming from Java EE (javax) to Jakarta EE (jakarta), we provide a
wrapper class JakartaHttpServletWrapper
for Jakarta and JavaxHttpServletWrapper
for javax.
The MatomoTracker
can be configured using the TrackerConfiguration
object. The following configuration options are
available:
.apiEndpoint(...)
AnURI
object that points to the Matomo Tracking API endpoint of your Matomo installation. Must be set..defaultSiteId(...)
If you provide a default site id, it will be taken if the action does not contain a site id..defaultTokenAuth(...)
If you provide a default token auth, it will be taken if the action does not contain a token auth..enabled(...)
The tracker is enabled per default. You can disable it per configuration with this flag..logFailedTracking(...)
Will send errors to the log if the Matomo Tracking API responds with an erroneous HTTP code.connectTimeout(...)
allows you to change the default connection timeout of 10 seconds. 0 is interpreted as infinite, null uses the system default.socketTimeout(...)
allows you to change the default socket timeout of 10 seconds. 0 is interpreted as infinite, null uses the system default.userAgent(...)
used by the request made to the endpoint isMatomoJavaClient
per default. You can change it by using this builder method..proxyHost(...)
The hostname or IP address of an optional HTTP proxy.proxyPort
must be configured as well.proxyPort(...)
The port of an HTTP proxy.proxyHost
must be configured as well..proxyUsername(...)
If the HTTP proxy requires a username for basic authentication, it can be configured with this method. Proxy host, port and password must also be set..proxyPassword(...)
The corresponding password for the basic auth proxy user. The proxy host, port and username must be set as well..disableSslCertValidation(...)
If set to true, the SSL certificate of the Matomo server will not be validated. This should only be used for testing purposes. Default: false.disableSslHostVerification(...)
If set to true, the SSL host of the Matomo server will not be validated. This should only be used for testing purposes. Default: false.threadPoolSize(...)
The number of threads that will be used to asynchronously send requests. Default: 2
We improved this library by adding the dimension parameter and removing outdated parameters in Matomo version 5, removing some dependencies (that even contained vulnerabilities) and increasing maintainability. Sadly this includes the following breaking changes:
- The parameter
actionTime
(gt_ms
) is no longer supported by Matomo 5 and was removed. - Many methods marked as deprecated in version 2 were removed. Please see the former Javadoc of version 2 to get the deprecated methods.
- We removed the vulnerable dependency to the Apache HTTP client. Callbacks are no longer of
type
FutureCallback<HttpResponse>
, butConsumer<Void>
instead. - The
send...
methods ofMatomoTracker
no longer return a value (usually Matomo always returns an HTTP 204 response without a body). If the request fails, an exception will be thrown. - Since there are several ways on how to set the auth token,
verifyAuthTokenSet
was removed. Just check yourself, whether your auth token is null. However, the tracker checks, whether an auth token is either set by parameter, by request or per configuration. - Due to a major refactoring on how the queries are created, we no longer use a large map instead of concrete attributes
to collect the Matomo parameters. Therefore
getParameters()
of classMatomoRequest
no longer exists. Please use getters and setters instead. - The methods
verifyEcommerceEnabled()
andverifyEcommerceState()
were removed fromMatomoRequest
. The request will be validated prior to sending and not during construction. getRandomHexString
was removed. UseRandomValue.random()
orVisitorId.random()
instead.
requestDatetime
,visitorPreviousVisitTimestamp
,visitorFirstVisitTimestamp
,ecommerceLastOrderTimestamp
are of typeInstant
. You can useInstant.ofEpochSecond()
to create them from epoch seconds.requestDatetime
was renamed torequestTimestamp
due to setter collision and downwards compatibilitygoalRevenue
is the same parameter asecommerceRevenue
and was removed to prevent duplication. UseecommerceRevenue
instead.setEventValue
requires a double parametersetEcommerceLastOrderTimestamp
requires anInstant
parameterheaderAcceptLanguage
is of typeAcceptLanguage
. You can build it easily usingAcceptLanguage.fromHeader("de")
visitorCountry
is of typeCountry
. You can build it easily usingAcceptLanguage.fromCode("fr")
deviceResolution
is of typeDeviceResolution
. You can build it easily usingDeviceResolution.builder.width(...).height(...).build()
. To easy the migration, we added a constructor methodDeviceResolution.fromString()
that accepts inputs of kind width_x_height, e.g.100x200
pageViewId
is of typeUniqueId
. You can build it easily usingUniqueId.random()
randomValue
is of typeRandomValue
. You can build it easily usingRandomValue.random()
. However, if you really want to insert a custom string here, useRandomValue.fromString()
construction method.- URL was removed due to performance and complicated exception handling and problems with parsing of complex
URLs.
actionUrl
,referrerUrl
,outlinkUrl
,contentTarget
anddownloadUrl
are strings. getCustomTrackingParameter()
ofMatomoRequest
returns an unmodifiable list.- Instead of
IllegalStateException
the tracker throwsMatomoException
- In former versions the goal id had always to be zero or null. You can define higher numbers than zero.
- For more type changes see the sections below.
visitorId
andvisitorCustomId
are of typeVisitorId
. You can build them easily usingVisitorId.fromHash(...)
.- You can use
VisitorId.fromHex()
to create aVisitorId
from a string that contains only hexadecimal characters. - Or simply use
VisitorId.fromUUID()
to create aVisitorId
from aUUID
object. - VisitorId.fromHex() supports less than 16 hexadecimal characters. If the string is shorter than 16 characters, the remaining characters will be filled with zeros.
- According to Matomo, custom variables should no longer be used. Please use dimensions instead. Dimension support has been introduced.
CustomVariable
is in packageorg.matomo.java.tracking.parameters
.customTrackingParameters
inMatomoRequestBuilder
requires aMap<String, Collection<String>>
instead ofMap<String, String>
pageCustomVariables
andvisitCustomVariables
are of typeCustomVariables
instead of collections. Create them withnew CustomVariables().add(customVariable)
setPageCustomVariable
andgetPageCustomVariable
no longer accept a string as an index. Please use integers instead.- Custom variables will be sent URL encoded
This project can be tested and built by calling
mvn install
The built jars and javadoc can be found in target
. By using
the Maven goal `install, a snapshot
version can be used in your local Maven repository for testing purposes, e.g.
<dependency>
<groupId>org.piwik.java.tracking</groupId>
<artifactId>matomo-java-tracker</artifactId>
<version>3.4.1-SNAPSHOT</version>
</dependency>
To start a local Matomo instance for testing, you can use the docker-compose file in the root directory of this project. Start the docker containers with
docker-compose up -d
You need to adapt your config.ini.php file and change the following line:
[General]
trusted_hosts[] = "localhost:8080"
to
[General]
trusted_hosts[] = "localhost:8080"
After that you can access Matomo at http://localhost:8080. You have to set up Matomo first. The database credentials are
matomo
and matomo
. The database name is matomo
. The (internal) database host address is database
. The database
port is 3306
. Set the URL to http://localhost and enable ecommerce.
The following snippets helps you to do this quickly:
docker-compose exec matomo sed -i 's/localhost/localhost:8080/g' /var/www/html/config/config.ini.php
After the installation you can run MatomoTrackerTester
in the module test
to test the tracker. It will send
multiple randomized
requests to the local Matomo instance.
To enable debug logging, you append the following line to the config.ini.php
file:
[Tracker]
debug = 1
Use the following snippet to do this:
docker-compose exec matomo sh -c 'echo -e "\n\n[Tracker]\ndebug = 1\n" >> /var/www/html/config/config.ini.php'
To test the servlet integration, run MatomoServletTester
in your favorite IDE. It starts an embedded Jetty server
that serves a simple servlet. The servlet sends a request to the local Matomo instance if you call the URL
http://localhost:8090/track.html. Maybe you need to disable support for the Do Not Track preference in Matomo to get the
request tracked: Go to Administration > Privacy > Do Not Track and disable the checkbox _Respect Do Not Track.
We also recommend to install the Custom Variables plugin from Marketplace to the test custom variables feature and
setup some dimensions.
We use SemVer for versioning. For the versions available, see the tags on this repository.
Have a fantastic feature idea? Spot a bug? We would absolutely love for you to contribute to this project! Please feel free to:
- Fork this project
- Create a feature branch from the master branch
- Write awesome code that does awesome things
- Write awesome test to test your awesome code
- Verify that everything is working as it should by running mvn test. If everything passes, you may
want to make sure that your tests are covering everything you think they are!
Run
mvn verify
to find out! - Commit this code to your repository
- Submit a pull request from your branch to our dev branch and let us know why you made the changes you did
- We'll take a look at your request and work to get it integrated with the repo!
Please read the contribution document for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.
We use Checkstyle and JaCoCo to ensure code quality. Please run mvn verify
before submitting a pull request. Please
provide tests for your changes. We use JUnit 5 for testing. Coverage should be at least 80%.
- The original Piwik Java Tracker Implementation
- Matomo SDK for Android
- Piwik SDK Android
- piwik-tracking
- Matomo Tracking API Java Client -> Most of the code was integrated in the official Matomo Java Tracker
This software is released under the BSD 3-Clause license. See LICENSE.
Copyright (c) 2015 General Electric Company. All rights reserved.