Import your server logs in Matomo with this powerful and easy to use tool.
- Python 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10.
- Matomo On-Premise >= 4.0.0 or Matomo Cloud. Doesn't work when Matomo for WordPress is used.
The script will import all standard web server log files, and some files with non-standard formats. The following log formats are supported:
- all default log formats for: Nginx, Apache, IIS, Tomcat, Haproxy
- all log formats commonly used such as: NCSA Common log format, Extended log format, W3C Extended log files, Nginx JSON, Traefik JSON, OVH, Gandi virtualhost servers
- log files of some popular Cloud services: Amazon AWS CloudFront logs, AWS S3 logs, AWS ELB logs.
- streaming media server log files such as: Icecast
- log files with and without the virtual host will be imported
In general, many fields are left optional to make the log importer very flexible.
We're looking for contributors! Feel free to submit Pull requests on Github.
The Log Analytics importer is designed to detect and import into Matomo as many log files as possible. Help us add your log formats!
- Implement your new log format in the import_logs.py file (look for
FORMATS = {
variable where the log formats are defined), - Add a new test in tests/test_main.py,
- Test that the logs are imported successfully as you expected (
tests/run_tests.sh
), - Open a Pull Request,
- Check the test you have added works (the build should be green),
- One Matomo team member will review and merge the Pull Request as soon as possible.
We look forward to your contributions!
This readme page could be improved and maybe you would like to help? Feel free to "edit" this page and create a pull request.
If you're a Python developer and would like to contribute to open source log importer, check out the list of issues for import_logs.py which lists all issues and suggestions.
The most simple way to import your logs is to run:
./import_logs.py --url=matomo.example.com /path/to/access.log
You must specify your Matomo URL with the --url
argument.
The script will automatically read your config.inc.php file to get the authentication
token and communicate with your Matomo install to import the lines. If your Matomo install is on a different server, use the --token-auth=<SECRET>
parameter to specify your API token.
The default mode will try to mimic the Javascript tracker as much as possible, and will not track bots, static files, or error requests.
If you wish to track all requests the following command would be used:
python /path/to/matomo/misc/log-analytics/import_logs.py --url=http://mysite/matomo/ --idsite=1234 --recorders=4 --enable-http-errors --enable-http-redirects --enable-static --enable-bots access.log
-
If you are importing Netscaler log files, make sure to specify the
--iis-time-taken-secs
option. Netscaler stores the time-taken field in seconds while most other formats use milliseconds. Using this option will ensure that the log importer interprets the field correctly. -
Some log formats can't be detected automatically as they would conflict with other formats. In order to import those logfiles make sure to specify the
--log-format-name
option. Those log formats are: OVH (ovh), Incapsula W3C (incapsula_w3c)
You must first make sure your logs are automatically rotated every day. The most popular ways to implement this are using either:
- logrotate: http://www.linuxcommand.org/man_pages/logrotate8.html It will work with any HTTP daemon.
- rotatelogs: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/programs/rotatelogs.html Only works with Apache.
- let us know what else is useful and we will add it to the list
Your logs should be automatically rotated and stored on your webserver, for instance in daily logs
/var/log/apache/access-%Y-%m-%d.log
(where %Y, %m and %d represent the year,
month and day).
You can then import your logs automatically each day (at 0:01). Setup a cron job with the command:
1 0 * * * /path/to/matomo/misc/log-analytics/import-logs.py -u matomo.example.com `date --date=yesterday +/var/log/apache/access-\%Y-\%m-\%d.log`
If you protect your site with Basic access authentication then you can pass the credentials via your cron job.
Apache configuration:
<Location /matomo>
AuthType basic
AuthName "Site requires authentication"
# Where all the external login/passwords are
AuthUserFile /etc/apache2/somefile
Require valid-user
</Location>
cron job:
5 0 * * * /var/www/html/matomo/misc/log-analytics/import_logs.py --url https://www.mysite.com/matomo --auth-user=someuser --auth-password=somepassword --exclude-path=*/matomo/index.php --enable-http-errors --enable-reverse-dns --idsite=1 `date --date=yesterday +/var/log/apache2/access-ssl-\%Y-\%m-\%d.log` > /opt/scripts/import-logs.log
Security tips:
- Currently the credentials are not encrypted in the cron job. This should be a future enhancement.
- Always use HTTPS with Basic access authentication to ensure you are not passing credentials in clear text.
With an Intel Core i5-2400 @ 3.10GHz (2 cores, 4 virtual cores with Hyper-threading), running Matomo and its MySQL database, between 250 and 300 records were imported per second.
The import_logs.py script needs CPU to read and parse the log files, but it is actually Matomo server itself (i.e. PHP/MySQL) which will use more CPU during data import.
To improve performance,
- by default, the script uses one thread to parse and import log lines.
You can use the
--recorders
option to specify the number of parallel threads which will import hits into Matomo. We recommend to set--recorders=N
to the number N of CPU cores that the server hosting Matomo has. The parsing will still be single-threaded, but several hits will be tracked in Matomo at the same time. - the script will issue hundreds of requests to matomo.php - to improve the Matomo webserver performance you can disable server access logging for these requests. Each Matomo webserver (Apache, Nginx, IIS) can also be tweaked a bit to handle more req/sec.
nginx's default access log is parsed with the --log-format-name=ncsa_extended
option.
To log multiple virtual hosts in nginx's access log, use the following configuration:
log_format vhosts '$host $remote_addr - $remote_user [$time_local] "$request" $status $body_bytes_sent "$http_referer" "$http_user_agent"';
access_log /PATH/TO/access.log vhosts;
When executing import_logs.py
, use --log-format-name=common_complete
.
In Matomo> Actions> Page URLs and Page Title reports, Matomo reports the Avg. generation time, as an indicator of your website speed. This metric works by default when using the Javascript tracker, but you can use it with log file as well.
Apache can log the generation time in microseconds using %D
in the LogFormat.
This metric can be imported using a custom log format in this script.
In the command line, add the --log-format-regex
parameter that contains the group generation_time_micro
.
Here's an example:
Apache LogFormat "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b %D"
--log-format-regex="(?P<ip>\S+) \S+ \S+ \[(?P<date>.*?) (?P<timezone>.*?)\] \"\S+ (?P<path>.*?) \S+\" (?P<status>\S+) (?P<length>\S+) (?P<generation_time_micro>\S+)"
Note: the group <generation_time_milli>
is also available if your server logs generation time in milliseconds rather than microseconds.
Since nginx 1.7.1 you can log to syslog and import them live to Matomo.
Path: nginx -> syslog -> (syslog central server) -> import_logs.py -> matomo
As a syslog central server you could use rsyslog or syslog-ng, use relevant parts of documentation below. Rsyslog part is tested with Ubuntu 16.10 and is working out-of-the-box.
You can use any log format that this script can handle, like Apache Combined, and Json format which needs less processing.
http {
...
log_format matomo '{"ip": "$remote_addr",'
'"host": "$host",'
'"path": "$request_uri",'
'"status": "$status",'
'"referrer": "$http_referer",'
'"user_agent": "$http_user_agent",'
'"length": $bytes_sent,'
'"generation_time_milli": $request_time,'
'"date": "$time_iso8601"}';
...
server {
...
# for syslog-ng
access_log syslog:server=127.0.0.1,severity=info matomo;
# for rsyslog
access_log syslog:server=unix:/var/cache/nginx/access.socket,facility=local0 matomo;
...
}
}
This is the config for the central server if any. If not, you can also use this config on the same server as Nginx.
options {
stats_freq(600); stats_level(1);
log_fifo_size(1280000);
log_msg_size(8192);
};
source s_nginx { udp(); };
destination d_matomo {
program("/usr/local/matomo/matomo.sh" template("$MSG\n"));
};
log { source(s_nginx); filter(f_info); destination(d_matomo); };
Just needed to configure the best params for import_logs.py, file /usr/local/matomo/matomo.sh
:
#!/bin/sh
/path/to/misc/log-analytics/import_logs.py \
--url=http://localhost/matomo/ \
--idsite=1 --recorders=4 --enable-http-errors --enable-http-redirects --enable-static --enable-bots \
--log-format-name=nginx_json -
Aug 31 23:59:59 tt-srv-name www.tt.com: 1.1.1.1 - - [31/Aug/2014:23:59:59 +0200] "GET /index.php HTTP/1.0" 200 3838 "http://www.tt.com/index.php" "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/31.0" 365020 www.tt.com
--log-format-regex='.* ((?P<ip>\S+) \S+ \S+ \[(?P<date>.*?) (?P<timezone>.*?)\] "\S+ (?P<path>.*?) \S+" (?P<status>\S+) (?P<length>\S+) "(?P<referrer>.*?)" "(?P<user_agent>.*?)").*'
Create new file /etc/rsyslog.d/10-matomo.conf
with following content and restart rsyslog service afterwards:
# socket to which you should send nginx data
$AddUnixListenSocket /var/cache/nginx/access.socket
# message starts with tag, "nginx: <...>", which we remove
$template matomo,"%msg:9:$%\n"
# uncomment following line to debug what is sent to matomo and in which format
# to check script part you could issue following command
# and expected result is "1 requests imported successfully":
# 'tail -1 /var/tmp/nginx.tmp | /usr/local/matomo/matomo.sh'
#local0.* /var/tmp/nginx.tmp;matomo
if $syslogfacility-text == 'local0' then ^/usr/local/matomo/matomo.sh;matomo
/usr/local/matomo/matomo.sh
, won't work without --token-auth
parameter:
#!/bin/sh
echo "${@}" | /path/to/misc/log-analytics/import_logs.py \
--url=https://localhost/matomo/ --token-auth=<SECRET> \
--enable-http-errors --enable-http-redirects --enable-static --enable-bots \
--idsite=1 --recorders=4 --log-format-name=nginx_json -
Since apache CustomLog directives can send log data to a script, it is possible to import hits into matomo server-side in real-time rather than processing a logfile each day.
This approach has many advantages, including real-time data being available on your matomo site, using real logs files instead of relying on client-side Javacsript, and not having a surge of CPU/RAM usage during log processing.
The disadvantage is that if Matomo is unavailable, logging data will be lost. Therefore we recommend to also log into a standard log file. Bear in mind also that apache processes will wait until a request is logged before processing a new request, so if matomo runs slow so does your site: it's therefore important to tune --recorders
to the right level.
You might have in your main config section:
# Set up your log format as a normal extended format, with hostname at the start
LogFormat "%v %h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-Agent}i\"" myLogFormat
# Log to a file as usual
CustomLog /path/to/logfile myLogFormat
# Log to matomo as well
CustomLog "|/path/to/import_logs.py --option1 --option2 ... -" myLogFormat
Note: on Debian/Ubuntu, the default configuration defines the vhost_combined
format. You can use it instead of defining myLogFormat
.
Here is another example on Apache defining the custom log:
LogFormat "%v %h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-agent}i\"" matomoLogFormat
CustomLog "||/var/www/virtual/test.tld/matomo/htdocs/misc/log-analytics/import_logs.py \
--debug --enable-http-errors --enable-http-redirects --enable-bots \
--url=http://matomo.test.tld --output=/var/log/matomo.log --recorders=1 \
--recorder-max-payload-size=1 --log-format-name=common_complete \
-" matomoLogFormat
Useful options here are:
--add-sites-new-hosts
(creates new websites in matomo based on %v in the LogFormat)--output=/path/to/matomo.log
(puts any output into a log file for reference/debugging later)--recorders=4
(use whatever value seems sensible for you - higher traffic sites will need more recorders to keep up)-
so it reads straight from /dev/stdin
You can have as many CustomLog statements as you like. However, if you define any CustomLog directives within a block, all CustomLogs in the main config will be overridden. Therefore if you require custom logging for particular VirtualHosts, it is recommended to use mod_macro to make configuration more maintainable.
As a rather extreme example of what you can do, here is an apache config with:
- standard logging in the main config area for the majority of VirtualHosts
- customised logging in a particular virtualhost to change the hostname (for instance, if a particular virtualhost should be logged as if it were a different site)
- customised logging in another virtualhost which creates new websites in matomo for subsites (e.g. to have domain.com/subsite1 as a whole website in its own right). This requires setting up a custom
--log-format-regex
to allow "/" in the hostname section (NB the escaping necessary for apache to pass through the regex to matomo properly), and also to have multiple CustomLog directives so the subsite gets logged to both domain.com and domain.com/subsite1 websites in matomo - we also use mod_rewrite to set environment variables so that if you have multiple subsites with the same format , e.g. /subsite1, /subsite2, etc, you can automatically create a new matomo website for each one without having to configure them manually
NB use of mod_macro to ensure consistency and maintainability
Apache configuration source code:
# Set up macro with the options
# * $vhost (this will be used as the matomo website name),
# * $logname (the name of the LogFormat we're using),
# * $output (which logfile to save import_logs.py output to),
# * $env (CustomLog can be set only to fire if an environment variable is set - this contains that environment variable, so subsites only log when it's set)
# NB the --log-format-regex line is exactly the same regex as import_logs.py's own 'common_vhost' format, but with "\/" added in the "host" section's allowed characters
<Macro matomolog $vhost $logname $output $env>
LogFormat "$vhost %h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-Agent}i\"" $logname
CustomLog "|/path/to/matomo/misc/log-analytics/import_logs.py \
--add-sites-new-hosts \
--config=/path/to/matomo/config/config.ini.php \
--url='http://your.matomo.install/' \
--recorders=4 \
--log-format-regex='(?P<host>[\\\\w\\\\-\\\\.\\\\/]*)(?::\\\\d+)? (?P<ip>\\\\S+) \\\\S+ \\\\S+ \\\\[(?P<date>.*?) (?P<timezone>.*?)\\\\] \\\"\\\\S+ (?P<path>.*?) \\\\S+\\\" (?P<status>\\\\S+) (?P<length>\\\\S+) \\\"(?P<referrer>.*?)\\\" \\\"(?P<user_agent>.*?)\\\"' \
--output=/var/log/matomo/$output.log \
-" \
$logname \
$env
</Macro>
# Set up main apache logging, with:
# * normal %v as hostname,
# * vhost_common as logformat name,
# * /var/log/matomo/main.log as the logfile,
# * no env variable needed since we always want to trigger
Use matomolog %v vhost_common main " "
<VirtualHost>
ServerName example.com
# Set this host to log to matomo with a different hostname (and using a different output file, /var/log/matomo/example_com.log)
Use matomolog "another-host.com" vhost_common example_com " "
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost>
ServerName domain.com
# We want to log this normally, so repeat the CustomLog from the main section
# (if this is omitted, our other CustomLogs below will override the one in the main section, so the main site won't be logged)
Use matomolog %v vhost_common main " "
# Now set up mod_rewrite to detect our subsites and set up new matomo websites to track just hits to these (this is a bit like profiles in Google Analytics).
# We want to match domain.com/anothersubsite and domain.com/subsite[0-9]+
# First to be on the safe side, unset the env we'll use to test if we're in a subsite:
UnsetEnv vhostLogName
# Subsite definitions. NB check for both URI and REFERER (some files used in a page, or downloads linked from a page, may not reside within our subsite directory):
# Do the one-off subsite first:
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/anothersubsite(/|$) [OR]
RewriteCond %{HTTP_REFERER} domain\.com/anothersubsite(/|$)
RewriteRule ^/.* - [E=vhostLogName:anothersubsite]
# Subsite of the form /subsite[0-9]+. NB the capture brackets in the RewriteCond rules which get mapped to %1 in the RewriteRule
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/(subsite[0-9]+)(/|$)) [OR]
RewriteCond %{HTTP_REFERER} domain\.com/(subsite[0-9]+)(/|$)
RewriteRule ^/.* - [E=vhostLogName:subsite%1]
# Now set the logging to matomo setting:
# * the hostname to domain.com/<subsitename>
# * the logformat to vhost_domain_com_subsites (can be anything so long as it's unique)
# * the output to go to /var/log/matomo/domain_com_subsites.log (again, can be anything)
# * triggering only when the env variable is set, so requests to other URIs on this domain don't call this logging rule
Use matomolog domain.com/%{vhostLogName}e vhost_domain_com_subsites domain_com_subsites env=vhostLogName
</VirtualHost>
As matomo (which includes this code as a git reference), matomo-log-analytics is released under the GPLv3 or later. Please refer to LEGALNOTICE for copyright and trademark statements and LICENSE.txt for the full text of the GPLv3.
This documentation is a community effort, we welcome your pull requests to improve this documentation.