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analytics.usa.gov

Analytics.usa.gov is a product of the Digital Analytics Program (DAP), which collects and publishes website analytics from thousands of public-facing US federal government websites per the "Delivering a Digital-First Public Experience" requirement.

The process for adding features to this project is described in Development and deployment process.

About the components

Ths app uses Jekyll to build the site, and Sass for CSS. Javascript provided is a webpacked aggregation of several different modules, leveraging React and d3 for the visualizations. Learn more on the webpack configuration

This is the main repository for https://analytics.usa.gov. Additional repositories are:

Developing locally

Prerequisites

Install ruby and node libraries before attempting to run other development commands:

# Install dependencies
bundle install
npm install

Build and serve the site on your local machine

# Compile and serve the full site locally, watching for changes.
npm start

Running the linters

Linters run on the static files for the repo and ensure that the code is free from syntax issues and that code style conforms to community best practices. These checks are also enforced in CI where possible. Run the linters with the following commands:

# JavaScript
npm run lint:js
# SCSS
npm run lint:styles
# HTML
npm run lint:html

You can add :fix to any above the above commands and the linter will attempt to automatically fix common lint issues.

Run the unit tests

Unit tests ensure that code works as expected and can be helpful in finding bugs. These tests are also enforced to pass via CI. Run the unit tests with the following command:

npm test

Install git hooks

There are git hooks provided in the ./hooks directory to help with common development tasks. These will checkout current NPM packages on branch change events, and run the linters and unit tests on pre-commit.

Install the provided hooks with the following command:

npm run install-git-hooks

Now the site will be served at http://localhost:4000 and will be reloaded if you make changes to the source files locally.

Check for accessibility issues

With the site running locally, you can test for accessiblity issues with pa11y

# Run the site locally
npm start

# Run pa11y checks
npm run pa11y

You can update the URL in the script definition to run pa11y for other pages. By default pa11y runs on the http://localhost:4000/ page.

Developing with local data

The development settings assume data is available at /ga4-data. You can change this in _development.yml.

Developing with real live data from analytics-reporter

If also working off of local data, e.g. using analytics-reporter, you will need to make the data available over HTTP and through CORS.

Various tools can do this. This project recommends using the Node module serve:

npm install -g serve

Generate data to a directory:

analytics --output [dir]

Then run serve from the output directory:

serve --cors

The data will be available at http://localhost:4000 over CORS, with no path prefix. For example, device data will be at http://localhost:4000/devices.json.

Adding Additional Agencies

  1. Ensure that data is being collected for a specific agency's Google Analytics ID. Visit 18F's analytics-reporter for more information. Save the url path for the data collection path.
  2. Create a new json object in the /_data/agencies.json file. The slug attribute of the object will be the url path. The name attribute is the Agency's name.

Javascript Modules

  • Index - The entry point for the webpack bundler. This pulls in all React component JS to make it available for rendering.
  • js/components the top level directory containing all React component definitions. The components which render charts contain the d3 logic for rendering the chart within them. Since this is not a full react app due to many pages being generated statically by Jekyll, there are index.js files within some component directories to run createRoot from the react-dom library to inject React components at certain elements
  • lib/chart_helpers helper functions containing d3 logic which is shared between multiple charts.
  • lib/touchpoints.js third party code from the Touchpoints project integration, included in this repo to avoid Content Security Policy problems from remote-hosted scripts.

Deploying the app

Production and staging applications are deployed via CI automatically. Any commits to the master branch will be deployed to production after passing automated tests in CI. Any commits to the staging branch will be deployed to the staging environment. Any commits to the develop branch will be deployed to the development environment.

It shouldn't be necessary to deploy manually, but with the Cloud Foundry CLI installed, follow these steps to deploy.

To deploy to analytics.usa.gov after building the site with the details in _config.yml:

make deploy_production

To deploy to analytics-staging.app.cloud.gov after building the site with the details in _config.yml and _staging.yml:

make deploy_staging

Environments

Environment Branch URL
Production master https://analytics.usa.gov
Staging staging https://analytics-staging.app.cloud.gov
Development develop https://analytics-develop.app.cloud.gov

API key

The historical data downloads page of the site makes API calls (proxied through the site's NGINX server) which include an api.data.gov API key. This key is provided as configuration by CI during deployment and can be updated as needed in the CI deployment variables.

Webpack Configuration

The application compiles es6 modules into web friendly js via Wepback and the babel loader.

The webpack configuration is set in the wepback.config.js.

The current configuration uses babel present-env.

The webpack also includes linting using eslint leveraging Prettier, as well as community recommended style guidlines for eslint and react.

The webconfig uses the TerserWebpackPlugin to minimize the bundle.

The resulting uglified bundle is built into assest/bundle.js.

NPM webpack commands

Command purpose
npm run build-dev a watch command rebuilding the webpack with a development configuration (i.e. no minifiecation)
npm run build-prod a webpack command to build a minified and transpiled bundle.js

Blog and usage by other organizations

For a detailed description of how the site works, read 18F's blog post on analytics.usa.gov.

Other organizations who have reused this project for their analytics dashboard:

The City of Anchorage, AK The City of Omaha, NE
The City of Sacramento, CA Carbarrus County, NC
Cook County, IL City of Seattle
Douglas County, NE Washington State University
State of Indiana U.S. Department of Education
State of Georgia USA.gov - General Services Administration

This blog post details their implementations and lessons learned.

Public domain

This project is in the worldwide public domain. As stated in CONTRIBUTING:

This project is in the public domain within the United States, and copyright and related rights in the work worldwide are waived through the CC0 1.0 Universal public domain dedication.

All contributions to this project will be released under the CC0 dedication. By submitting a pull request, you are agreeing to comply with this waiver of copyright interest.