Goldflag

joined 1 day ago
[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 3 points 3 hours ago (1 children)
[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 2 points 3 hours ago

from what i know, awstats gets analytics from server-side logs while Rybbit uses a client side script. So not really and apples to apples comparison

[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 1 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Everything is in the repo and cloud features are just toggled off in the self-hosted build.

[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 9 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

Clickhouse definitely takes a lot of resources! There's unfortunately no way around that, though in my experience it runs fine on the cheapest Hetzner instances which are like $3-4 a month for 2GB of RAM. How lightweight is your VPS?

And yea, you don't need clickhouse for a simple static site. I chose clickhouse because it Postgres or MySQL does not scale well since the main site I personally use Rybbit for sends around 20 million events a month.

It pains me to plug my competitors, but check out Umami or Goatcounter if you want a platform that uses postgres.

[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 1 points 20 hours ago

I gotta say nice job on the website. Very tastefully done

[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 15 points 20 hours ago (5 children)

Only very slightly so. One of the reasons I created Rybbit is because platforms like plausible and fathom have much inferior self-hosted versions (very limited featureset and basically never updated). We have a comparison here

[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 14 points 21 hours ago

it didn't have enough features, especially since the community version is heavily nerfed (it's missing even funnels)

[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 7 points 21 hours ago

Posthog makes it almost impossible to actually self-host since they try to push you onto the cloud as much as possible. They say that the self-hosted version only works well up until 100k events ... which is insane since their cloud free tier is 1 million events. It's actually the reason why I built Rybbit. I tried to self-host posthog on my server but it ran it up to 100% CPU on 8 cores and didn't even work.

Ok posthog rant done.

The other main difference is that Posthog has like 10+ different products all in one. Their web analytics is good, but it's just kind of bland (imo) because it's not their main focus.

[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 23 points 22 hours ago (1 children)

Yea, we use a client-side script like almost everyone else. The major difference is that we don't use cookies so you can avoid a lot of the cookie banner/GDPR nonsense.

Rybbit definitely isn't the first open source cookieless web analytics platform (Plausible and Umami are the two other big ones), but it's probably the most "all-in-one" of all these alternatives.

[–] Goldflag@lemmy.world 59 points 22 hours ago (3 children)
 

Hi guys, I've been working on a self-hostable web analytics platform since the start of this year after being frustrated with Google Analytics and Plausible.

I've packed a bunch of cool web analytics features into Rybbit, but I've tried very hard to keep the interface simple to use,

https://github.com/rybbit-io/rybbit

Check it out!

view more: next ›