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1644 lines
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Hello. So, I started the recording. So, since it's 10 a.m., we're about to start with this
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session. Today we have Richard Stark, who is a Matomo Supporting Member and Matomo Analytics
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Expert. In his talk, Matomo Tips and Tricks, he will tell us more about the collection
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of Matomo features which you might not know about. So, let's hear Richard for more.
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Good evening from New Zealand. Thank you, everybody, for joining this MatomoCamp session
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for Tips and Tricks. All right. So, for those of you who've never heard of me before, hi,
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I'm Richard. I am part of the Matomo Support Team based here in New Zealand. For those
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of you who maybe have sent us some emails over the past couple of months, maybe a year
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or so, you might have seen my name pop up in your email inbox, maybe now and then. So,
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if this is not the first time, thank you so much for joining us. If it is the first time
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hearing about me, it's great to meet you all. All right. So, as you saw in the previous
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slide, my session for today is titled Matomo Tips and Tricks. I've really tried to include
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a bunch of different tips and tricks for everybody, kind of from the everyday users of Matomo,
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as well as tips and tricks for those responsible for managing the Matomo setup or for Matomo
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administrators. All right. So, I've broken down the tips and tricks into four different
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categories. They are, number one, UI tips. Number two, performance tips. Number three,
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useful CLI or command line interface commands and how to figure out what options to use.
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And number four, useful free plugins that are not installed by default in Matomo. And
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then at the end of the session, we'll have a short Q&A session. So, please feel free
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to pop any questions you might have in the chat room during the session. We do have a
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dedicated chat room available for this live session on chat.matomocamp.org. I have asked
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the moderator to grab a few of the more interesting questions to answer at the end just to make
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sure we don't miss any of those. But you're also more than welcome to repeat your questions
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at the end if they do get missed. If we do have enough time, we'll also be opening up
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the floor to any questions at that time that you may have just randomly. So, let's get
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started. Number one, we've got some UI tips. So, the first tip I've got for you today is
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called Zen Mode. So, for those of you who have never used Zen Mode before, what it basically
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does is it provides you with an uninterrupted view of your Matomo reports or your Matomo
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dashboard. And it can be really, really useful for situations where you want to have a dashboard
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on a dedicated screen or a dedicated vice for sharing reports. For example, if you might
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have a dedicated screen in your office for looking at dashboards or pretty numbers and
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charts, that is the perfect thing to use for this. It can also be quite useful if you wanted
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to embed, for example, the entire Matomo UI into an iFrame. So, toggling Zen Mode on and
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off can then allow you to quite easily navigate between the different reports within the iFrame.
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And then when you want to bring that into sort of the full screen mode, you can quickly
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toggle the Zen Mode and you have that awesome uninterrupted view of your dashboard or for
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your reports. So, if you've never seen what the Zen Mode looks like before, I will get
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to show a screen which hopefully a lot of you are familiar with. This is what the standard
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UI in Matomo looks like. I'm pretty sure this is something that a lot of you see probably
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on a daily basis, maybe less so often for other people. But what Zen Mode basically
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does is this. It gets rid of the top menu bar. It gets rid of the menus on the left
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hand side. And in the screenshot here, I've kind of added the screenshot including the
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URL bar at the top. But obviously, if you did want to have this on a nice big screen,
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you can go into full screen and you can have that really awesome uninterrupted view of
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your Matomo reports. So, if you've never used it before, there's actually two different
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ways that we can get to Zen Mode, how we can toggle it on and off. So, the one option,
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of course, is to just click on our small little toggle button at the top of the page over
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here. The other option, which is my preferred option, is just to hit the Z key on your keyboard.
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That allows you to quickly switch between Zen Mode on and off.
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All right. So, my next tip for you today is the search function shortcut. So, the search
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function shortcut helps you kind of quickly navigate within the Matomo UI using your keyboard
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and keyboard arrows. So, what it does is it allows you to search for and switch between
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websites and segments quite quickly without having to touch your mouse. It also doubles
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as a search tool to look for more information on the Matomo.org site. For example, you can
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quickly search up for user guides or maybe you have a question or two that hopefully
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is answered in an FAQ. So, most of you have probably seen the search bar up in the top
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left hand side of the Matomo UI before, but if you wanted to quickly access this search
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feature, you just hit the F key on your keyboard.
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All right. The next UI tip for today is themes. So, for those of you who've kind of used
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Matomo for a long time and have never really tried themes before, it's really something
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that you can use to kind of customize the look, the feel, and the layout of the Matomo
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UI. There are actually several different themes available pretty much for every Matomo user
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in the world that you can quickly install and activate on your Matomo to get a really
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custom looking field. So, some of the default ones you can see up on the screen now. For
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example, we've got modern, we've got the minimalist themes, we've got the dark themes, but then
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we also have some other themes that are specific just to customizing fonts. Some that give
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you really cool visualizations, some spark lines, things like that.
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The really great thing about themes, though, is that you're really not just limited to
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these few themes that are available. The themes are completely customizable. You can customize
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them to your heart's content, and it really requires very little skill. If you have a
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basic understanding of CSS or maybe a little bit of less, you can customize as much as
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you want and then upload those themes directly to your Matomo UI. So, if you've never installed
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or activated themes before, you're probably wondering, how do I download and install themes?
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Now obviously, we can have a look on the website directly at themes.matomo.org, but you can
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also directly have a look at the themes from within your Matomo UI. So, to do that, we
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just go to the administration icon, we go to platform and marketplace, and then we click
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on the drop down menu and we select themes. From here, you can select any of the themes
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that are available to download, but you'll also have a nice little button up at the top
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of the screen that lets you upload your custom themes in a zip file format that you can then
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install and activate on your Matomo instance.
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Alright, the next section is performance tips. So, one of the biggest performance improvements
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that you can make to your Matomo instance is to disable browser archiving and then set
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up a crontab for archiving. So, you might be wondering, why do we recommend disabling
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browser archiving? Now, for the majority of users out there that have very small websites
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or websites that might have only a few hundred visits a day, it's definitely not worth the
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effort going ahead and setting up those crontabs and disabling browser archiving, but for those
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of you that are tracking a little bit more, you know, maybe a few thousand hits a day
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or maybe tens of thousands of hits a day, this is probably one of the biggest improvements
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that you can make to the performance of Matomo that you can see very quick and tangible results.
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So, when we have browser archiving enabled, almost every time a user views a report, Matomo
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needs to process the report that they're trying to request. It needs to go and fetch all that
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raw data, needs to crunch all the numbers, needs to put everything into pretty charts
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and numbers and lines and present it onto the screen. And it does this on the fly or
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basically in real time. So, you can imagine if you're loading a report that has a lot
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of data or reports that cover a long period of time, this can sometimes really slow down
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your experience with Matomo and can sometimes take quite a long time for those reports to
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load. This sort of effect can really be compounded when users are not aware of this. And it,
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you know, they might be going around jumping through a bunch of different reports wondering
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why the heck is this thing taking so long? What I mean there by compounding is if a user
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clicks on one report, it takes three or four seconds to load and they don't see anything
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on the screen. They decide, hey, I'm going to have a look at this report. That report
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does the same. They can go through five or six or seven different reports in a matter
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of seconds and every single one of those reports, once you start loading them in the user interface,
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those requests have already been sent. The Matomo server is working on them in the background
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to try and process all that data. Now, the good thing is, is when they go back to those
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other reports that they've already requested the data for, it should load relatively quickly.
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The problem is if they come back and do that again in one or two hours later, it's going
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to need to do that whole process over again. So by pre-processing all of those reports
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using what we call a crontab for the core archive command and setting up a schedule
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and disabling that browser archiving, we can be a hundred percent certain that all of those
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reports can load really, really quickly and your Matomo users can have a great experience.
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So this setting can actually be changed directly within the general settings of your Matomo
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instance, but it can also be set up by setting the specific config setting in your config.ini.php.
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But of course, if you're not familiar with messing around with the files directly on
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the Matomo server, disabling this within the UI is just perfect. All right. It is still
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important, however, to understand that there are going to be some cases where Matomo will
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still need to process reports when they're requested from the browser. This is specifically
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important when you're requesting, for example, a date range report because a date range report
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cannot be pre-processed. The other thing as well, if you have users who have created segments
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and those segments have been configured to be processed from in real time or on the fly,
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those segments will also be triggering some browser archiving requests. All right. The
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next tip that we've got for you has to do with segments. So what we talk about with
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segments when it comes to performance is we're talking about how far back segments are processed
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by default on your Matomo server. So when you have a segment in Matomo, if you're creating
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a segment or editing a segment, the default that Matomo is going to process that segment
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for is what we call the beginning of time. And that basically means that Matomo is going
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to process that segment from the very first day that you have raw data. Now, for a lot
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of people, this can mean that they're having to process segment data going back two or
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three or even more years, five or six years into the past. So this can have a really big
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impact on performance, especially for those people who have a lot of historical or a lot
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of raw data. So by changing this to a different time frame, for example, you can change it
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to automatically process only back 30 days. You can do it for 60 days or three months
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or six months or even a year. You can really customize and prevent your Matomo server from
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working too much on reports that you might not need to use. So to change this setting,
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we basically need to add the following to our config file. Now, if you're wondering
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how the heck are you going to remember this, all of this information is available. You
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can have a look in your config file. You can have a search for it on the Matomo website.
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You can hopefully find some more information about how to set this config file. Otherwise,
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if you wanted to look for this specific one, you can maybe take a screenshot or have a
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look at this recording afterwards, and then you can implement this into your config file
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settings. And of course, like you can see in the slide that's on the screen, there's
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a few different ways that we can set this up. For example, the one at the top is the
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segment creation time. So basically that means that no historical data for that segment is
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going to be processed from before the date was created. So for a lot of people that are
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tracking maybe tens of thousands or even millions of hits every single month, this might be
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the most beneficial one. You can also have a smaller timeframe. For example, the one
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at the bottom is the last 93. So that's roughly about three months historical data. So now
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that I've told you how to disable browser archiving and to change how far back Matomo
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goes back to process all of the segment data, you're probably wondering how do I get historical
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data when I've configured this setting in Matomo? And that brings us really nicely into
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our next segment, and that is useful CLI commands. Now, CLI is an acronym for command line interface,
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and that might sound really scary, but Matomo, when you install it onto your server, has
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a really cool what we call the console script. And the console script allows you to run some
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really specific commands directly on your Matomo server that allow you to do things
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or accomplish tasks that you want to do. So we've got a couple of different CLI commands
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that we're going to talk about today. We're going to talk about how to invalidate specific
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date ranges. So this is very useful for archiving specific segments further back than what we've
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just recently changed in our settings. We're also going to have a look at invalidating
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specific segments. And then number three, which is something that you might not have
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been aware of, is invalidating specific plugins. So if you don't know, Matomo 4 actually ships
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with a new feature that allows plugins that support that new feature to automatically
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archive reports going back a certain number of months. So for example, if you've just
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installed a brand new plugin or you've just purchased a premium plugin and you go ahead
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and install that onto your Matomo server, the great thing is that Matomo is going to
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go back and automatically archive the last six months of data for that new plugin. So
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that means that you have instant access to a great wealth of historical report data for
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that new plugin. However, sometimes it's still going to be necessary to archive reports going
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further back than what we've just set up in our settings. This is especially useful when
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you just installed a plugin. You want to have a look at, you know, what was the data for
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this plugin a year ago or two years ago or even further back than that, as far back as
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what you have raw data. So that is when the core invalidate report data console command
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comes in. So as you can see in the example on the screen, in this example, we're running
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the invalidate report data console command. So this command always requires a dates option.
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As you can see in the example, we've got, for example, from the 1st of June up until
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today. So that will basically invalidate all report data for your entire Matomo instance
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going from the 1st of June till today. You can also use other types of date formats such
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as the last 30 or last 7 or last 90, you know, things like that to kind of just get a general
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date range invalidated. So some of you, if you're having a look at this, might be remembering
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that we do have what we call the invalidate reports plugin. That also allows you, as you
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can see in this example, to invalidate segments. The biggest difference, of course, between
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the plugin and the console command is that the plugin is kind of like what we would consider
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a sledgehammer when you're trying to invalidate report data. It doesn't necessarily differentiate
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between different specific dates or specific plugins. It's kind of an all or nothing deal.
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And that's where it really comes in handy, knowing how to work with these CLI commands.
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And you can combine a lot of these different options together to get some really specific
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ranges or specific report data that you're looking for. So as you can see in the example
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over here, we've just put the plain text name of our segment. And in the next one, you'll
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see that we can now also invalidate some very specific plugins. So this is really where
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the CLI commands are a lot more useful than just invalidating report data in the UI. So
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when we combine all of these together, we get the ability to not only invalidate reports
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for a specific date range and for a specific segment, but also for a very specific plugin.
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So this is really, really useful. And once you've done all this, of course, it then becomes
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necessary to reprocess that data. And that brings us to the very last step in this specific
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section. And that is reprocessing the report data that we've just invalidated using the
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force date range option. So in this example, we're looking at the last one that we used,
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the core invalidate report data, where we set the dates as the first of June to the
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last of June. And when we run this last core archive command with the force date range
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similar to or exactly matching what we've just invalidated, Matomo is going to only
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go ahead and process that specific date range for that specific plugin. So some plugins
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do actually have their own console commands that can be used for archiving, which we'll
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talk about in a minute. But what a lot of you may be wondering is like, oh, do I have
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to take a screenshot of this page? Do I have to memorize all of this information that's
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in front of me right now so that I know how to use it? And the great news is no, you don't
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have to memorize or take a screenshot of any of this data because all of this is directly
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available when you run the console commands directly on your Matomo server. And we can
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find this information by using the dash dash help option that the dash dash help option
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when you're working with CLI commands is your absolute best friend. If you've ever forgotten
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what the specific command is or what type of input you need to give for a specific option,
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the dash dash help option is going to show that. So here, for example, in this slide,
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we've got the help output for the core archive command. So as you can see on the screen,
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hopefully the text isn't too small. We can see all of the potential options that we could
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add to this to kind of really narrow down and get some very specific commands that we
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can use for our server. So as I mentioned earlier, we do have some plugins that might
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have some very specific commands. A good example of a plugin that has its own archiving command
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is the custom reports plugin. So with the custom reports console command, it allows
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you to actually go in and specifically just archive the custom reports for a specific
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date range without needing to first invalidate that data. Now, a lot of you might be wondering,
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do I need to have a look at that? Do I need to go look at a guide for that sort of information?
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And here's the next really great tip is that no, you really don't have to know that information
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beforehand. The console command, if you just type in console on an SSH or in a terminal
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window in the Matomo root directory and you add the dash dash list option, it's going
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to give you a full list of all of the console commands that you can run directly on your
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Matomo server. And now that you've got this great list of console commands, you can then
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run those specific commands each with their own dash dash help or dash help option to
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get a list of all the optional parameters or required parameters that that specific
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plugin requires. So the important thing to remember whenever you're working on this thing
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is that just because a command works on one Matomo server doesn't necessarily mean that
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it works on every other Matomo server. And the reason for this is that every plugin that
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you install has the ability to add options to that list. So in other words, we're talking
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about all of these console commands can be or are in a lot of cases server specific.
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So if you're ever curious about how to run these console commands, how do I figure out
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how to use all of this stuff, use the list command, use the help command and build your
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command from there. Alright, so our next section is going to be useful free plugins and these
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are specifically plugins that are not installed in Matomo by default, but are available to
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be downloaded and installed directly from within your Matomo instance without requiring
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any additional information. All you basically have to do is click download and install from
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your Matomo instance. And we're going to start with the first one on my list at least and
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in my opinion, one of the best free plugins that you can install called the Queued Tracking
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plugin. So the Queued Tracking plugin, it improves the performance and the stability
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of your Matomo server by reducing the load on the Matomo database during tracking. It
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also at the same time really greatly improves the speed of tracking requests sent to your
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Matomo server. So how this works does take a little bit of an explanation. So we're going
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to do that now. So hopefully you'll see a graphic on your screen and what we're looking
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at here is what we would consider a normal tracking request. So you can see up at the
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top there, the browser sends that HTTP tracking request. That tracking request then gets received
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by the Matomo server and needs to be processed. It's then inserted directly into the Matomo
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database into that raw visits log and then once it's inserted, we send that response
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to the browser. Now the Queued Tracking plugin, this behavior changes in a few key ways. So
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as we can see on the next graphic, as soon as the Matomo server, so here at the top again
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we can see the HTTP tracking request. As soon as that is received by the server, it's put
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into a queue and then immediately the Matomo server responds to that browser or to that
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device or that application to say, great, I've got that tracking request, you can carry
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on. Once that tracking request is then placed into the queue, there's a few different things
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that can happen. Now, number one, you can either set up your Matomo instance to automatically
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process all of the requests that are in the queue when the queue reaches a certain threshold,
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but it can also be set up to be run on a schedule. So for example, you can process all of the
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requests in the queue once every minute or once every two or three minutes. And what
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this really does is that like you saw in the beginning, it not only improves the tracker
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performance, but it also enables your Matomo server to handle very large traffic peaks
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without bringing down your database server. And the way that it does this is that instead
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of sending, you know, small little individual single tracking requests every single time
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one of those tracking requests is received to the database server, it can process all
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of the tracking requests in that queue as a batch tracking request. So it really helps
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your Matomo server and it really makes a lot more stable and capable of handling those
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very large tracking peaks.
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All right, the next one on the list is the tracking spam prevention plugin. So the tracking
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spam prevention plugin gives you some really good options that you can enable to prevent
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spam tracking requests being sent or logged in your Matomo server. So it does this by
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giving you a couple of options. The first option it gives you is blocking requests from
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cloud providers. So this is really useful, for example, if you have a malicious or a
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bad actor that's sending you a lot of tracking requests from a server somewhere specifically
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in the world. And the problem might be that they're using a lot of different servers,
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you can't block all of those IP ranges. Well, the great news is the tracking spam prevention
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plugin is going to really help you in that.
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Number two is that it can automatically block requests from headless browsers. Headless
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browsers are notorious for people that try to send these sorts of requests because the
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load that it puts in the device sending those requests is a lot lower than a fully fledged
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browser.
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Number three, it can restrict the number of actions in a single visit or the maximum number
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of actions that Matomo will track in a single visit. This is especially useful to prevent
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spam visits that might or that can sometimes track hundreds or even thousands of actions
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in a single visit. We've seen some examples with people that we've provided support to
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in the past from the Matomo team, where they've had individual visits tracked over 10,000
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actions in a single visit in a matter of minutes or even hours. And the great way is that you
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can automatically block this or cap the number of tracking requests that can be tracked in
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a single instance.
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And number four, it can exclude specific countries or it can allow you to only include specific
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countries. So this is really useful. For example, if you have a website that is specifically
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targeting or specifically only working in a single country or in a single group of countries
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to automatically exclude any tracking requests from countries outside of that, but it can
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also be useful to very quickly and easily exclude specific countries if you notice that
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you're getting a lot of spam or non-legitimate tracking requests from those countries.
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All right. The next plugin on the list, which is an absolute must-have, is the marketing
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campaigns reporting. So by default, Matomo will give you the option or will give you
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the ability to track campaigns. And it comes with a really useful campaign URL builder
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directly in the Matomo UI. However, a lot of people, or let me rather say, most people
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probably already have campaigns set up that they're using to drive traffic to their site
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using campaign links that are oftentimes set up in their ad networks or with specific social
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networks. And the marketing campaigns reporting plugin extends that default capability, that
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default campaigns reporting, to give you access to all of the possible campaign parameters
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used by these platforms, as well as providing support for some of these campaign tracking
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parameters without needing to use any of the Matomo-specific campaign parameters. We have
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a really great blog post available on our blog that you can go and read up about the
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marketing campaigns reporting, and I would definitely recommend installing it on your
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Matomo server. All right. The next one on the list is probably a little bit more for
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the Matomo administrators out there. So that's called the Log Viewer. So the Log Viewer is
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kind of more just a quality of life or convenience plugin that you can install to have a quick
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look at the Matomo application logs. So this can really save you some time and effort instead
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of having to SSH into your server and grep some logs or download your logs from your
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syslog server, you can just log into Matomo, go to your administration UI, and have a look
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at the logs directly. All right. And the next one on our list is the Custom Alerts plugin.
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So the Custom Alerts plugin is really great, especially if you're not somebody who's looking
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at the reports every single day. And what the Custom Alerts plugin allows you to do is
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to get notified when something changes or something specific happens in your Matomo
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instance or on the websites that you're tracking. For example, you can set up an alert when
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your website gets more than 300 views in a day. You can have another alert set up, for
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example, if a specific product sells less than 100 items in a specific timeframe. But
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alerts can be set up in other ways as well. For example, you can set up alerts as percentages.
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So you can set up an alert, for example, that notifies you if the traffic to your website
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drops by more than 50 percent in a given timeframe. And obviously, a 50 percent drop over a given
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timeframe probably indicates that something big has changed or something has happened.
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You can also set it up for if you have zero visits. Now, obviously, zero visits would be a pretty bad
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outcome for you. You want to be sure that you're getting all of the tracking data and
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that nothing is wrong with that tracking data. So for those types of alerts, you can actually
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set them up not only as an email alert, but also as an SMS alert. So if you're setting
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up an SMS alert, you'll need to make sure that you also set up the Mobile Messaging
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Plugin. Now, the Mobile Messaging Plugin is included in Matomo Core, but it might not
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be activated on your Matomo server. So if you want to set up SMS alerts with a Custom
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Alerts Plugin, you'll need to go ahead and activate that plugin as well. And the last
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plugin on our list for today is the IP2 Company Plugin. This one kind of explains itself.
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What it does is it adds the functionality to your Matomo server to easily see if visits
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to your website or app are connecting from any known IP ranges for specific companies.
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So this is really useful, especially if your website or even your marketing campaigns are
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specifically targeting a certain market segment or even a very specific company. It also provides
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you some reports for these as well, so you can see which companies are visiting your
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website or using your application more than others. And all of these plugins can be found
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on the Matomo Plugins website at plugins.matomo.org. There is a massive list of plugins that didn't
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make the cut, unfortunately, for this session today. So if you're ever curious, if you wanted
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to know how you can extend the capability of your Matomo server, have a look at the
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list of plugins available there. And alternatively, you can also find them in the Marketplace
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section of your Matomo server. From there, you can directly install and activate and
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start using these awesome plugins. All right. And that brings us to the end of the last
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segment for this MatomoCamp session. So we're going to move on to some question and answers
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now. So if you haven't yet had an opportunity to send some questions through to the chat,
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just going to take a minute. The moderator has sent some questions through to us on the
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chat on this side as well. So we'll just have a quick look through those questions and see
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347
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if we can answer some of them. How is it like to work for the Matomo or InnerCraft team?
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348
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This is a question from Ronan. Honestly, it's been probably one of the best work experiences
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that I've ever had in my life. The team is amazing. It's awesome to work in a group of
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people that are conscious about open source software, conscious about being open and sharing.
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And it's really just a great company culture overall. What are the next big features the
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team is working on? So yeah, there's not a lot of big secrets when it comes to what sort
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of features we're working on. If you want to know what features we're working on next,
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you can probably have a look at the GitHub issues page. And you can kind of see, kind
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of looking at those milestones in the GitHub page, you can kind of get a feeling of what
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features are going to be worked on next. What is the priority for those sorts of things?
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Can we add new shortcuts with Matomo? This is actually something I'm not 100% sure. And
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I don't think we have the option to have keyboard shortcuts, but that's definitely something
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that I'll have a look at and ask the team about as well. Do we have any plans to develop
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more documentation about how to make more attractive teams? So I'm not sure who asked
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that question specifically, but we do actually have a developer's guide available on our
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developer documentation on how to create themes. Obviously, there's not necessarily very specific
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examples of what you can do. The main reason for that is that it's kind of really open.
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If you know a little bit about CSS, you know a little bit about LESS, you can go happy
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and hack away all day every day and create really cool customized themes. Something that
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I may not have mentioned earlier is that you're not just limited to using CSS or LESS, you
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can also include JavaScript files in your plugins to kind of extend it even further
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than what CSS or LESS would allow you to do. All right, Lenaro asks in the chat room, does
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the spam prevention work retroactive to filter out already made spam visits? No. So the tracking
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spam prevention plugin doesn't work retroactively. So this is something that you would need to
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install to prevent future spam tracking requests. If you do have very specific spam tracking
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requests, the best way to get rid of that data or those spam tracking requests is to
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use the GDPR tools available within Matomo. And that can be kind of useful, especially
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if they've, for example, all of the tracking requests came from a certain IP address or
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if they came from a certain country or they track certain specific things to your Matomo
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instance, you can use those GDPR tools to very quickly and easily delete all of that
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data. All right, that's some of the questions that we've got on the, are we having any plans
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00:36:49,700 --> 00:36:57,100
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to make the config.ini.php file accessible from the UI? No, I don't think we've got any
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379
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00:36:57,100 --> 00:37:04,100
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plans to make that config file editable from within the UI, but it is possible to view
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380
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00:37:04,100 --> 00:37:12,340
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the config file from the UI. Not necessarily just limited to the config.ini.php, but there
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381
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00:37:12,340 --> 00:37:17,180
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is a section under the diagnostics tab that you can actually go and have a look at all
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382
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00:37:17,180 --> 00:37:25,060
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of the settings that are currently set either in the global config file or the config.ini.php
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383
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00:37:25,060 --> 00:37:30,460
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within your Matomo instance. The reason why we wouldn't necessarily make it directly editable
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384
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00:37:30,460 --> 00:37:38,100
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from the UI is because a lot of the settings that you set in the config.ini.php can override
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385
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00:37:38,100 --> 00:37:48,060
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some of the settings that you might set in your user interface. All right, just having
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386
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00:37:48,060 --> 00:37:54,620
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a look for a couple more questions. Do you have any tips for solving upgrade issues?
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387
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00:37:54,620 --> 00:37:59,620
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Sometimes the upgrade fails and the database and core are not the same version. There have
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388
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00:37:59,620 --> 00:38:04,460
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been several questions on this in the forum, but there isn't a good solution. That's a
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389
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00:38:04,460 --> 00:38:08,660
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really great question and it's actually something that I helped one or two customers with in
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390
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00:38:08,660 --> 00:38:13,180
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the last couple of weeks as well. It might be really useful from our end just to put
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391
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00:38:13,180 --> 00:38:18,540
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that into an FAQ. It's something that I've kind of been planning to do as well, but yes,
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392
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00:38:18,540 --> 00:38:24,140
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there is actually a way that you can roll back the version that is stored in the database
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393
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00:38:24,140 --> 00:38:30,740
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so that Matomo can rerun all of those database upgrade commands. So stay tuned. I don't know
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394
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00:38:30,740 --> 00:38:37,180
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if you have any way that you can kind of keep an eye on some of the FAQs. Otherwise, feel
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395
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00:38:37,180 --> 00:38:43,760
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free to shoot us an email at support at matomo.org just asking about that information about those
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396
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00:38:43,760 --> 00:38:48,100
|
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specific steps. And if we don't yet have that FAQ out there, we'll be more than happy to
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397
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00:38:48,100 --> 00:38:54,980
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send that information on to you. Could you give a general definition of what archiving
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398
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00:38:54,980 --> 00:39:03,720
|
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means? Yeah. So archiving is basically the process that Matomo uses to kind of process
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399
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00:39:03,720 --> 00:39:08,580
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all of that raw data. So as you can imagine, if you're sending hundreds of thousands of
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400
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00:39:08,580 --> 00:39:16,180
|
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tracking requests or hits to your Matomo interface, that data on its own isn't really useful other
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401
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00:39:16,180 --> 00:39:22,940
|
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than just to kind of look at in reality. So what archiving does is it takes that raw data
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402
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00:39:22,940 --> 00:39:28,780
|
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and it parses through every single piece of that raw data, and that is used to then generate
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403
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00:39:28,780 --> 00:39:39,480
|
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the reports that you view in your Matomo instance. All right. Anyone else got a couple more questions
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404
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00:39:39,480 --> 00:39:56,540
|
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for us? All right. That looks like all the questions for today. So that means that we're
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405
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00:39:56,540 --> 00:40:01,200
|
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actually almost out of time. I really just wanted to say thank you, everyone, for joining.
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406
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00:40:01,200 --> 00:40:05,780
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Thank you so much for the awesome questions that you asked. I hope that everybody learned
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407
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00:40:05,780 --> 00:40:10,680
|
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something new today that will help give you success with Matomo. And I'd also like to
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408
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00:40:10,680 --> 00:40:17,640
|
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give a massive thank you to the volunteers that have made MatomoCamp possible. This
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409
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00:40:17,640 --> 00:40:22,460
|
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really is a community-driven event, and none of this would be possible without the awesome
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410
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00:40:22,460 --> 00:40:29,700
|
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contribution of the volunteers as well as the sponsors. Have a great day, everyone.
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411
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00:40:29,700 --> 00:40:38,220
|
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Bye.
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