Skip to main content

Python/MongoDB Information Platform - Server

Project description

metrique/server/static/img/metrique_logo.png

Metrique

Python/MongoDB Information Platform and Data Warehouse

Metrique help bring data into an intuitive, indexable data object collection that supports quick snapshotting, advanced ad-hoc querying, including (mongodb) aggregations and mapreduce, along with python, ipython, pandas, numpy, matplotlib, and so on, is fully integrated with the scientific python computing stack. I hope so anyway. :)

Author: “Chris Ward” <cward@redhat.com>

Sources: https://github.com/drpoovilleorg/metrique

Installation

You must first install MongoDB. Then, to continue, make sure it’s started.

Metrique (suggested) Install virtualenv and create a new virtual environment for metrique. Activate it.

Install metrique:

python-pip install metrique -r requirements.txt

You should now be ready to go.

Run metrique-server-config.py if you changed any defaults.

To start metrique, run:

$[/metrique/server/bin] metrique-server start [2|1|0] [1|0]

Where argv are debug on+/on/off and async on/off respectively.

It’s suggested to run :mod:metrique-server-setup after install as well, especially if you changed any default values of your mongo or metrique servers, they’re hosted on a different ip than localhost.

Client If the metrique server is running on anything other than http://127.0.0.1, run metrique-client-setup.

Then, launch a python shell. We suggest ipython notebook.

As of this time, :mod:cubes can be found in global metrique namespace or local to the running user.

Default: ~/.metrique/cubes

To quickly make those cubes available in sys.path:

IN  [] from metrique.cubes import set_cube_path
IN  [] set_cube_path()  # defaults to '~/.metrique/cubes'

Then, to load a cube for extraction, query or administration, import:

IN  [] from git_repo.gitrepo import Commit
IN  [] g = Commit(config_file=None, uri=None)

Ping the server to ensure your connected. If all is well, metriqe server should pong your ping!:

IN  [] g.ping()
OUT [] pong!

Try running an example ::mod:git_commit etl job, for example:

IN  [4] g.extract("git_commit")

Then, analyse away:

IN  [5] q = c.query.fetch('git_commit', 'author, committer_ts')
IN  [6] q.groupby(['author']).size().plot(kind='barh')
OUT [6] <matplotlib.axes.AxesSubplot at 0x6f77ad0>

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

metriqued-0.1.3-alpha35.tar.gz (21.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file metriqued-0.1.3-alpha35.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for metriqued-0.1.3-alpha35.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 3a2a5098afff780e0093b6bea6f189c5054310a5404f0b79cf87b487495827f3
MD5 f87abef100377db68074349a09a7a06e
BLAKE2b-256 cbf041feb61fb18be7f441a9bfc38c411a67bcf3ead09d846d9aa78ee1b63728

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page