Integrate Google Analytics with NGINX

Google Analytics

Google Analytics let you gather info about the traffic to your site. Once you create an account, you get assigned a tag. There are instructions on the GA site on how to enable analytics but it typically typically involves adding some HTML/Javascript code to the main page of your site.

<!-- Google tag (gtag.js) -->
<script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XXXXXXX"></script>
<script>
  window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || [];
  function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);}
  gtag('js', new Date());

  gtag('config', 'G-XXXXX');
</script>

Once you insert this code to the main page of your site, you should start seeing data on Google Analytics. For testing, you might need to disable any ad blockers as those might block the GA scripts.

Google Analytics via NGINX injection

Some servers or static site generators (like Jekyll) support Google Analytics. For example, for Jekyll, you just need to add your Google Analytics tag to your config file and it will insert the GA code into all the pages that it generates.

Some servers however don’t support Google Analytics. Since I’m already using NGINX reverse proxy, I wanted to see if I could try and inject the Google Analytics code so I could get traffic info for servers that don’t support Google Analytics like Jellyfin.

NGINX, if built with --with-http_sub_module supports a sub_filter command that can replace a string with another. We can use this to replace an HTML tag like </head> with the GA code.

server {
    listen 443 ssl http2;
    listen [::]:443 ssl http2;
    ...
    ## Google analytics
    sub_filter_types text/html;
    sub_filter '</head>' '<script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-XXXXXXX"></script>
    	              <script>
    		        window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || [];
                            function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);}
                            gtag(\'js\', new Date());

                            gtag(\'config\', \'G-XXXXXXX\');
    		      </script></head>';
    sub_filter_once off;
    ...
    location / {
        ...
	      proxy_set_header Accept-Encoding "";

The snippet of code above should replace </head> with the GA code + the </head> tag. We only want to do the replacement on text/html MIME types. You can then do a systemct reload nginx.

TL;DR (auto-generated with llama3.2:1b)

📊🚀💻 Google Analytics + NGINX = 🤯

The post discusses integrating Google Analytics with Nginx, a web server software. It provides instructions on how to enable Google Analytics in Jekyll static site generators and how to use Nginx’s sub_filter feature to inject the code into HTML pages that don’t support Google Analytics. The goal is to track website traffic using Google Analytics even if the server doesn’t support it, such as Jellyfin media servers.