Structr

Expert Topics

Built-in Analytics

Structr includes a built-in analytics system that allows you to build custom analytics and audit functionality into your application. You can record events like page views, user actions, or business transactions, and later query them with filtering, aggregation, and time-based analysis.

This feature is similar to tools like Google Analytics, but runs entirely within your Structr instance. All data stays on your server, giving you full control over what you track and how you analyze it.

Overview

Event tracking consists of two parts:

Events are stored as LogEvent entities in the database with the following properties:

Property Description
action The type of event (e.g., “VIEW”, “CLICK”, “PURCHASE”)
message Additional details about the event
subject Who triggered the event (typically a user ID)
object What the event relates to (typically a content ID)
timestamp When the event occurred (set automatically)

Recording Events

You can record events in two ways: using the logEvent() function from your application code, or by posting directly to the REST endpoint.

Using logEvent()

StructrScript:

${logEvent('VIEW', 'User viewed article', me.id, article.id)}

JavaScript:

$.logEvent('VIEW', 'User viewed article', $.me.id, article.id);

The parameters are:

  1. action (required) – The event type
  2. message (required) – A description or additional data
  3. subject (optional) – Who triggered the event
  4. object (optional) – What the event relates to

JavaScript Object Syntax

In JavaScript, you can also pass a single object:

$.logEvent({
    action: 'PURCHASE',
    message: 'Order completed',
    subject: $.me.id,
    object: order.id
});

Using the REST API

You can also create events via POST request, which is useful for external systems or JavaScript frontends:

POST /structr/rest/log
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "action": "VIEW",
    "message": "User viewed article",
    "subject": "user-uuid-here",
    "object": "article-uuid-here"
}

When using the REST API, subject, object, and action are required. The timestamp is set automatically.

Common Patterns

Track page views in a page’s onRender method:

$.logEvent('VIEW', request.path, $.me?.id, thisPage.id);

Track user actions in event handlers:

$.logEvent('DOWNLOAD', file.name, $.me.id, file.id);

Track business events in lifecycle methods:

// In Order.afterCreate
$.logEvent('ORDER_CREATED', 'New order: ' + this.total, this.customer.id, this.id);

Querying Events

The /structr/rest/log endpoint provides flexible querying capabilities.

Query Parameters

Parameter Description
subject Filter by subject ID
object Filter by object ID
action Filter by action type
timestamp Filter by time range using [start TO end] syntax
aggregate Group by time using SimpleDateFormat pattern
histogram Extract and count values from messages using regex
filters Filter messages by regex patterns (separated by ::)
multiplier Extract numeric multiplier from message using regex
correlate Filter based on related events (see Correlation section)

Overview Query

Without parameters, the endpoint returns a summary of all recorded events:

GET /structr/rest/log

Response:

{
    "result": [{
        "actions": "VIEW, CLICK, PURCHASE",
        "entryCount": 15423,
        "firstEntry": "2026-01-01T00:00:00+0000",
        "lastEntry": "2026-02-03T14:30:00+0000"
    }]
}

Filtering Events

Filter by subject, object, action, or time range:

GET /structr/rest/log?subject=<userId>
GET /structr/rest/log?object=<articleId>
GET /structr/rest/log?action=VIEW
GET /structr/rest/log?subject=<userId>&action=PURCHASE

Time Range Queries

Filter by timestamp using range syntax:

GET /structr/rest/log?timestamp=[2026-01-01T00:00:00+0000 TO 2026-01-31T23:59:59+0000]

Aggregation

The aggregate parameter groups events by time intervals. It accepts a Java SimpleDateFormat pattern that defines the grouping granularity:

Pattern Groups by
yyyy Year
yyyy-MM Month
yyyy-MM-dd Day
yyyy-MM-dd HH Hour
yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm Minute

Example – count events per day:

GET /structr/rest/log?action=VIEW&aggregate=yyyy-MM-dd

You can add custom aggregation patterns as additional query parameters. Each pattern is a regex that matches against the message field:

GET /structr/rest/log?action=VIEW&aggregate=yyyy-MM-dd&category=category:(.*)&premium=premium:true

This groups by day and counts how many messages match each pattern. The response includes a total count plus counts for each named pattern.

Multiplier

When aggregating, you can extract a numeric value from the message to use as a multiplier instead of counting each event as 1:

GET /structr/rest/log?action=PURCHASE&aggregate=yyyy-MM-dd&multiplier=amount:(\d+)

If an event message contains amount:150, it contributes 150 to the total instead of 1. This is useful for summing values like order amounts or quantities.

Histograms

The histogram parameter extracts values from messages using a regex pattern with a capture group, creating a breakdown by those values:

GET /structr/rest/log?action=VIEW&aggregate=yyyy-MM-dd&histogram=category:(.*)

This returns counts grouped by both time (from aggregate) and by the captured category value. The response shows how many events occurred for each category in each time period.

Filters

The filters parameter applies regex patterns to the message field. Only events where all patterns match are included. Separate multiple patterns with :::

GET /structr/rest/log?action=VIEW&filters=premium:true::region:EU

This returns only VIEW events where the message contains both premium:true and region:EU.

Correlation

Correlation allows you to filter events based on the existence of related events. This is useful for questions like “show me all views of articles that were later purchased” or “find users who viewed but did not buy”.

The correlation parameter has the format:

correlate=ACTION::OPERATOR::PATTERN

The components are:

Example: Find views that led to purchases

GET /structr/rest/log?action=VIEW&correlate=PURCHASE::and::article-(.*)

This returns VIEW events only if there is also a PURCHASE event where the pattern article-(.*) extracts the same value from the message.

Operators:

Operator Description
and Include event if a correlating event exists
andSubject Include event if a correlating event exists with the same subject
andObject Include event if a correlating event exists with the same object
not Include event only if NO correlating event exists

Example: Find users who viewed but did not purchase

GET /structr/rest/log?action=VIEW&correlate=PURCHASE::not::article-(.*)

This is an advanced feature that requires careful design of your event messages to include matchable patterns.

Designing Event Messages

The power of the query features depends on how you structure your event messages. A well-designed message format makes filtering, aggregation, and correlation much easier.

Key-Value Format

A recommended pattern is to use key-value pairs in your messages:

$.logEvent('PURCHASE', 'category:electronics amount:299 region:EU premium:true', $.me.id, order.id);

This format allows you to:

JSON Format

For complex data, you can store JSON in the message:

$.logEvent('PURCHASE', JSON.stringify({
    category: 'electronics',
    amount: 299,
    region: 'EU'
}), $.me.id, order.id);

Note that JSON is harder to query with regex patterns, but useful when you need to retrieve and parse the full event data later.

Consistent Naming

Use consistent action names across your application:

Use Cases

Page View Analytics

Track which pages are most popular:

// In page onRender
$.logEvent('VIEW', thisPage.name, $.me?.id, thisPage.id);

Query most viewed pages:

GET /structr/rest/log?action=VIEW&aggregate=object

User Activity Tracking

Track what a specific user does:

GET /structr/rest/log?subject=<userId>

Conversion Funnels

Track steps in a process:

$.logEvent('FUNNEL_STEP', 'cart', $.me.id, session.id);
$.logEvent('FUNNEL_STEP', 'checkout', $.me.id, session.id);
$.logEvent('FUNNEL_STEP', 'payment', $.me.id, session.id);
$.logEvent('FUNNEL_STEP', 'complete', $.me.id, session.id);

Audit Trails

Track who changed what:

// In onSave lifecycle method
let mods = $.retrieve('modifications');
$.logEvent('MODIFIED', JSON.stringify(mods.after), $.me.id, this.id);

Performance Considerations

Related Topics

Migration Guide

This chapter covers breaking changes and migration steps when upgrading between major Structr versions.

Important: Always create a full backup before upgrading Structr.

Migrating to Structr 6.x

Version 6 introduces several breaking changes that require manual migration from 5.x.

Global Schema Methods

Global schema methods have been simplified. The globalSchemaMethods namespace no longer exists – functions can now be called directly from the root context.

StructrScript / JavaScript:

// Old (5.x)
$.globalSchemaMethods.foo()

// New (6.x)
$.foo()

REST API:

# Old (5.x)
/structr/rest/maintenance/globalSchemaMethods/foo

# New (6.x)
/structr/rest/foo

Action required: Search your codebase for /maintenance/globalSchemaMethods and $.globalSchemaMethods and update all occurrences.

REST API Query Parameter Change

The _loose parameter has been renamed to _inexact.

# Old (5.x)
/structr/rest/foo?_loose=1

# New (6.x)
/structr/rest/foo?_inexact=1

REST API Response Structure

The response body from $.GET and $.POST requests is now accessible via the body property.

// Old (5.x)
JSON.parse($.GET(url))

// New (6.x)
JSON.parse($.GET(url).body)

Schema Inheritance

The extendsClass property on schema nodes has been replaced with inheritedTraits.

// Old (5.x)
eq('Location', get(first(find('SchemaNode', 'name', request.type)), 'extendsClass').name)

// New (6.x)
contains(first(find('SchemaNode', 'name', request.type)).inheritedTraits, 'Location')

JavaScript Function Return Behavior

JavaScript functions now return their result directly by default.

Option 1: Restore old behavior globally:

application.scripting.js.wrapinmainfunction = true

Option 2: Remove unnecessary return statements from functions.

JavaScript Strict Mode

Identifiers must be declared before use. Assigning to undeclared variables throws a ReferenceError.

// ❌ Not allowed
foo = 1;
for (foo of array) {}

// ✅ Correct
let foo = 1;
for (let foo of array) {}

Custom Indices

Custom indices are dropped during the upgrade to 6.0.

Action required: Recreate all custom indices manually after upgrading.

Upload Servlet Changes

Aspect 5.x Behavior 6.x Behavior
Default upload folder Root or configurable /._structr_uploads
Empty folder setting Allowed Enforced non-empty
uploadFolderPath Unrestricted Authenticated users only

Repeaters: No REST Queries

REST queries are no longer allowed for repeaters. Migrate them to function queries or flows.

Migration Checklist for 6.x


Migrating to Structr 4.x

All versions starting with the 4.0 release include breaking changes which require migration of applications built with Structr versions prior to 4.0 (1.x, 2.x and 3.x).

GraalVM Migration

With version 4.0, the required Java Runtime changed from standard JVMs (OpenJDK, Oracle JDK) to GraalVM. GraalVM brings full ECMAScript support, better performance, and polyglot scripting capabilities.

Installing GraalVM

Each Structr version supports the stable GraalVM version current at the time of release. The following example shows installation on Linux:

wget https://github.com/graalvm/graalvm-ce-builds/releases/download/vm-22.1.0/graalvm-ce-java11-linux-amd64-22.1.0.tar.gz
tar xvzf graalvm-ce-java11-linux-amd64-22.1.0.tar.gz
sudo mv graalvm-ce-java11-22.1.0 /usr/lib/jvm
sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/java java /usr/lib/jvm/graalvm-ce-java11-22.1.0/bin/java 2210
sudo update-alternatives --auto java

Migration of Script Expressions

Predicates in find() and search()

All predicates in find() and search() expressions need the $.predicate prefix. The easiest way to migrate is to export the application using deployment export and search all files for these predicates:

$.and
$.or
$.not
$.equals
$.contains
$.empty
$.range
$.within_distance
$.sort
$.page

Examples:

// Old (3.x)
$.find('File', 'size', $.range(null, 100), $.page(1, 10));

// New (4.x+)
$.find('File', 'size', $.predicate.range(null, 100), $.predicate.page(1, 10));
// Old (3.x)
$.find('User', $.sort('createdDate'));

// New (4.x+)
$.find('User', $.predicate.sort('createdDate'));

Some predicates also exist as regular functions ($.sort(), $.empty()) or keywords ($.page). When used outside of find(), they don’t need changes:

// No change needed - sort() used outside find()
$.sort($.find('User'), 'createdDate');

Resource Access Permissions

Resource Permissions (formerly “Resource Access Grants”) have been made more flexible. Rights management now also applies to permission nodes themselves, requiring users to have read access to the permission object to use it.

Manual Migration
  1. Log in as admin
  2. Navigate to Security → Resource Permissions
  3. Enable “Show only used grants”
  4. Migrate permissions:

For many permissions, enable “Show visibility flags in Resource Permissions table” in Dashboard → UI Settings.

Semi-automatic Migration via Deployment

When importing a deployment export from a pre-4.0 version into 4.x+, Structr runs automatic migration using this heuristic:

Scripting Considerations

Date Comparisons

Use the getTime() function when comparing dates to avoid issues with GraalVM ProxyDate entities:

{
    return $.me.createdDate.getTime() <= $.now.getTime();
}
Conditional Chaining Limitation

Conditional chaining on ProxyObjects with function members can cause errors:

{
    const obj = {
        method1: () => "works"
    };

    // Works
    obj.method1?.();

    // Works, call doesn't get executed
    obj.method2?.();

    const proxyObject = $.retrieve('passedObject');

    // Does NOT work - throws unsupported message exception
    proxyObject.myMethod?.();
}

REST Request Parameters

Starting with 4.0, REST request parameters must be prefixed with underscore to prevent name collisions with property names:

# Old
/structr/rest/Project?page=1&pageSize=10&sort=name

# New
/structr/rest/Project?_page=1&_pageSize=10&_sort=name

Full list of affected parameters:

Parameter Parameter Parameter
page pageSize sort
order loose locale
latlon location state
house country postalCode
city street distance
outputNestingDepth debugLoggingEnabled forceResultCount
disableSoftLimit parallelizeJsonOutput batchSize

Legacy mode can be enabled with application.legacy.requestparameters.enabled = true but is discouraged for new projects.

Neo4j Upgrade

Neo4j 4.x is recommended for Structr 4.x, though Neo4j 3.5 is still supported. If upgrading Neo4j, consult the Neo4j changelog.

Cypher Parameter Syntax

The old parameter syntax {param} was deprecated in Neo4j 3.0 and removed in Neo4j 4.0. Use $param instead. For compatibility, you can prefix queries with CYPHER 3.5.

Database Name Configuration

If migrating from Neo4j versions prior to 4, the default database may be named graph.db instead of neo4j. Configure the database name in structr.conf:

YOUR_DB_NAME.database.connection.url = bolt://localhost:7687
YOUR_DB_NAME.database.connection.name = YOUR_DB_NAME
YOUR_DB_NAME.database.connection.password = your_neo4j_password
YOUR_DB_NAME.database.connection.databasename = graph.db
YOUR_DB_NAME.database.driver = org.structr.bolt.BoltDatabaseService

Migration Checklist for 4.x