3

I am using delayed_job to do some background task. In between I want to track some events. I am using mixpanel gem to track the events. In controller its working perfectly fine. But not in Delayed Job.

Code I am using

@original_message = Message.find(message_id)
@mixpanel= Mixpanel::Tracker.new("43242637426346287482", message_id, true)
@mixpanel.track_event("blank_body", {:reset_result => "sucess" })
//message_id is a unique for every request.

I have specified

  gem 'mixpanel' in gemfile

              {undefined method `[]=' for 45:Fixnum

/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/mixpanel-0.9.0/lib/mixpanel/tracker.rb:38:in clear_queue'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/mixpanel-0.9.0/lib/mixpanel/tracker.rb:13:ininitialize'\n/Users/mohit/projects/textadda/lib/message_job.rb:109:in new'\n/Users/mohit/projects/textadda/lib/message_job.rb:109:inperform'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/backend/base.rb:87:in invoke_job'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:120:inrun'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.8.7-p334/lib/ruby/1.8/timeout.rb:67:in timeout'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:120:inrun'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.8.7-p334/lib/ruby/1.8/benchmark.rb:308:in realtime'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:119:inrun'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:177:in reserve_and_run_one_job'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:104:inwork_off'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:103:in times'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:103:inwork_off'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:78:in start'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.8.7-p334/lib/ruby/1.8/benchmark.rb:308:inrealtime'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:77:in start'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:74:inloop'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/worker.rb:74:in start'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/delayed_job-2.1.4/lib/delayed/tasks.rb:9\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/task.rb:205:incall'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/task.rb:205:in execute'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/task.rb:200:ineach'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/task.rb:200:in execute'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/task.rb:158:ininvoke_with_call_chain'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.8.7-p334/lib/ruby/1.8/monitor.rb:242:in synchronize'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/task.rb:151:ininvoke_with_call_chain'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/task.rb:144:in invoke'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/application.rb:112:ininvoke_task'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/application.rb:90:in top_level'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/application.rb:90:ineach'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/application.rb:90:in top_level'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/application.rb:129:instandard_exception_handling'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/application.rb:84:in top_level'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/application.rb:62:inrun'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/application.rb:129:in standard_exception_handling'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/lib/rake/application.rb:59:inrun'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/gems/rake-0.9.2/bin/rake:32\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/bin/rake:19:in `load'\n/Users/mohit/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.8.7-p334/bin/rake:19

EDIT

I have implemented mixpanel in background process using standard get request. But I am still looking for the solution how can I use Mixpanel gem in background process.

2
  • Have you tried require 'mixpanel' to explicitly require it before you call it via Mixpanel::Tracker...?
    – iwasrobbed
    Aug 2, 2011 at 5:25
  • @Seamus Abshere updated
    – Mohit Jain
    Aug 4, 2011 at 16:04

2 Answers 2

1
+100

You should just be doing something like this:

@mixpanel= Mixpanel::Tracker.new("43242637426346287482", {:REMOTE_ADDR => message_id}, true)
@mixpanel.track_event("blank_body", {:reset_result => "sucess" })

The gem expects the second variable to be the request environment, so will get the ip address that way, and send that to mixpanel.com. But I am not even sure if that is really needed, so I think that even a simple

@mixpanel= Mixpanel::Tracker.new("43242637426346287482", {}, true)
@mixpanel.track_event("blank_body", {:reset_result => "sucess" })

should work.

Hope this helps.

1

NOTE: THIS ANSWER IS NOW OUT OF DATE AS OF OCT 15 2012 AS THE INITIALIZE METHOD NO LONGER TAKES A ENV PARAMETER

The example on https://github.com/zevarito/mixpanel Mixpanel::Tracker.new gets called like this:

Mixpanel::Tracker.new("YOUR_MIXPANEL_API_TOKEN", request.env, true)

In a controller context, request.env is a hash.

In your code above your passing in message_id as the second argument, which looks like an integer. Sorry, can't help anymore than that, don't know anything about the mixpanel gem, but that's the root of your problem.

If the mixpanel API documentation tells you you can pass an integer as the second parameter, it's incorrect. Here's the code relevant to your error from https://github.com/zevarito/mixpanel/blob/master/lib/mixpanel/tracker.rb

module Mixpanel
  class Tracker
    def initialize(token, env, async = false)
      @token = token
      @env = env
      @async = async
      clear_queue
    end

# snip

    def clear_queue
      @env["mixpanel_events"] = []
    end

# snip

  end
end

Passing an integer as the second argument to the initializer will not work, because the Fixnum class doesn't have a hash assignment ([]=) method, which is exactly the error message you are getting.

If the documentation tells you this can be an integer, you should probably file an issue against mixpanel.

4
  • IN back ground process you dont have access to request.env and this is should be just a unique code as per mixpanel api..
    – Mohit Jain
    Aug 5, 2011 at 19:48
  • I've updated the answer with a bit more detail, where in the API docs does it say this can be an integer?
    – malclocke
    Aug 8, 2011 at 0:21
  • From API:-- One thing to keep in mind is that you have to include a unique identifier with the data you send from Ruby, as we are unable to use the request's IP address for uniqueness tracking. You need to include either 'distinct_id' or 'ip' as a property of your request.
    – Mohit Jain
    Aug 8, 2011 at 5:46
  • And more over when I sent this query to their support I got this as reply: The Mixpanel ruby library is community-supported & I haven't used it. Please feel free to update it to work in your environment, it should be quite simple.
    – Mohit Jain
    Aug 8, 2011 at 5:48

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