Use the GitHub Firehose API to visualize the most active GitHub users in real-time
Have you ever had a play around with real-time Dashboard in Google Analytics? It’s kind of fascinating to see people interact with your website in real time. Did you know you can build something similar using the GitHub timelime?
It’s surprisingly easy to build a basic prototype in Streamlit. I’d like to show you how to build a very modest, minimal, MVP version of a real-time dashboard. You can use the public stream of GitHub events, namely: The GitHub Firehose.
You can use it build a very simple pipeline and dashboard that keeps track of the number of events by GitHub username and shows you the current top 10.
Here's a preview of the payload that you get from the GithubFirehose API. In this tutorial, we're only going to use a small portion of it (the "actor" object)
{ "id": "41339742815", "type": "WatchEvent", "actor": { "id": 12345678, "login": "someuser123", "display_login": "someuser123", "gravatar_id": "", "url": "https://api.github.com/users/someuser123", "avatar_url": "https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/12345678?", }, "repo": { "id": 89012345, "name": "someorg/somerepo", "url": "https://api.github.com/repos/someorg/somerepo", }, "payload": { "action": "started" }, "public": true, "created_at": "2024-08-26T12:21:53Z" }
But we can't just connect the Firehose to Streamlit, we need a back end to process the data first. Why?
Streamlit is a fantastic tool for quickly whipping up interactive application prototypes with Python. However, when it comes to rendering real-time data, Streamlit can be a bit tricky. You can stream the GitHub Firehose into Kafka easy enough (my colleague Kris Jenkins has an excellent tutorial on this called High Performance Kafka Producers in Python )
But getting Streamlit to render data that you’re consuming directly from Kafka can be kind of a rigmarole. Streamlit wasn’t designed to handle a continuous stream of data flowing in every millisecond. You don’t really need the visualization to refresh at that frequency anyway.
Even if your source data stream updates every millisecond (like a really busy server log), you can just show a snapshot of the data every second. To do this, you’d sink that data into a database, and put it behind an API that Streamlit can poll at a more manageable rate.
By putting the data behind an API, you not only make it easier for Streamlit to handle, but you also make the data accessible to other tools. This approach requires a bit of backend development, but don’t worry — I’ve prepared a set of Docker containers and a docker compose file to help you get started locally.
You can be a complete back end novice and still understand how this works, I promise.
Here’s a quick overview of the components we’ll be using:
Yes, I know it looks like a lot, but I’ll focus on the static data layer — namely the API service and the Streamlit dashboard. I won’t delve into the murky depths of the streaming data layer here (but I’ll give you some links in case you want to know more).
I added this layer because it’s handy to know how streaming back ends work generally, even if you don’t have to maintain them yourself.
Here’s very brief breakdown of what each service does:
Service | Description |
---|---|
Streamlit Service | Displays a Streamlit Dashboard which polls the API and renders the data in a chart and table. |
Flask API | Serves a minimal REST API that can query a database and return the results as JSON. |
Postgres Database | Stores the event count data. |
Postgres Writer Service | Reads from a topic and continuously updates the database with new data. |
Aggregation Service | Refines the raw event logs and continuously aggregates them into event counts broken down by GitHub display name. |
Streaming Data Producer | Reads from a real-time public feed of activity on GitHub and streams the data to a topic in Redpanda (our local message broker). |
Red Panda Server | Manages the flow of streaming data via topics (buffers for streaming data). |
You can inspect the code in the accompanying Github repo. Each service has its own subfolder, with code and a README:
To get started, you’ll need Docker with Docker Compose installed (and Git of course). The easiest way is to install Docker Desktop. Once you have Docker set up, follow these steps:
git clone https://github.com/quixio/template-streamlit-rt-githubdash
cd template-streamlit-rt-githubdash
docker compose up
You should see some log entries that look like this (make sure Docker Desktop is running).
Open your browser and go to http://localhost:8031. You should see your dashboard running.
Let’s take a look at the two main components of the static data layer: the dashboard and the data API.
Now, let’s look at how the Streamlit app uses this API. It polls the API, gets the results back as JSON, turns the JSON into a dataframe, then caches the results. To refresh the results, the cache is cleared at a defined interval (currently 1 second) so that Streamlit needs to retrieve the data again.
import streamlit as st import requests import time import pandas as pd import os import logging from datetime import datetime import plotly.express as px from dotenv import load_dotenv load_dotenv() ### for local dev, outside of docker, load env vars from a .env file logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO) logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) # API endpoint URL api_url = os.environ['API_URL'] ## Function to get data from the API def get_data(): print(f"[{datetime.now()}] Fetching data from API...") response = requests.get(api_url) data = response.json() df = pd.DataFrame(data) try: # Reorder columns # df = df[['page_id', 'count']] df = df[['displayname', 'event_count']] except: logger.info("No data yet...") return df # Function to get data and cache it @st.cache_data def get_cached_data(): return get_data() # Streamlit UI st.title("Real-time Dashboard for GitHub Data using Streamlit,Flask and Quix") st.markdown("This dashboard reads from a table via an API, which is being continuously updated by a Quix Streams sink process running in Docker. It then displays a dynamically updating Plotly chart and table underneath.") st.markdown("In the backend, there are services that:\n * Read from the GitHub Firehose \n * Stream the event data to Redpanda\n * Read from Redpanda and aggregate the events per GitHub user\n * Sinking the page event counts (which are continuously updating) to PostGres\n\n ") st.markdown("Take a closer a look at the [back-end code](https://github.com/quixio/template-streamlit-rt-githubdash), and learn how to read from a real-time source and apply some kind of transformation to the data before bringing it into Streamlit (using only Python)") # Placeholder for the bar chart and table chart_placeholder = st.empty() table_placeholder = st.empty() # Placeholder for countdown text countdown_placeholder = st.empty() # Main loop while True: # Get the data df = get_cached_data() # Check that data is being retrieved and passed correctly if df.empty: st.error("No data found. Please check your data source.") break # Calculate dynamic min and max scales min_count = df['event_count'].min() max_count = df['event_count'].max() min_scale = min_count * 0.99 max_scale = max_count * 1.01 # Create a Plotly figure fig = px.bar(df, x='displayname', y='event_count', title="Current Top 10 active GitHub Users by event count", range_y=[min_scale, max_scale]) # Style the chart fig.update_layout( xaxis_title="Display Name", yaxis_title="Event Count", xaxis=dict(tickangle=-90) # Vertical label orientation ) # Display the Plotly chart in Streamlit using st.plotly_chart chart_placeholder.plotly_chart(fig, use_container_width=True) # Display the dataframe as a table table_placeholder.table(df) # Countdown for i in range(1, 0, -1): countdown_placeholder.text(f"Refreshing in {i} seconds...") time.sleep(1) # Clear the countdown text countdown_placeholder.empty() # Clear the cache to fetch new data get_cached_data.clear()
This Streamlit app polls the API every second to fetch the latest data. It then displays this data in a dynamically updating bar chart and table. The @st.cache_data decorator is used to cache the data, reducing the load on the API.
The API, built with Flask, serves as the gateway to our data. This code sets up a simple Flask API that queries a PostgreSQL database and returns the results as JSON. We’re using the psycopg2 library to interact with the database and Flask to define an API route.
import os from flask import Flask, jsonify from waitress import serve import psycopg2 import logging from dotenv import load_dotenv load_dotenv() ### for local dev, outside of docker, load env vars from a .env file logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO) logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) app = Flask(__name__) # Replace with your PostgreSQL connection details pg_host = os.environ['PG_HOST'] pg_port = os.getenv('PG_PORT','5432') pg_db = os.environ['PG_DATABASE'] pg_user = os.environ['PG_USER'] pg_password = os.environ['PG_PASSWORD'] pg_table = os.environ['PG_TABLE'] # Establish a connection to PostgreSQL conn = psycopg2.connect( host=pg_host, port=pg_port, database=pg_db, user=pg_user, password=pg_password ) @app.route('/events', methods=['GET']) def get_user_events(): query = f"SELECT * FROM {pg_table} ORDER BY event_count DESC LIMIT 10" logger.info(f"Running query: {query}") try: # Execute the query with conn.cursor() as cursor: cursor.execute(query) results = cursor.fetchall() columns = [desc[0] for desc in cursor.description] # Convert the result to a list of dictionaries results_list = [dict(zip(columns, row)) for row in results] except: logger.info(f"Error querying Postgres...") results_list = [{"error": "Database probably not ready yet."}] return jsonify(results_list) if __name__ == '__main__': serve(app, host="0.0.0.0", port=80)
You can set up a much fancier API with query parameters and whatnot, but here I want to keep it simple. When an API request is received, just select the top 10 entries from the event_counts table and returns them as JSON. That’s it.
You might wonder why we use an API instead of querying the database directly from Streamlit. Here are a few reasons:
Actually, while we’re on the subject of APIs, it’s about time for a digression on why all this back end stuff is good to know in the first place.
I know I said I wasn’t going to talk too much about the streaming data layer, but I want to quickly show you how it works, because it’s really not as complicated as you might think.
It uses one Python library — Quix Streams — to produce to Redpanda (our Kafka stand-in), consume from it, then do our aggregations. If you know Pandas, you’ll quickly get the hang of it, because it uses the concept of “streaming data frames” to manipulate data.
Here are some code snippets that demonstrate the basics of Quix Streams.
Connecting to Kafka (or any other Kafka-compatible message broker) and initializing data source and destination.
# Initialize a connection by providing a broker address app = Application(broker_address="localhost:19092") # This is a basic example, are many other optional arguments # Define a topic to read from and/or to produce to input_topic = app.topic("raw_data") output_topic = app.topic("processed_data") # turn the incoming data into a Streaming Dataframe sdf = app.dataframe(input_topic) All of the services in the streaming data layer (Streaming Data Producer, Aggregation service, and the Postgres Writer) use these basic conventions to interact with Redpanda. The aggregation service uses the following code to manipulate the data on-the-fly. sdf = app.dataframe(input_topic) # Get just the "actor" data out of the larger JSON message and use it as the new streaming dataframe sdf = sdf.apply( lambda data: { "displayname": data['actor']['display_login'], "id": data['actor']['id'] } ) # Group (aka "Re-key") the streaming data by displayname so we can count the events sdf = sdf.group_by("displayname") # Counts the number of events by displayname def count_messages(value: dict, state: State): current_total = state.get('event_count', default=0) current_total += 1 state.set('event_count', current_total) return current_total # Adds the message key (displayname) to the message body too (not that necessary, it's just for convenience) def add_key_to_payload(value, key, timestamp, headers): value['displayname'] = key return value # Start manipulating the streaming dataframe sdf["event_count"] = sdf.apply(count_messages, stateful=True) # Apply the count function and initialize a state store (acts as like mini database that lets us track the counts per displayname), then store the results in an "event_count" column sdf = sdf[["event_count"]] # Cut down our streaming dataframe to be JUST the event_count column sdf = sdf.apply(add_key_to_payload, metadata=True) # Add the message key "displayname" as a column so that its easier to see what user each event count belongs to. sdf = sdf.filter(lambda row: row['displayname'] not in ['github-actions', 'direwolf-github', 'dependabot']) # Filter out what looks like bot accounts from the list of displaynames sdf = sdf.update(lambda row: print(f"Received row: {row}")) # Print each row so that we can see what we're going to send to the downstream topic # Produce our processed streaming dataframe to the downstream topic "event_counts" sdf = sdf.to_topic(output_topic)
As you can see, it’s very similar to manipulating data in Pandas, it’s just that it’s data on-the-move, and we’re interacting with topics rather than databases or CSV files.
With Docker, we’ve simplified the setup process, so you can see how the pipeline works straight away. But you can also tinker with the Python files outside of Docker.
In fact, I’ve included a stripped down docker-compose file ‘docker-compose-rp-pg.yaml’ with just the non-Python services included (it’s simpler to keep running the Repanda broker and the PostgreSQL DB in Docker).
That way, you can easily run Redpanda and Postgres while you tinker with the Python files.
docker-compose down
To continue working with the Python files outside of Docker:
pip install -r requirements.txt
docker-compose down
docker-compose -f docker-compose-rp-pg.yaml up
Now you’re ready to experiment with the Python files and run the code directly in an IDE such as PyCharm.
Here’s your next challenge. Why not update the services to create a real-time “trending repos” report by counting the most active repos in a 30-min time window?
You can use the Quix Streams Windowed Aggregations as a reference. After all, who wants to see the trending repos just for a whole day? Attention spans are getting shorter -and the world is going real-time — we need minute-by-minute updates! Life just feels more exciting when the numbers change before our eyes.
As a reminder, you can find all the code files in this repo: https://github.com/quixio/template-streamlit-rt-githubdash
Now, go forth and impress your colleagues with amazing real-time dashboards!
PS: If you run into trouble, feel free to drop me a line in the Quix Community slack channel and I’ll do my best to help.
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