Dashboard deep-dive
Dashboard tour is the lap-around. This page is the per-chart reference: what each one shows, what it’s derived from, and the gotchas.
Filters
A date-range picker, a model picker, and a key picker sit at the top of the dashboard. Setting any filter reloads every widget on the page with the same filter applied. Filters are reflected in the URL so links are shareable.
The default range is the last 30 days, ending today (UTC). Changing the range:
- Updates the Top models ranking.
- Updates the Eco impact comparison.
- Restricts the recent-transactions table.
It does not change your credit balance, which is always live.
Credit balance widget
- Big number: current balance.
- Small number: spent in the current calendar month.
- The colour of the band underneath is a heuristic: green if your current burn-rate would last the full calendar month, amber if not.
The widget pulls live; clicking Top up opens the Stripe checkout.
Usage today widget
- Top number: total tokens today (UTC), all models.
- Bottom number: total credits spent today.
- Bars: per-model breakdown of today’s tokens.
Hover any bar for the per-model token and credit total. Click a bar to filter the rest of the dashboard by that model.
Top models (last 30 days)
- Horizontal bar chart, ranked by total tokens descending.
- Each bar shows tokens; the value next to the bar shows credits.
- The 30-day window is fixed regardless of the page-level filter so the ranking is stable across page loads.
When fewer than five models have non-trivial usage, the chart shows just the ones with data rather than padding with empty bars.
Eco impact widget
The widget has three numbers and one comparison:
- Energy — total Wh estimated for the filtered range.
- Carbon — total gCO₂e estimated for the filtered range.
- Per 1K tokens — the normalised value, useful for comparing across ranges of different sizes.
- Comparison — the same usage replayed against your chosen baseline model. If your actual usage was lower-energy than the baseline, the widget reports the saving; if higher, it reports the gap. Pick or change the baseline from Settings → Eco baseline.
The widget refuses to display a comparison when the underlying estimates’ confidence is too low to be meaningful — the visible number becomes ”—” with a note explaining why.
Recent transactions table
- Default sort: newest first.
- Sortable columns: timestamp, model, tokens, cost, latency.
- Filterable columns: model, provider, region, status.
- Clicking a row opens its detail page.
Per-day usage chart
Below the recent-transactions table, a stacked column chart shows tokens per day, stacked by model, for the filtered range. This is the chart to use when explaining usage growth or detecting a spike.
The chart respects the page-level model filter — selecting a model up top filters the chart to that one.
Per-day cost chart
Same shape as the per-day usage chart but in credits. Use it for budgeting and burn-rate analysis. The two charts share the same time axis so they can be compared visually.
Provider distribution
A donut showing the share of requests served by each upstream provider in the filtered range. It’s the fastest way to confirm a routing-policy change actually took effect.
When a policy is supposed to keep traffic in a single provider but
the donut shows multiple wedges, check the policy and the per-request
routing_trace for the requests that escaped.
Mobile dashboard
On a phone the dashboard collapses to a single column, the filters move into a slide-up panel, and the per-day charts become scrollable. The recent-transactions table becomes a vertical card list. Heavy operations (large CSV exports, multi-key edits) still want the desktop view.