Mixpanel SDKs: Node.js
Getting Started
This Mixpanel Node.js library provides many of the features in available in the JavaScript SDK. It is fully async, and intended to be used in Javascript server-side outside of the browser (such as importing past events with a script).
For the in-browser client-side library, please use the JavaScript SDK.
The Library Source Code and an Example Application is documented in our GitHub repo.
Installing the Library
The Javascript library is named mixpanel-browser
in NPM. This is to distinguish it from this server-side Node.js library, which is available as mixpanel
.
Use npm to install Mixpanel. Open your CLI, and run the following command in your root directory to install the library:
# install Mixpanel using npm
npm install mixpanel
After installation, import the Mixpanel class in your code and create the Mixpanel object using the .init()
method with your project token.
// import the Mixpanel class
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
// create an instance of the mixpanel object
const mp = Mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN')
Library Configuration
The Mixpanel object can be initialized with different configurations. See a complete list of the configuration optionshere.
You can override the default configuration using the config
argument when initializing the library.
Example Usage
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
// initialize mixpanel with verbose enabled
const mp = Mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN',{
verbose: true,
}
);
Sending Events
Use track()
to send an event by providing the distinct_id, event name, and any event properties. This will trigger a request to the /track API endpoint to ingest the event into your project.
The /track endpoint will only validate events with timestamps within the last 5 days of the request. Events with timestamps older than 5 days will not be ingested. See below on best practices for historical imports.
Example Usage
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
const mp = Mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN');
// track "some_event" for distinct_id 12345
// with "plan" event prop
mp.track('some_event', {
distinct_id: '12345',
plan: 'premium'
});
Mixpanel determines default geolocation data ($city
, $region
, mp_country_code
) using the IP address on the incoming request. As all server-side calls will likely originate from the same IP (that is, the IP of your server), this can have the unintended effect of setting the location of all of your users to the location of your data center. Learn more about best practices for geolocation..
Note that tracking with Node in an async serverless implementation requires you to wait for the Mixpanel request to complete. The easiest way to do this would be to pass in in a callback as a 3rd parameter into track
and return a promise that is resolved when the request is sent.
Importing Historical Events
The track()
function is designed for real-time tracking in a server-side environment and will trigger request to the /track API endpoint, which will validate for events with a time stamp that is within the last 5 days of the request. Events older than 5 days will not be ingested.
Use the import()
function to import events that occured more than 5 days in the past. The import()
function is based on the /import API endpoint.
Example Usage
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
const mp = Mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN');
// import an old event for distinct_id 12345
// with epoch timestamp 1698023982
// with "plan" event prop
mp.import('some_event', 1698023982, {
distinct_id: '12345',
plan: 'premium'
});
You can also use the mp-utils python module designed for scripting.
Managing User Identity
Since the Node.js SDK is a server-side library, IDs are not generated by the SDK. Instead, you will need to generate and manage the distinct_id yourself and include it in your events and profile data.
Learn more about server-side identity management.
Storing User Profiles
Create user profiles by setting profile properties to describe them. Example profile properties include “name”, “email”, “company”, and any other demographic details about the user.
The Mixpanel object contains a people
property, that exposes the MixpanelPeople
class which contain methods for managing user profile properties. These methods will trigger requests to the /engage API endpoint.
Mixpanel determines default geolocation data ($city
, $region
, mp_country_code
) using the IP address on the incoming request. As all server-side calls will likely originate from the same IP (that is, the IP of your server), this can have the unintended effect of setting the location of all of your users to the location of your data center. Learn more about best practices for geolocation..
Setting Profile Properties
Set profile properties on a user profile by calling people.set()
.
If a profile property already exist, if will be overwritten with the latest value provided in the method. If a profile property does not exist, it will be added to the profile.
Example Usage
// initialize Mixpanel
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
const mp = Mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN');
// create a user profile with name and plan user props
mp.people.set('sample_distinct_id', {
name: 'sam',
plan: 'premium',
ip: '0' // do not update geolocation
});
// overwrite "name" user prop with "samantha"
mp.people.set('sample_distinct_id', {
name: 'samantha',
ip: '0'
});
Other Types of Profile Updates
There are a few other methods for setting profile properties. See a complete reference of the available methods in the MixpanelPeople
class here.
A few commonly used people methods are highlighted below:
The people.set_once()
method set profile properties only if they do not exist yet. If it is setting a profile property that already exists, it will be ignored.
Use this method if you want to set profile properties without the risk of overwriting existing data.
Example Usage
// initialize Mixpanel
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
const mp = Mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN');
// create a user profile with name and plan user props
mp.people.set('sample_distinct_id', {
name: 'sam',
plan: 'premium',
ip: '0'
});
// will be ignored since "name" already exists
mp.people.set_once('sample_distinct_id', {
name: 'samantha',
ip: '0'
});
//set "location" user prop since it does not exist
mp.people.set_once('sample_distinct_id', {
location: 'san francisco',
ip: '0'
});
Group Analytics
Read more about Group Analytics before proceeding. You will need to have the group key defined in your project settings first.
Mixpanel Group Analytics is a paid add-on that allows behavioral data analysis by selected groups, as opposed to individual users.
A group is identified by the group_key
and group_id
.
group_key
is the event property that connects event data to a group. (e.g.company
)group_id
is the identifier for a specific group. (e.g.mixpanel
,company_a
,company_b
, etc.)
Sending Group Identifiers With Events
All events must have the group key as an event property in order to be attributed to a group. Without the group key, an event cannot be attributed to a group.
To send group identifiers with your events, set the group_key
as an event property with the group_id
as the value.
Example Usage
// track "some_event" with a "distinct_id"
// event is attributed to the "mixpanel" company group
mp.track('some_event', {
'distinct_id': 'sample_distinct_id',
'Plan Type': 'Premium',
'company': 'mixpanel'
});
Multiple Groups
An event can be attributed to multiple groups by passing in the group_key
value as a list of multiple group_id
values.
Example Usage
// track "some_event" with a "distinct_id"
// event is attributed to 2 comapny groups: "mp-us" and "mp-eu"
mp.track('some_event', {
'distinct_id': 'sample_distinct_id',
'Plan Type': 'Premium',
'company': ['mp-us','mp-eu']
});
Adding Group Identifiers to User Profiles
To connect group information to a user profile, include the group_key
and group_id
as a user profile property using the people.set()
call.
Example Usage
// initialize Mixpanel
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
const mp = Mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN');
// set group key "company" as a user prop
// with group id "mixpanel" as value
mp.people.set('sample_distinct_id', {
name: 'sam',
company: 'mixpanel',
ip: '0'
});
Setting Group Profile Properties
Create a group profile by setting group properties, similar to a user profile. For example, you may want to describe a company group with properties such as “ARR”, “employee_count”, and “subscription”.
The Mixpanel object contains a groups
property, that exposes the MixpanelGroups
class which contain methods for managing group profile properties.
To set group profile properties, use the groups.set()
method, which will trigger a request to the /groups API endpoint.
Example Usage
// track some event attributed to the "mixpanel" company group
mp.track('some_event', {
'distinct_id': 'sample_distinct_id',
'company': 'mixpanel'
});
// Create or update a the "mixpanel" company group
// setting "name" and "industry" as group props
mixpanel.groups.set('company', 'mixpanel', {
name: 'Mixpanel',
industry: 'Analytics',
})
Other Group Profile Methods
See all of the methods under the MixpanelGroups
class here.
A few commonly used group methods are highlighted below:
The groups.set_once()
method set group profile properties only if they do not exist yet. If it is setting a profile property that already exists, it will be ignored.
Use this method if you want to set group profile properties without the risk of overwriting existing data.
Example Usage
// set group profile for "mixpanel" company group
mp.groups.set('company', 'mixpanel', {
name: 'Mixpanel',
employee_count: 100
});
// ignored since "name" is already exists
mp.groups.set_once('company', 'mixpanel', {
name: 'mp-us'
});
# set "location" group prop since it does not exist
mp.groups.set_once('company', 'mixpanel', {
location: 'us',
});
Debug Mode
To enable debug mode, set the debug
configuration option to true
during the library initialization.
Example Usage
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
// enable debug logs
mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN',{
debug: true
});
Privacy-Friendly Tracking
You have control over the data you send to Mixpanel. The Node.js SDK have a few configurations to help you protect user data.
Since this is a server-side tracking library where you have control of the servers, your server is responsible for determining whether to send data about a particular user or not.
EU Data Residency
Route data to Mixpanel’s EU servers by setting the host
config property during the library initialization.
Example Usage
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
// set request URLs to Mixpanel's EU domain
mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN',{
host: 'api-eu.mixpanel.com'
});
India Data Residency
Route data to Mixpanel’s EU servers by setting the host
config property during the library initialization.
Example Usage
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
// set request URLs to Mixpanel's India domain
mixpanel.init('YOUR_PROJECT_TOKEN', {
host: 'api-in.mixpanel.com'
});
Disable Geolocation
The Node.js SDK parse the request IP address to generate geolocation properties for events and profiles. You may want to disable them to prevent the unintentional setting of your data’s geolocation to the location of your server that is sending the request, or to prevent geolocation data from being tracked entirely.
To disable geolocation, set the geolocate
config property to false
during the library initialization.
You can also disable geolocation for individual requests by setting the ip
to 0
.
Example Usage
const Mixpanel = require('mixpanel');
// Initialize Mixpanel with geolocation parsing disabled
const mp = Mixpanel.init('<YOUR_TOKEN>', { geolocate: false });
// track an event without geolocation parsing
// by setting ip to 0
mp.track('event name', {
distinct_id: 'sample_distinct_id',
ip: '0'
});
// set profile properties without geolocation parsing
// by setting ip to 0
mp.people.set('sample_distinct_id', {
name: 'sam',
plan: 'premium',
ip: '0'
});
Release History
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