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Alexa
Overview
Step 1. Create an input
Step 2. Verify your input
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Overview
Step 1. Create an input
Step 2. Verify your input
Step 3. Set up your output
Step 4. Create a connection
Step 5. Verify your connection
Step 6. Track events
Step 7. Track user data
Step 8. Create a data plan
Step 1. Create an input
Step 2. Create an output
Step 3. Verify output
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Aliasing
mParticle provides an HTTP-based Events API that can be used to collect data from your backend systems.
The base URL for the Events API varies depending on the data localization region for your mParticle account:
Region | Pod | URL |
---|---|---|
United States | US1 | https://s2s.mparticle.com/v2, https://s2s.us1.mparticle.com/v2 |
United States | US2 | https://s2s.us2.mparticle.com/v2 |
Europe | EU1 | https://s2s.eu1.mparticle.com/v2 |
Australia | AU1 | https://s2s.au1.mparticle.com/v2 |
The mParticle Events API can be authenticated with basic authentication in either of two ways:
You can manually set the Authorization
header in calls to the Events API by including your key and secret encoded together:
example-api-key:example-api-secret
ZXhhbXBsZS1hcGkta2V5OmV4YW1wbGUtYXBpLXNlY3JldA==
Basic ZXhhbXBsZS1hcGkta2V5OmV4YW1wbGUtYXBpLXNlY3JldA==
Authorization: Basic ZXhhbXBsZS1hcGkta2V5OmV4YW1wbGUtYXBpLXNlY3JldA==
The following examples demonstrate how to execute a general request to the Events API, however, the size of an example request body exercising every available property and parameter is too large to include. For a complete reference of the Events API schema that lists each property and parameter, see the JSON reference.
Use the Open API (previously known as Swagger) specification or similar tools to generate helper SDKs (using Swagger Codegen or OpenAPI Generator) for the Events API:
mParticle imposes default service limits on server-to-server data transfers using the Events API. For the specific limits, see Default Service Limits.
When sending large amounts of data to the Events API, use efficient batching strategies to prevent drops in performance.
Remember that one event batch includes an array than can contain one or more events. If you are tracking a large number of events that are all triggered by a single user, combine as many events as possible in a single batch based on a predetermined rate, such as a set number of events per timespan or a set number of events per user. Sending one batch for each event incurs a noticeable drop in performance.
You can further reduce your number of requests by grouping up to 100 event batches for multiple users and sending them to the /bulkevents
endpoint.
Event batches require the following:
/bulkevents
must contain no more than 100 batchesExceeding these limits results in throttling.
POST
https://s2s.{pod}.mparticle.com/v2/events
curl --location --request POST 'https://s2s.{pod}.mparticle.com/v2/events' \
--header 'Authorization: Basic {your-api-key}:{your-api-secret}' --data-raw '{ your-event-batch }'
{
"events" : [
{
"data" : {},
"event_type" : "custom_event"
}
],
"device_info" : {},
"user_attributes" : {},
"deleted_user_attributes" : [],
"user_identities" : {},
"application_info" : {},
"schema_version": 2,
"environment": "production",
"context" : {},
"ip" : "172.217.12.142"
}
A successful request receives a 200 Accepted
response.
POST
https://s2s.{pod}.mparticle.com/v2/bulkevents
This path accepts a JSON array of event batches. See our JSON documentation for additional information.
You may not send more than 100 EVENT DATA items per request.
If some event batches succeed and some event batches fail, you still receive a 202 Accepted
response.
Don’t use this URL to upload historical data older than 30 days, as this could impact downstream processes such as audience calculation. To upload historical data older than 30 days, use the historical endpoint.
curl --location --request POST 'https://s2s.{pod}.mparticle.com/v2/bulkevents' \
--header 'Authorization: Basic {your-api-key}:{your-api-secret}' --data-raw '{ array-of-event-batches }'
[
{
"events" : [
{
"data" : {},
"event_type" : "custom_event"
}
],
"device_info" : {},
"user_attributes" : {},
"deleted_user_attributes" : [],
"user_identities" : {},
"application_info" : {},
"schema_version": 2,
"environment" : "production",
"context" : {},
"ip" : "172.217.12.142"
},
{
"events" : [
{
"data" : {},
"event_type" : "custom_event"
}
],
"device_info" : {},
"user_attributes" : {},
"deleted_user_attributes" : [],
"user_identities" : {},
"application_info" : {},
"schema_version" : 2,
"environment" : "production",
"context" : {},
"ip" : "172.217.12.142"
}
]
A successful request receives a 202 Accepted
response.
POST
https://s2s.{pod}.mparticle.com/v2/bulkevents/historical
This path accepts the same JSON payload as /v2/bulkevents and should be used to upload historical data more than 30 days old. Data forwarded to the historical endpoint is subject to special requirements and is processed differently.
A batch received by the historical data endpoint will not be processed if any of the following are true:
timestamp_unixtime_ms
property,timestamp_unixtime_ms
is less than 72 hours old.The historical
API endpoint behaves nearly identically to the events
and bulkevents
endpoints with one key difference: data is not forwarded to connected event and data warehouses.
mParticle Feature | Effect of historical data |
---|---|
Event and Data Warehouse Outputs | Not forwarded downstream. |
Audience | No change to Real-time or Standard Audiences. Data is subject to existing date-range retention limits. Real-time audiences have a 30 day look-back for most customers. |
User Activity | No change; Events visible in date order. |
Identity and Profiles | No change |
curl --location --request POST 'https://s2s.{pod}.mparticle.com/v2/bulkevents/historical' \
--header 'Authorization: Basic {your-api-key}:{your-api-secret}' --data-raw '{ historical-event-batch }'
{
"events" : [
{
"data" : {},
"event_type" : "custom_event"
}
],
"device_info" : {},
"user_attributes" : {},
"deleted_user_attributes" : [],
"user_identities" : {},
"application_info" : {},
"schema_version": 2,
"environment": "production",
"context" : {},
"ip" : "172.217.12.142"
}
A successful request receives a 202 Accepted
response.
Status | Code | Notes |
---|---|---|
202 | Accepted | The POST was accepted. |
400 | Bad Request | The request JSON was malformed JSON or had missing fields. |
401 | Unauthorized | The authentication header is missing. |
403 | Forbidden | The authentication header is present, but invalid. |
429 | Too Many Requests | You have exceeded your provisioned limit. The v2/events and v2/bulkevents endpoints may return a Retry-After response header with a value containing a non-negative decimal integer indicating the number of seconds to delay. If the header is not present, we recommend retrying your request with exponential backoff and random jitter.. Learn more about API throttling in Default Service Limits. |
503 | Service Unavailable | We recommend retrying your request in an exponential backoff pattern |
5xx | Server Error | A server-side error has occurred, please try your request again. |
In some cases, the server provides additional information in the response body. If no additional information is available, the response body will be omitted and you will only receive the status code and message.
{
"errors" :
[
{
"code" : "BAD_REQUEST",
"message" : "Required event field \"event_type\" is missing or empty."
}
]
}
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