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Field Transformations

Use the Field Transformations API to create and manage one-to-one correlations, called mappings, between external data and fields in the mParticle JSON schema.

Field transformations format and usage

Field transformations are JSON formatted schemas that contain one or more mappings between external source fields and internal mParticle destination fields. Field transformations are identified in the mParticle system by a unique string ID and string name.

Each field transformation includes an array called mappings. This array contains a list of individual mapping objects that specify how external data should be mapped to internal mParticle fields.

Field transformation format

{
  "id": "unique-string-id",
  "name": "Example Field Transformation Name",
  "destination_type": "event_batch",
  "mappings": [
    {
      "mapping_type": "mapping-type",
      "source": "external-field",
      "destination": "destination-field"
    }
  ]
}

Field transformation properties

Property Data type Required Description
id string Yes Unique ID you must set when creating a field transformation. Can only include numbers, letters, dashes -, and underscores _.
name string Yes Descriptive name you must set when creating a field transformation. There are no character restrictions.
destination_type string Yes Specifies the type of data being ingested. Valid values include: event_batch
mappings array Yes An array of JSON objects that specify which mParticle fields to map source fields to. See Mappings overview for more details.

Mappings overview

Each object in the mappings array is configured with the following properties:

Property Required Description
mapping_type Yes Valid values include column, static, ignore. See Mapping type settings for more details.
source Required when mapping_type is column or ignore The name of the field in the source data table. This must be left unset or set to null if mapping_type is set to static.
destination Required when mapping_type is column or static The name of the mParticle field as it is listed in the mParticle JSON schema. Use the JSON path format when setting the destination field. destination must be unset or set to null for ignore mappings.
ignore_when Optional Valid values include $null and $empty. When mapping_type is set to column, you can set ignore_when to $null or $empty to ignore a mapping when the external field value is null or empty. If ignore_when is not set, the field value will map null values if supported.
value
  • Required when mapping_type is static. Templates are not supported.
  • Optional when mapping_type is column. Templates are optional.
When mapping_type is set to static, you can set value to any string you want to map to an mParticle field, excluding the use of a template. If mapping_type is set to column, you may use a template when setting value.
value_type Optional The type of data supplied for value. Valid values include string, number, integer, and boolean.

Mapping type settings

The supported values for mapping_type are:

Mapping type Description
column Maps a column in a source database or table to an mParticle field.
static Maps a static value to an mParticle field. source must be excluded, or set to null for static mappings.
ignore Prevents source data from being mapped to mParticle.

Following are descriptions and examples for each type:

column

Set mapping_type to column to map the values stored in a column in a data table to an mParticle field:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "source-column-name", 
  "destination": "mparticle-destination"
}

You can use the column mapping type to map nested fields within an object in your source data to a destination in mParticle. For example, imagine the following source data stored in a column named "foo":

{
  "object": {
    "property": {
      "item": "bar"
    }
  }
}

You could select the nested field "item" using:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "foo.object.property.item",
  "destination": "mparticle-destination"
}

This would result in the following output:

{
  "mparticle-destination": "bar"
}
Ignore empty fields in a column if they are empty or null

You can ignore individual fields when they are empty or null using the ignore_when setting for column mappings:

Ignore when empty:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "source-column-name",
  "destination": "mparticle-destination",
  "ignore_when": "$empty"
}

Ignore when null:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "source-column-name",
  "destination": "mparticle-destination",
  "ignore_when": "$null"
}

static

Set mapping_type to static to map the value of value to an mParticle field:

{
  "mapping_type": "static",
  "destination": "mparticle-destination",
  "value": "some-value"
}

ignore

Set mapping_type to ignore to ignore the data listed in source:

{
  "mapping_type": "ignore",
  "source": "source-data-to-ignore"
}

array

To map multiple fields to a single array in mParticle, create a separate mapping for each field.

Within each mapping:

  • Set mapping_type to column or static
  • Set source to the name of the field or column in your source data. You may use * as a wildcard selector for field names that share a common prefix.
  • Set destination to the name of the destination array in mParticle that you want to map to, including square brackets []. For example: myArray[]
  • Set value to either a static value if you used the static mapping type or a template if you want to modify the output of your mapping.
Mapping multiple elements with a shared prefix to an array

Consider the following table of source data where each column name shares the prefix favorite_store_:

favorite_store_1 favorite_store_2 favorite_store_3
target old navy walmart

We can use the wildcard selector * to map each column to an array in mParticle called favorite_stores[]:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "favorite_store_*",
  "destination": "user_attribute.favorite_stores[]",
  "value": "{{ value | upcase }}"
}
Mapping multiple elements without a shared prefix to an array

Consider the following table of source data where each column has a unique name:

groceries clothing hardware
target old navy home depot

To map each of these columns to the array favorite_stores[], we create a separate mapping for each element:

[
  {
    "mapping_type": "column",
    "source": "groceries",
    "destination": "user_attribute.favorite_stores[]",
    "value": "{{ value | upcase }}"
  },
  {
    "mapping_type": "column",
    "source": "clothing",
    "destination": "user_attribute.favorite_stores[]",
    "value": "{{ value | upcase }}"
  },
  {
    "mapping_type": "column",
    "source": "hardware",
    "destination": "user_attribute.favorite_stores[]",
    "value": "{{ value | upcase }}"
  }
]

Unmapped data

You can create a “default” mapping that will be used for any source data that is not already mapped or ignored by setting source to the reserved keyword $unmapped:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "$unmapped",
  "destination": "mparticle-destination"
}

By creating an “unmapped” mapping you can decrease the chances of a warehouse sync pipeline dropping or missing data during ingest.

Simplified JSON path format

The mParticle JSON schema defines the structure that must be applied to all event data and user data for it to be ingested and usable by mParticle products.

At the highest level, the mParticle JSON schema contains an events array which represents an event batch. Each object in the events batch represents a single event, and it includes the event data stored in an object called data and the type of event that was logged, or the event_type. The specific event details are then stored in a series of nested JSON objects.

The Field Transformations API uses a simplified path format when mapping external data with individual fields contained in the mParticle JSON schema:

  • Top level elements are referred to by their field names:

    • For example, to reference a in {"a": 123}, use a
  • Nested elements are seperated by .:

    • For example, to reference b in {"a": {"b": 123}} use a.b
  • Fields of objects in nested in arrays are referenced using array indices:

    • For example, to reference b in {"a": [{"b": 123}]} use a[].b

Templating

mParticle supports the use of Liquid templates with field transformations to enable more flexible and dynamic mappings between your source data and mParticle fields.

Liquid templates can used when setting the value and destination fields of a mapping simply by adding the curly brace delimiters {{ }} surrounding your template object, or variable, and filters. For example:

"value": {{ value }}

You can use filters to modify the output of a template by adding a pipe character | before the filter:

"value": {{ value | upcase }}

You can string multiple filters together, separating each filter with a new pipe character:

{{ value | upcase | rstrip }}

You can also use the source field name in templates. For example, you can use a template to trim text from a source field name with:

some_prefix_{{ key | remove: "text-to-remove" }}

Supported template variables

mParticle supports the following variables for use in templates:

  • value: equals value of a field as found in your source database
  • key: equals the name of the column or property containing the value in your source database
  • key_length: equals the number of characters in key

Template example

For example, consider the following source data:

favorite_store_1 favorite_store_2 favorite_store_3
“target” “old navy” “walmart”

We could map each favorite store to an array in mParticle called favorite_stores with the mapping:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "favorite_store_*",
  "destination": "user_attribute.favorite_stores[]"
}

Note that this mapping makes use of the wildcard selector * for source to select every column name in our source data table that begins with "favorite_store_".

The resulting output of this mapping would be:

{
  "user_attributes":
    {
      "favorite_stores": ["target", "old navy", "walmart"]
    }
}

However, we can modify the output by setting a template with the upcase filter to the value of the value field in our mapping:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "favorite_store_*",
  "destination": "user_attribute.favorite_stores[]",
  "value": "{{ $value | upcase }}"
}

The resulting output of this mapping would then be:

{
  "user_attributes":
    {
      "favorite_stores": ["TARGET", "OLD NAVY", "WALMART"]
    }
}
Templates in mapping destinations

You can use templates when setting the destination of a mapping.

Consider the following example source data:

facebook_id email_id twitter_id
“johndoe” “john@example.com” “@johndoe”

To map each column to the correct user identity in mParticle, we can use the variable key with the remove filter in a template with user_identities:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "*_id",
  "destination": "user_identities.{{ key | remove: '_id' }}"
}

The resulting output of this mapping would be:

{
  "user_identities":
    {
      "facebook": "johndoe",
      "email": "john@example.com",
      "twitter": "@johndoe"
    }
}

Supported filters

Filters can be used in your template to modify the source data you want to map to an mParticle field. To learn more about a specific filter, refer to Filters in the Liquid documentation.

mParticle supports the following filters for use in templates:

  • abs
  • append
  • at_least
  • at_most
  • capitalize
  • ceil
  • compact
  • concat
  • date
  • default
  • divided_by
  • downcase
  • first
  • floor
  • join
  • last
  • lstrip
  • map
  • minus
  • modulo
  • plus
  • prepend
  • remove
  • remove_first
  • remove_last
  • replace
  • replace_first
  • replace_last
  • reverse
  • round
  • rstrip
  • size
  • slice
  • sort
  • sort_natural
  • split
  • strip
  • strip_newlines
  • sum
  • times
  • truncate
  • truncatewords
  • uniq
  • upcase
  • where

Wildcard

The asterisk * character can be used as a wildcard when selecting both your source fields and destinations in a mapping.

For example, consider the following data:

favorite_store_1 favorite_store_2 favorite_store_3
“target” “old navy” “walmart”

Setting source in a mapping for this data to favorite_store_* will select all three columns, since they each share the same prefix favorite_store_.

The wildcard selector can also function as a shorthand for the more verbose template {{ key }} when setting the destination. For example, the following mapping will map each store in the source data to a separate field of the same name within the user_attributes object in mParticle’s JSON schema:

Example mapping:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "favorite_store_*",
  "destination": "user_attributes.favorite_store_*"
}

Example output:

{
  "data": {
    "user_attributes": {
      "favorite_store_1": "target",
      "favorite_store_2": "old navy",
      "favorite_store_3": "walmart"
    }
  }
}

Wildcards are also supported when selecting fields nested within an object as your source. For example:

Example source data:

sizes
{"shoe_size": "12", "pants_size": "medium", "shirt_size": "small"}

Example mapping:

{
  "mapping_type": "column",
  "source": "sizes.*_size",
  "destination": "user_attributes.custom_attributes.{{ key }}"
}

Example output:

{
  "user_attributes": {
    "custom_attributes": {
      "shoe_size": "12",
      "pants_size": "medium",
      "shirt_size": "small"
    }
  }
}

Example field transformation

Consider the following simplified example source data table and destination schema:

Example source database table

column names: eventId sessionId timeStamp eventType ip fieldToIgnore staticValueToMap
data rows: 1234 5678 1402521613976 screen_view 172.217.12.142 value-to-ignore bar

Example destination JSON schema

{
  "events": [
    {
      "data": {
        "event_id": 1234,
        "session_id": 5678,
        "timestamp_unixtime_ms": 1402521613976,
        "custom_attributes":
        {
          "foo": "bar"
        }
      },
      "event_type": "screen_view"
    }
  ],
  "source_request_id": "7fa67be4-f83a-429f-9d73-38b660c50825",
  "environment": "production",
  "mpid": 7346244611012968789,
  "ip": "172.217.12.142"
}

A field transformation mapping each attribute in the database table to the attributes as they exist in the mParticle JSON schema would be:

Example field transformation

{
  "id": "example-field-transformation-id",
  "name": "Example Field Transformation",
  "destination_type": "event_batch",
  "mappings": [
    {
      "mapping_type": "column",
      "source": "eventId",
      "destination": "events[].data.event_id"
    },
    {
      "mapping_type": "column",
      "source": "sessionId",
      "destination": "events[].data.session_id"
    },
    {
      "mapping_type": "column",
      "source": "timeStamp",
      "destination": "events[].data.timestamp_unixtime_ms"
    },
    {
      "mapping_type": "column",
      "source": "ip",
      "destination": "ip"
    },
    {
      "mapping_type": "ignore",
      "source": "fieldToIgnore"
    },
    {
      "mapping_type": "static",
      "destination": "events[].data.custom_attributes.foo",
      "value": "bar"
    }
  ],
  "created_on": "2023-11-14T21:15:43.182Z",
  "created_by": "developer@example.com",
  "last_modified_on": "2023-11-14T21:15:43.182Z",
  "last_modified_by": "developer@example.com"
}

Authentication

The Field Transformations API can be authenticated with a bearer token.

Authenticate with a bearer token

To create a bearer token, send a POST request to mParticle’s SSO token endpoint at https://sso.auth.mparticle.com/oauth/token.

The JSON body of the request must contain:

  • client_id - the client ID, issued by mParticle when creating the API credentials
  • client_secret - the client secret, issued by mParticle when creating the API credentials
  • audience - set to a value of "https://api.mparticle.com"
  • grant_type - set to a value of "client_credentials"

Example cURL request

curl --request POST \
  --url https://sso.auth.mparticle.com/oauth/token \
  --header 'content-type: application/json' \
  --data '{"client_id":"...","client_secret":"...","audience":"https://api.mparticle.com","grant_type":"client_credentials"}'

Example HTTP request

POST /oauth/token HTTP/1.1
Host: sso.auth.mparticle.com
Content-Type: application/json
{
  "client_id": "your_client_id",
  "client_secret": "your_client_secret",
  "audience": "https://api.mparticle.com",
  "grant_type": "client_credentials"
}

A successful POST request to the token endpoint results in a JSON response as follows:

{
  "access_token": "YWIxMjdi883GHBBDnjsdKAJQxNjdjYUUJABbg6hdI.8V6HhxW-",
  "expires_in" : 28800,
  "token_type": "Bearer"
}

Subsequent requests to the API can then be authorized by setting the authorization header to:

Authorization: Bearer YWIxMjdi883GHBBDnjsdKAJQxNjdjYUUJABbg6hdI.8V6HhxW-

Tokens cannot be revoked, but they expire every eight hours. The initial token request can take between one and three seconds, so mParticle recommends that you cache the token and refresh it only when necessary.

Get all field transformations

GET https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields

Path parameters

Path Parameter Type Description
{workspaceId} Integer The ID for the workspace containing field transformations you want to retrieve.

Query parameters

Query Parameter Type Description
{destinationType} String Valid value: event_batch.

Example cURL request

curl --location --request GET 'https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields' \
--header 'Authorization: Bearer <access_token>'

Example JSON request body

No request body.

Response

A successful request receives a 200 response with an array containing each field transformation within a JSON object.

[
  {
    "id": "string",
    "name": "string",
    "destination_type": "event_batch",
    "mappings": [
      {
        "mapping_type": "column",
        "source": "string",
        "destination": "string",
        "value": "string"
      }
    ],
    "created_on": "2023-11-14T21:12:36.246Z",
    "created_by": "string",
    "last_modified_on": "2023-11-14T21:12:36.246Z",
    "last_modified_by": "string"
  }
]

Create a new field transformation

POST https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields

Example cURL request

curl --location --request POST 'https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields' \
--header 'Authorization: Bearer <access_token>'

Example JSON request body

{
  "id": "string",
  "name": "string",
  "destination_type": "event_batch",
  "mappings": [
    {
      "mapping_type": "column",
      "source": "string",
      "destination": "string",
      "value": "string"
    }
  ],
  "created_on": "2023-11-14T21:15:43.182Z",
  "created_by": "string",
  "last_modified_on": "2023-11-14T21:15:43.182Z",
  "last_modified_by": "string"
}

Response

A successful request receives a 200 response with a JSON object containing the field transformation you just created.

{
  "id": "string",
  "name": "string",
  "destination_type": "event_batch",
  "mappings": [
    {
      "mapping_type": "column",
      "source": "string",
      "destination": "string",
      "value": "string"
    }
  ],
  "created_on": "2023-11-14T21:15:43.182Z",
  "created_by": "string",
  "last_modified_on": "2023-11-14T21:15:43.182Z",
  "last_modified_by": "string"
}

Get a specific field transformation

GET https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields/{fieldTransformationId}

Path parameters

Path Parameter Type Description
{workspaceId} Integer The ID for the workspace containing the field transformation.
{fieldTransformationId} Integer The ID for the field transformation you want to retrieve.

Example cURL request

curl --location --request GET 'https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields/{fieldTransformationId}' \
--header 'Authorization: Bearer <access_token>'

Example JSON request body

No request body.

Response

A successful request receives a 200 response with a JSON object containing the field transformation.

{
  "id": "string",
  "name": "string",
  "destination_type": "event_batch",
  "mappings": [
    {
      "mapping_type": "column",
      "source": "string",
      "destination": "string",
      "value": "string"
    }
  ],
  "created_on": "2023-11-14T21:24:26.511Z",
  "created_by": "string",
  "last_modified_on": "2023-11-14T21:24:26.511Z",
  "last_modified_by": "string"
}

Update a field transformation

PUT https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields/{fieldTransformationId}

Path parameters

Path Parameter Type Description
{workspaceId} Integer The ID for the workspace containing the field transformation.
{fieldTransformationId} Integer The ID for the field transformation you want to update.

Example cURL request

curl --location --request PUT 'https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields/{fieldTransformationId}' \
--header 'Authorization: Bearer <access_token>'

Example JSON request body

{
  "id": "string",
  "name": "string",
  "destination_type": "event_batch",
  "mappings": [
    {
      "mapping_type": "column",
      "source": "string",
      "destination": "string",
      "value": "string"
    }
  ]
}

Response

A successful request receives a 200 response with a JSON object containing the updated field transformation.

{
  "id": "string",
  "name": "string",
  "destination_type": "event_batch",
  "mappings": [
    {
      "mapping_type": "column",
      "source": "string",
      "destination": "string",
      "value": "string"
    }
  ],
  "created_on": "2023-11-14T21:25:50.947Z",
  "created_by": "string",
  "last_modified_on": "2023-11-14T21:25:50.947Z",
  "last_modified_by": "string"
}

Delete a field transformation

DELETE https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields/{fieldTransformationId}

Path parameters

Path Parameter Type Description
{workspaceId} Integer The ID for the workspace containing the field transformation.
{fieldTransformationId} Integer The ID for the field transformation you want to delete.

Example cURL request

curl --location --request DELETE 'https://api.mparticle.com/platform/v2/workspaces/{workspaceId}/transformations/fields/{fieldTransformationId}' \
--header 'Authorization: Bearer <access_token>'

Example JSON request body

No request body.

Response

A successful request receives a 204 response with an empty body.

Error handling

Response code Error message Description
400 Bad Request
401 Unauthorized Verify that you have created the correct API credentials for the Field Transformations API and that you are using the correct authentication method.
403 Forbidden Verify that you have created the correct API credentials for the Field Transformations API and that you are using the correct authentication method.
404 Not Found

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    Last Updated: November 27, 2024