https://www.npmjs.com/package/@segment/analytics-node
- Node.js >= 18
- AWS Lambda
- Cloudflare Workers
- Vercel Edge Functions
- Web Workers / Browser (no device mode destination support)
# npm
npm install @segment/analytics-node
# yarn
yarn add @segment/analytics-node
# pnpm
pnpm install @segment/analytics-node
Assuming some express-like web framework.
import { Analytics } from '@segment/analytics-node'
// or, if you use require:
const { Analytics } = require('@segment/analytics-node')
// instantiation
const analytics = new Analytics({ writeKey: '<MY_WRITE_KEY>' })
app.post('/login', (req, res) => {
analytics.identify({
userId: req.body.userId,
previousId: req.body.previousId
})
res.sendStatus(200)
})
app.post('/cart', (req, res) => {
analytics.track({
userId: req.body.userId,
event: 'Add to cart',
properties: { productId: '123456' }
})
res.sendStatus(201)
});
See the documentation: https://segment.com/docs/connections/sources/catalog/libraries/server/node/#configuration
You can also see the complete list of settings in the AnalyticsSettings interface.
- See segment's documentation for plugin architecture.
- AWS lambda execution environment is challenging for typically non-response-blocking async activites like tracking or logging, since the runtime terminates / freezes after a response is emitted.
Here is an example of using analytics.js within a handler:
const { Analytics } = require('@segment/analytics-node');
// since analytics has the potential to be stateful if there are any plugins added,
// to be on the safe side, we should instantiate a new instance of analytics on every request (the cost of instantiation is low).
const analytics = () => new Analytics({
flushAt: 1,
writeKey: '<MY_WRITE_KEY>',
})
.on('error', console.error);
module.exports.handler = async (event) => {
...
// we need to await before returning, otherwise the lambda will exit before sending the request.
await new Promise((resolve) =>
analytics().track({ ... }, resolve)
)
...
return {
statusCode: 200,
};
....
};
import { Analytics } from '@segment/analytics-node';
import { NextRequest, NextResponse } from 'next/server';
export const analytics = new Analytics({
writeKey: '<MY_WRITE_KEY>',
flushAt: 1,
})
.on('error', console.error)
export const config = {
runtime: 'edge',
};
export default async (req: NextRequest) => {
await new Promise((resolve) =>
analytics.track({ ... }, resolve)
);
return NextResponse.json({ ... })
};
import { Analytics, Context } from '@segment/analytics-node';
export default {
async fetch(
request: Request,
env: Env,
ctx: ExecutionContext
): Promise<Response> {
const analytics = new Analytics({
flushAt: 1,
writeKey: '<MY_WRITE_KEY>',
}).on('error', console.error);
await new Promise((resolve, reject) =>
analytics.track({ ... }, resolve)
);
...
return new Response(...)
},
};
In order to guarantee authorized communication between your server environment and Segment's Tracking API, you can enable OAuth 2 in your Segment workspace. To support the non-interactive server environment, the OAuth workflow used is a signed client assertion JWT. You will need a public and private key pair where the public key is uploaded to the segment dashboard and the private key is kept in your server environment to be used by this SDK. Your server will verify its identity by signing a token request and will receive a token that is used to to authorize all communication with the Segment Tracking API.
You will also need to provide the OAuth Application ID and the public key's ID, both of which are provided in the Segment dashboard. You should ensure that you are implementing handling for Analytics SDK errors. Good logging will help distinguish any configuration issues.
import { Analytics, OAuthSettings } from '@segment/analytics-node';
import { readFileSync } from 'fs'
const privateKey = readFileSync('private.pem', 'utf8')
const settings: OAuthSettings = {
clientId: '<CLIENT_ID_FROM_DASHBOARD>',
clientKey: privateKey,
keyId: '<PUB_KEY_ID_FROM_DASHBOARD>',
}
const analytics = new Analytics({
writeKey: '<MY_WRITE_KEY>',
oauthSettings: settings,
})
analytics.on('error', (err) => { console.error(err) })
analytics.track({ userId: 'foo', event: 'bar' })