This library provides an API to track events and update profiles on Mixpanel.
Add mixpanel/mixpanel-php as a dependency and run composer update
"require": {
...
"mixpanel/mixpanel-php" : "2.*"
...
}Now you can start tracking events and people:
<?php
// import dependencies
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
// get the Mixpanel class instance, replace with your project token
$mp = Mixpanel::getInstance("MIXPANEL_PROJECT_TOKEN");
// track an event
$mp->track("button clicked", array("label" => "sign-up"));
// create/update a profile for user id 12345
$mp->people->set(12345, array(
'$first_name' => "John",
'$last_name' => "Doe",
'$email' => "[email protected]",
'$phone' => "5555555555",
"Favorite Color" => "red"
));- Download the Mixpanel PHP Library
- Extract the zip file to a directory called "mixpanel-php" in your project root
- Now you can start tracking events and people:
<?php
// import Mixpanel
require 'mixpanel-php/lib/Mixpanel.php';
// get the Mixpanel class instance, replace with your project token
$mp = Mixpanel::getInstance("MIXPANEL_PROJECT_TOKEN");
// track an event
$mp->track("button clicked", array("label" => "sign-up"));
// create/update a profile for user id 12345
$mp->people->set(12345, array(
'$first_name' => "John",
'$last_name' => "Doe",
'$email' => "[email protected]",
'$phone' => "5555555555",
"Favorite Color" => "red"
));By default, data is sent using ssl over cURL. This works fine when you're tracking a small number of events or aren't concerned with the potentially blocking nature of the PHP cURL calls. However, this isn't very efficient when you're sending hundreds of events (such as in batch processing). Our library comes packaged with an easy way to use a persistent socket connection for much more efficient writes. To enable the persistent socket, simply pass 'consumer' => 'socket' as an entry in the $options array when you instantiate the Mixpanel class. Additionally, you can contribute your own persistence implementation by creating a custom Consumer.
For further examples and options checkout out the "examples" folder
Version 2.6.2:
- Added support for $ignore_time
- Cleaned up some comments to be more clear
Version 2.6.1:
- Fixed bug in SocketConsumer timeout
Version 2.6:
- Updated default for
connect_timeoutin SocketConsumer to be 5
Version 2.5:
timeoutoption now refers toCURLOPT_TIMEOUTinstead ofCURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUTin non-forked cURL calls, it has been removed from the SocketConsumer in favor of a newconnect_timeoutoption.- Added a new
connect_timeoutoption for CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT in non-forked cURL calls (CurlConsumer) and the socket timeout (SocketConsumer) - Set default timeout (CURLOPT_TIMEOUT) to 30 seconds in non-forked cURL calls
- Set default connection timeoute (CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT) to 5 seconds in non-forked cURL calls
- We now pass cURL errors from non-forked cURL calls to
_handle_errorwith the curl errno and message
Version 2.4:
- Fixed a bug where passing the integer 0 for the
ipparameter would be ignored
Version 2.1 - 2.3:
- Broken releases
Version 2.0:
- Changed the default consumer to be 'curl' (CurlConsumer)
- Changed the default setting of 'fork' to false in the Curl Consumer. This means that by default, events and profile updates are sent synchronously using the PHP cURL lib when using the Curl Consumer.
- 'createAlias' uses the CurlConsumer with 'fork' explicitly set to false (as we need this to be synchronous) instead of the SocketConsumer.
- Fixed bug where max_queue_size was never read