Google Analytics Connections
Google Analytics is a web analytics service offered by Google that tracks and reports website traffic. For more information, go to https://analytics.google.com/analytics/web/provision/#/provision.
Nota
Per Google’s announcement here and here, Universal Analytics will not process new data. Our Google Analytics driver may allow access to Universal Analytics, but if Google decides to deprecate or remove API support for Universal Analytics, it is highly likely that your Google Analytics connector to Universal Analytics property will fail to import data.
A google analytics connection comes with the ability to access any one of the two data sources Universal Analytics or Google Analytics 4. It is recommended that you create a new connector for each of the two data sources.
While creating a connection, customers can use Google Analytics 4 or UniversalAnalytics by choosing GoogleAnalytics4 and UniversalAnalytics under the Schema dropdown.
Limitations and Requirements
Nota
During normal selection or import of an entire table, you may encounter an error indicating a problem with a specific column. Since some tables require filtering based on a particular column, data from them can only be ingested using custom SQL statements. In this case, the problematic column can be used as a filter in the WHERE clause of a custom SQL statement to ingest the table.
For more information, please consult the CData driver documentation for the specific table.
For more information on using custom SQL, go to Create Dataset with SQL.
Nota
For filtering date columns, this connection type supports a set of literal functions on dates. You can use these to reduce the volume of data extracted from the database using a custom SQL query. For more information, see the pg_dateliteralfunctions.htm
page in the driver documentation for this connection type.
Nota
Most interactions with the Google Analytics datastore are formed as custom SQL queries. More information on syntax and examples is provided below.
OAuth 2.0 authentication is required.
An OAuth 2.0 web client must be available for use in Alteryx Analytics Cloud (AAC).
You cannot create OAuth 2.0 connections via API.
Google Analytics allows up to 10 metrics and seven dimensions in a single query.
When issuing a query that selects all columns, only the default Metric columns are selected for tables with more than 10 Metrics.
The default Dimensions are used unless you explicitly select other dimension columns.
All reports in Google Analytics must cover a specific date range.
The default behavior is to pull the last month of data if the StartDate and EndDate inputs are left unset.
To override this behavior, the values can be set directly in the query.
Create Connection
via Cloud Portal
When you create the connection, please review the following properties and specify them accordingly:
Connection Property | Description |
---|---|
View Id | Unique identifier of the view Sugerencia To acquire your View Id, login to Google Analytics and navigate to your site data. Click the name of your site in the top menu bar. The identifiers for the available views are listed as numeric values in the right column. |
Connect String Options | The following is the default connect string option: Timeout=0;SupportEnhancedSQL=true;
|
Schema | By default, |
OAuth2 Client | The client is displayed. Nota When you create the connection in this window, you must click Authenticate, which authenticates to the app. This step is required. |
Default Column Data Type Inference | Leave this value as |
For more information, see the driver documentation http://cdn.cdata.com/help/DAG/jdbc/default.htm.
Connect String Options
Enhanced SQL
By default, the following connect string options is included. This option enables an enhanced form of SQL support for the connection.
SupportEnhancedSQL=true;
When this feature is enabled:
In-memory processing that is handled by default in the querying application (AACAAC) is passed to Google Analytics for processing.
This feature enables the use of advanced SQL expressions, such as the use of more predicates, joins, and aggregations.
For more information on enhanced SQL for Google Analytics, see https://cdn.cdata.com/help/DAG/jdbc/RSBGoogleAnalytics_p_SupportEnhancedSQL.htm.
Data Type Conversions
For more information, see the driver documentation http://cdn.cdata.com/help/DAG/jdbc/.
Example queries:
To import data from Google Analytics, you typically create a custom SQL SELECT statement. Example:
SELECT distinct Date, Sessions, NewUsers, BounceRate, PageviewsPerSession, AvgSessionDuration, Browser, FROM GoogleAnalytics.Traffic where StartDate = '90DaysAgo' and EndDate ='Today'
Nota
The distinct
keyword is currently required in default configuration when referencing specific values in a where
clause. Optionally, you can enable the use of enhanced SQL for this connection, which eliminates the need for the distinct
keyword. See "Connect String Options" above.
Do not apply quotes, double-quotes, or brackets around field or table values.
Literal values should be in single quotes.
StartDate
andEndDate
parameters can be used to specify a date range.You can also use date literal functions to specify date ranges. For more information, see http://cdn.cdata.com/help/DAG/jdbc/pg_dateliteralfunctions.htm.
For more information:
SQL syntax: http://cdn.cdata.com/help/DAG/jdbc/pg_overview.htm
SQL examples: http://cdn.cdata.com/help/DAG/jdbc/pg_retrievingdata.htm