🚨 Shai-Hulud Strikes Again:834 Packages Compromised.Technical Analysis →
Socket
Book a DemoInstallSign in
Socket

ga-service-acct

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
29
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

ga-service-acct

Google Analytics REST API via service account

latest
Source
npmnpm
Version
2.5.0
Version published
Maintainers
1
Created
Source

Google Analytics REST API via service accounts

This library provides tools to use the Google Analytics REST API (GET only).

Use of the REST API requires authentication, and this module provides an implementation of Google's oAuth instructions for 'service accounts' (instead of using the Google api for Node library).

There are two additional steps you need to setup to use this code:

1. Convert secret key

After creating the service email, you will download a .p12 key file that needs to be converted to a .pem file using:

openssl pkcs12 -in privatekey.p12 -nodes -nocerts > privatekey.pem

openssl will ask for the private key, which Google has probably told you is 'notasecret'

The code relies upon Json Web tokens and uses the contents of the .pem file to sign the request object which is sent to Google for an access token.

2. Provide service user access

Use the online GA Admin tools "User Management" module to give your service user read access to your GA data (you will need yourself to have management rights to make this change).

Example of usage

var fs = require('fs');
var Report = require('ga-service-cert');

var SERVICE_EMAIL = "123456789-2eqk45me6ts7jn3kf0vfr@developer.gserviceaccount.com";

var query = {
	'ids': 'ga:123456', 			// Update ids with your own view information
	'start-date': '2015-02-24',
	'end-date': '2015-03-10',
	'metrics': 'ga:users'
};

var private_key = fs.readFileSync(__dirname+'/privatekey.pem', "utf8");

var report = new Report(private_key, SERVICE_EMAIL, true);

report.on('ready', function() {

	report.get(query, function(err, data) {
		if (err) throw err
		console.log(data); 			// e.g. [ [ '5140' ] ]
	});

	// Alternative version using a Promise
	report.get(query)
		.then( data => console.log(data) ) // e.g. [ [ '5140' ] ]
		.catch( err => console.error(err) );
});

report.on('auth_error', function(err) {
	console.log(".test: auth_error", err);
	router.get('/*', (req, res) => res.status(500).send("Unable to connect to Google"));
});

Management data

From version version 0.4, the code implements the simplest management API call (more to follow once I find a use case).

report.getManagement(null, function(err, data) {
	if (err) throw err
	console.log(data.kind); 		// e.g. 'analytics#accounts'
});

Change log

  • 2.4.0 - .get can also return a Promise
  • 2.3.0 - Replaced babel polyfill with runtime
  • 2.2.1 - Removed private data from tests
  • 2.2.0 - Added tests (unusable without my private key)
  • 2.1.1 - Removed console statements from production code
  • 2.1.0 - Code improvements
  • 2.0.0 - Switch to ES6 Promises (with Babel polyfill for Node 0.10) from async
  • 1.2.0 - Switched to ES6 for development; shipping with transpiled file
  • 1.0.0 - Breaking change: constructor bow takes the key, rather than filename (to work better with e.g. system variables)
  • 0.4.1 - updated jwt to 5.0 and fixed bug in iat time
  • 0.4.0 - Added management data method

ToDo

  • Factor out token acquisition into separate module

Keywords

Google

FAQs

Package last updated on 28 Sep 2015

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts