Populate event properties with user agent data

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This transformation enhances incoming events by including browser & OS details from the $useragent property.

Note: This transformation is generally only needed when using clients that don't already set these properties, or when sending events directly from the server.

This transformation extracts the following properties from the provided $useragent:

PropertyDescriptionExample
$browserName of the browser for the userChrome, Firefox
$browser_versionThe version of the browser that was used70, 79
$osThe operating system of the userWindows, Mac OS X
$browser_typeThe type of client that made the requestbot, browser

Requirements

Using this requires either PostHog Cloud with the data pipelines add-on, or a self-hosted PostHog instance running a recent version of the Docker image.

Installation

  1. In PostHog, click the "Data pipeline" tab in the left sidebar.
  2. Search for 'User Agent Populator'.
  3. Configure the transformation by clicking on the settings icon.
  4. Click the toggle to enable the transformation.

Once the transformation has been configured and enabled, it will begin to transform all new events which come into PostHog.

Configuration

Before an transformation can be enabled in PostHog, it has to be configured.

Using the User Agent Populator

This transformation works by parsing the $useragent property on events as they are ingested. As a result, if an event is ingested without the $useragent (or $user-agent) property set, this transformation will do nothing. This property can be set using any of our client or server libraries.

Note: Most of our client libraries will already automatically extract the $browser, $browser_version, and $os properties, so there is no need to set the $useragent property when using these libraries.

One common use-case for this transformation is populating client information when sending events from the server-side. Typically, a UserAgent header will be set when a client sends a request to your server, which your server can then forward to PostHog with the $useragent property. This gives you an idea of what types of clients are using your service and allows you to create insights that filter based on these properties.

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