Analyze Mixpanel Data in R via ODBC

Jerod Johnson
Jerod Johnson
Director, Technology Evangelism
Create data visualizations and use high-performance statistical functions to analyze Mixpanel data in Microsoft R Open.

Access Mixpanel data with pure R script and standard SQL. You can use the CData ODBC Driver for Mixpanel and the RODBC package to work with remote Mixpanel data in R. By using the CData Driver, you are leveraging a driver written for industry-proven standards to access your data in the popular, open-source R language. This article shows how to use the driver to execute SQL queries to Mixpanel data and visualize Mixpanel data in R.

Install R

You can complement the driver's performance gains from multi-threading and managed code by running the multithreaded Microsoft R Open or by running R linked with the BLAS/LAPACK libraries. This article uses Microsoft R Open (MRO).

Connect to Mixpanel as an ODBC Data Source

Information for connecting to Mixpanel follows, along with different instructions for configuring a DSN in Windows and Linux environments.

Start by setting the Profile connection property to the location of the Mixpanel Profile on disk (e.g. C:\profiles\Mixpanel.apip). Next, set the ProfileSettings connection property to the connection string for Mixpanel (see below).

Mixpanel API Profile Settings

Obtain Mixpanel service account credentials from your organization settings under Service Accounts, then use the service account username and secret to authenticate.

When you configure the DSN, you may also want to set the Max Rows connection property. This will limit the number of rows returned, which is especially helpful for improving performance when designing reports and visualizations.

Windows

If you have not already, first specify connection properties in an ODBC DSN (data source name). This is the last step of the driver installation. You can use the Microsoft ODBC Data Source Administrator to create and configure ODBC DSNs.

Linux

If you are installing the CData ODBC Driver for Mixpanel in a Linux environment, the driver installation predefines a system DSN. You can modify the DSN by editing the system data sources file (/etc/odbc.ini) and defining the required connection properties.

/etc/odbc.ini

[CData API Source]
Driver = CData ODBC Driver for Mixpanel
Description = My Description
Profile = C:\profiles\Mixpanel.apip
ProfileSettings = 'User = your_service_account_username
Password = your_service_account_secret'

For specific information on using these configuration files, please refer to the help documentation (installed and found online).

Load the RODBC Package

To use the driver, download the RODBC package. In RStudio, click Tools -> Install Packages and enter RODBC in the Packages box.

After installing the RODBC package, the following line loads the package:

library(RODBC)

Note: This article uses RODBC version 1.3-12. Using Microsoft R Open, you can test with the same version, using the checkpoint capabilities of Microsoft's MRAN repository. The checkpoint command enables you to install packages from a snapshot of the CRAN repository, hosted on the MRAN repository. The snapshot taken Jan. 1, 2016 contains version 1.3-12.

library(checkpoint)
checkpoint("2016-01-01")

Connect to Mixpanel Data as an ODBC Data Source

You can connect to a DSN in R with the following line:

conn <- odbcConnect("CData API Source")

Schema Discovery

The driver models Mixpanel APIs as relational tables, views, and stored procedures. Use the following line to retrieve the list of tables:

sqlTables(conn)

Execute SQL Queries

Use the sqlQuery function to execute any SQL query supported by the Mixpanel API.

annotations <- sqlQuery(conn, "SELECT AnnotationId, ProjectId FROM Annotations WHERE Date = '2024-01-15'", believeNRows=FALSE, rows_at_time=1)

You can view the results in a data viewer window with the following command:

View(annotations)

Plot Mixpanel Data

You can now analyze Mixpanel data with any of the data visualization packages available in the CRAN repository. You can create simple bar plots with the built-in bar plot function:

par(las=2,ps=10,mar=c(5,15,4,2))
barplot(annotations$ProjectId, main="Mixpanel Annotations", names.arg = annotations$AnnotationId, horiz=TRUE)

Ready to get started?

Connect to live data from Mixpanel with the API Driver

Connect to Mixpanel