Reputation: 821
When you are creating a new instance of analytics.js by running
ga('create', 'UA-XXXXXXX-Y', {'cookieDomain': 'none'});
GA creates a unique client Id. I want to fetch this id and use it for my own purposes, but I can find only setter for this parameter but can't find any getter method to get it.
GA send it later in a parameter called &cid=123123.232323
Does anyone knows how do I get it?
Upvotes: 52
Views: 111780
Reputation: 1
I think it changed a bit in 2024 we were using
ga.getAll()[0].b.data.w[':clientId'];
for a lifetime of the project suddenly it started breaking, tried multiple things
the only thing that worked for us was gaGlobal
you can use gaGlobal.vid
to get the id directly!
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1884
First create the Google Analytics ga object to create a tracker object, by passing it a "Ready callback" function, then use the tracker to call other methods.
The ga() command queue provides an interface for doing almost everything you need to do with the analytics.js library.
"function(tracker)" is a callback function to be invoked when the analytics library is fully loaded and ready to be interacted with. The function is invoked with the default tracker object as it first argument. If no default tracker has been created, the first argument is/will return undefined.
Note: when the callback function is invoked, all ga object methods are available for use. Including the one you want tracker.get('clientId')
Replace the UA-XXXXX-Y in the code below with your UA code from Google Analytics.
// Queues a tracker object for creation.
ga('create', 'UA-XXXXX-Y', 'auto');
// Once the tracker has been created, log the
// client ID to the console.
ga(function(tracker) {
console.log(tracker.get('clientId'));
/* Your other code here */
});
Alternatively for lines 1 & 2, use the code below to create a named tracker.
// Queues a named tracker object for creation.
ga('create', 'UA-XXXXX-Y', 'auto', 'myTracker');
Official Google documentation: Cookies and User Identification
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 3791
Although the author explicitly said he is using Javascript, others (like me) may be searching for a way to get this information from the server-side, like PHP.
For both: GA4 and UA, I found that you can easily check for the _ga cookie, which looks like:
_ga=GA1.3.475128143.1522318100
In the exemple above, the user id is "475128143.1522318100".
So, in PHP I can fetch it quickly as:
$gaUserId = preg_replace("/^.+\.(.+?\..+?)$/", "\\1", @$_COOKIE['_ga']);
You can also use Javascript to retrieve the cookie in a single line, without using ga() functions:
var gaUserId = document.cookie.match(/_ga=(.+?);/)[1].split('.').slice(-2).join(".")
This is working for me.
Upvotes: 36
Reputation: 31
If you are using Google Tag Manager, you can use User-Defined Variable -> Variable type: "1st-Party Cookie" -> Cookie Name = _ga. Let's call it "GA Cookie". It will store value like this GA.1.1.123.123.
To cut the "GA.1.1", make another User-Defined Variable -> Variable Type: "Custom JavaScript" and write a simple JS function:
function() {
var pattern = "GA1.1.";
var id = {{GA Cookie}}.substr(pattern.length);
return id;
}
It is not always "GA1.1", but still it has 5 signs. You can use different variable like var length = 5, but as for me, it looks like a kind of magic number.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 9603
Google does have some documentation on getting the client id.
Looks like this:
ga(function(tracker) {
var clientId = tracker.get('clientId');
});
I've used this before, too:
ga.getAll()[0].get('clientId');
EDIT: If you have more than one tracker on the page, it may be probable that at index 0 there is not the one you want, so an alternative function should be the following:
function() {
try {
var trackers = ga.getAll();
var i, len;
for (i = 0, len = trackers.length; i < len; i += 1) {
if (trackers[i].get('trackingId') === "ID-PROPERTY") {
return trackers[i].get('clientId');
}
}
} catch(e) {}
return 'false';
}
where ID-PROPERTY is the id of your Property (i.e. UA-XXXXX-XX).
Upvotes: 104