Segment is a Customer Data Platform (CDP) that collects event data from various sources and routes it to different destinations for analytics, marketing, and data warehousing. By configuring a webhook as a destination, you can forward events from Segment directly into RisingWave. This setup enables you to leverage RisingWave’s capabilities for real-time data processing and analytics without the need for additional intermediaries.

This guide will walk through the steps to set up RisingWave as a destination for Segment webhooks.

1. Create a secret in RisingWave

First, create a secret in RisingWave to securely store a secret string. This secret will be used to validate incoming webhook requests from Segment.

CREATE SECRET test_secret WITH (backend = 'meta') AS 'TEST_WEBHOOK';
Parameter or clauseDescription
test_secretThe name of the secret.
TEST_WEBHOOKThe secret string used for signing and verifying webhook payloads. Replace this with a secure, random string.

2. Create a table in RisingWave

Next, create a table configured to accept webhook data from Segment.

CREATE TABLE wbhtable (
  data JSONB
) WITH (
  connector = 'webhook'
) VALIDATE SECRET test_secret AS secure_compare(
  headers->>'x-signature',
  encode(hmac(test_secret, data, 'sha1'), 'hex')
);
Parameter or clauseDescription
data JSONBDefines the name of column to store the JSON payload from the webhook. Currently, only JSONB type is supported for webhook tables.
headers->>'...'Extracts the signature provided by Segment in the x-signature HTTP header.

In secure_compare() function, the whole HTTP header is interpreted as a JSONB object, and you can access the header value using the ->> operator, but only the lower-case header names in the ->> operator, otherwise the verification will fail.
encode(...)Computes the expected signature. In the example above, it generates an HMAC SHA-1 hash of the payload (data) using the secret (test_secret), encodes it in hexadecimal.
secure_compare(...)Validates requests by matching the header signature against the computed signature, ensuring only authenticated requests are processed. The secure_compare() function compares two strings in a fixed amount of time, regardless of whether they are equal or not, ensuring that the comparison is secure and resistant to timing attacks.

3. Set up webhook in Segment

After configuring RisingWave to accept webhook data, set up Segment to send events to your RisingWave instance.

RisingWave webhook URL

The webhook URL should follow this format:

https://<HOST>/webhook/<database>/<schema_name>/<table_name>
ParameterDescription
HOSTThe hostname or IP address where your RisingWave instance is accessible. This could be a domain name or an IP address.
databaseThe name of the RisingWave database where your table resides
schema_nameThe schema name of your table, typically public unless specified otherwise.
table_nameThe name of the table you created to receive webhook data, e.g., wbhtable.

Configure webhook in Segment

For more detailed instructions, refer to the Segment’s Webhooks Destination Documentation and Webhooks (Actions) Destination Documentation.

1

Access the Segment Workspace:
Log in to your Segment workspace.

2

In the left sidebar, click on Connections > Add Destination.

  • Search for webhook in the list of available destinations.
  • Select Webhooks (Actions) and click Add destination to proceed.
3

  • Select the data source that identifies the source you want to send events from and follow the steps to name your destination.
  • Click on the tab Settings > Basic Settings > Shared Secret, enter the same secret string you used when creating the RisingWave secret (e.g., 'TEST_WEBHOOK'). This ensures that Segment signs the payloads using this secret, allowing RisingWave to validate them.
  • Click on the tab Settings > Basic Settings > Enable Destination and make sure it is enabled.
4

Configure the webhook description on the Mappings tab.

  • Click New Mapping and then Send.
  • Choose the event type you want to send to RisingWave.
  • Fill the configuration for the webhook requests based on the source information. You can also directly fill the values, filling RisingWave webhook URL as URL, POST as Method.
5

At the end of the page, you can send the test message via Send test event. Review your settings, click Next and specify a name.

4. Push data from Segment via webhook

With the webhook configured, Segment will automatically send HTTP POST requests to your RisingWave webhook URL whenever the specified events occur (e.g., pushes to the repository). RisingWave will receive these requests, validate the signatures, and insert the payload data into the target table.

5. Further event processing

The data in the table is already ready for further processing. You can access the fields using data->'field_name' in SQL queries.

You can create a materialized view to extract specific fields from the JSON payload.

CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW segmentb_events AS
SELECT
  data->>'action' AS action,
  data->'repository'->>'full_name' AS repository_name,
  data->'sender'->>'login' AS sender_login,
  data->>'created_at' AS event_time
FROM wbhtable;

You can now query segmentb_events like a regular table to perform analytics, generate reports, or trigger further processing.