# Clients in Zulip `zerver.models.Client` is Zulip's analogue of the HTTP User-Agent header (and is populated from User-Agent). It exists for use in analytics and other places to provide human-readable summary data about "which Zulip client" was used for an operation (e.g. was it the Android app, the desktop app, or a bot?). In general, it shouldn't be used for anything controlling the behavior of Zulip; it's primarily intended to assist debugging. ## Analytics A `Client` is used to sort messages into client categories such as `ZulipElectron` on the `/stats` page. For more information see, [Analytics](analytics.md). ## Integrations Generally, integrations in Zulip should declare a unique User-Agent, so that it's easy to figure out which integration is involved when debugging an issue. For incoming webhook integrations, we do that conveniently via the auth decorators (as we will describe shortly); other integrations generally should set the first User-Agent element on their HTTP requests to something of the form ZulipIntegrationName/1.2 so that they are categorized properly. The `webhook_view` auth decorator, used for most incoming webhooks, accepts the name of the integration as an argument and uses it to generate a client name that it adds to the `request_notes` object that can be accessed with the `request` (Django [HttpRequest](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/ref/request-response/#django.http.HttpRequest)) object via `zerver.lib.request.get_request_notes(request)`. In most integrations, `request_notes.client` is then passed to `check_send_webhook_message`, where it is used to keep track of which client sent the message (which in turn is used by analytics). For more information, see [the incoming webhook walkthrough](https://zulip.com/api/incoming-webhooks-walkthrough).