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This article shows how to use the CData JDBC Driver for Amazon Athena to integrate with the External SQL Sources (ESS) feature in FileMaker Pro, which allows you to link records in FileMaker Pro with related records in your other operational data stores.
You will use the MySQL Remoting feature to access Amazon Athena as a remote MySQL database. The CData JDBC Driver for Amazon Athena implements both the JDBC and MySQL standards to integrate with applications like FileMaker Pro that support connections to traditional databases like MySQL but not generic JDBC connections.
CData provides the easiest way to access and integrate live data from Amazon Athena. Customers use CData connectivity to:
Users frequently integrate Athena with analytics tools like Tableau, Power BI, and Excel for in-depth analytics from their preferred tools.
To learn more about unique Amazon Athena use cases with CData, check out our blog post: https://www.cdata.com/blog/amazon-athena-use-cases.
There are two data access modes in FileMaker Pro:
The JDBC driver is part of a data access chain. Compared to a native ODBC integration, FileMaker Pro integrations that use MySQL remoting have several additional components. This article shows how to link each of the following components with FileMaker Pro:
On Windows, FileMaker Pro requires the official MySQL driver, the MySQL Connector\ODBC (currently, the best option is Connector\ODBC 8.0.11).
On macOS, FileMaker Pro requires the Actual Technologies Open Databases ODBC driver.
An ODBC driver manager.
On Windows, the driver manager is built in. On macOS, you will need to install a driver manager before installing the ODBC driver; install the iODBC driver manager.
Follow the steps below to enable the MySQL Remoting feature:
Open Terminal and change to the lib subfolder in the installation folder.
$ cd "/Applications/CData/CData JDBC Driver for Amazon Athena/lib"
amazonathena = "AWSAccessKey='a123';AWSSecretKey='s123';AWSRegion='IRELAND';Database='sampledb';S3StagingDirectory='s3://bucket/staging/';"
To authorize Amazon Athena requests, provide the credentials for an administrator account or for an IAM user with custom permissions: Set to the access key Id. Set to the secret access key.
Note: Though you can connect as the AWS account administrator, it is recommended to use IAM user credentials to access AWS services.
To obtain the credentials for an IAM user, follow the steps below:
To obtain the credentials for your AWS root account, follow the steps below:
If you are using the CData Data Provider for Amazon Athena 2018 from an EC2 Instance and have an IAM Role assigned to the instance, you can use the IAM Role to authenticate. To do so, set to true and leave and empty. The CData Data Provider for Amazon Athena 2018 will automatically obtain your IAM Role credentials and authenticate with them.
In many situations it may be preferable to use an IAM role for authentication instead of the direct security credentials of an AWS root user. An AWS role may be used instead by specifying the . This will cause the CData Data Provider for Amazon Athena 2018 to attempt to retrieve credentials for the specified role. If you are connecting to AWS (instead of already being connected such as on an EC2 instance), you must additionally specify the and of an IAM user to assume the role for. Roles may not be used when specifying the and of an AWS root user.
For users and roles that require Multi-factor Authentication, specify the and connection properties. This will cause the CData Data Provider for Amazon Athena 2018 to submit the MFA credentials in a request to retrieve temporary authentication credentials. Note that the duration of the temporary credentials may be controlled via the (default 3600 seconds).
In addition to the and properties, specify , and . Set to the region where your Amazon Athena data is hosted. Set to a folder in S3 where you would like to store the results of queries.
If is not set in the connection, the data provider connects to the default database set in Amazon Athena.
See the help documentation for more information about the available connection properties and other configuration options for remoting.
Start the MySQL daemon by specifying the configuration file or settings on the command line. The example below uses the included sample configuration file.
$ java -jar cdata.jdbc.amazonathena.jar -f "cdata.jdbc.amazonathena.remoting.ini"
After connecting successfully to Amazon Athena and starting the MySQL daemon, create a MySQL ODBC data source. When working with ODBC data sources, you specify connection properties in a DSN (data source name).
If you have not already obtained an ODBC driver and driver manager, refer to "Outlining the ESS Setup" to determine the components supported for your platform.
Follow the steps below to use the iODBC graphical administrator tool:
You can use the built-in Microsoft ODBC Data Source Administrator to create the ODBC DSN.
Shadow tables exist in an external SQL source but can be used in much the same way as other tables in your FileMaker database; you can add them in the relationships graph, browse data, and create layouts on them.
After specifying the username and password for the DSN, you can add Amazon Athena tables to the relationships graph. You can now scroll through, sort, edit, and summarize Amazon Athena data by clicking View -> Browse Mode, just as you would a remote MySQL database.
👁 Tables to be linked to the external data source in the relationships graph. (Salesforce is shown.)Download a free trial of the Amazon Athena Driver to get started:
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