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The Oracle Database Gateway for ODBC and Heterogeneous Services technology enable you to connect to ODBC data sources as remote Oracle databases. This article shows how to use the CData ODBC Driver for CSV to create a database link from CSV to Oracle and to query CSV data through the SQL*Plus tool. You can also create the database link and execute queries from SQL Developer.
Information for connecting to CSV follows, along with different instructions for configuring a DSN in Windows and Linux environments.
CData Drivers let you work with CSV files stored locally and stored in cloud storage services like Box, Amazon S3, Google Drive, or SharePoint, right where they are.
Set the URI property to local folder path.
To connect to CSV file(s) within Amazon S3, set the URI property to the URI of the Bucket and Folder where the intended CSV files exist. In addition, at least set these properties:
To connect to CSV file(s) within Box, set the URI property to the URI of the folder that includes the intended CSV file(s). Use the OAuth authentication method to connect to Box.
To connect to CSV file(s) within Dropbox, set the URI proprerty to the URI of the folder that includes the intended CSV file(s). Use the OAuth authentication method to connect to Dropbox. Either User Account or Service Account can be used to authenticate.
To connect to CSV file(s) within SharePoint with SOAP Schema, set the URI proprerty to the URI of the document library that includes the intended CSV file. Set User, Password, and StorageBaseURL.
To connect to CSV file(s) within SharePoint with REST Schema, set the URI proprerty to the URI of the document library that includes the intended CSV file. StorageBaseURL is optional. If not set, the driver will use the root drive. OAuth is used to authenticate.
To connect to CSV file(s) within Google Drive, set the URI property to the URI of the folder that includes the intended CSV file(s). Use the OAuth authentication method to connect and set InitiateOAuth to GETANDREFRESH.
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.
Note: If you need to modify the DSN or create other CSV DSNs, you must use a system DSN and the bitness of the DSN must match your Oracle system. You can access and create 32-bit DSNs on a 64-bit system by opening the 32-bit ODBC Data Source Administrator from C:\Windows\SysWOW64\odbcad32.exe.
If you are installing the CData ODBC Driver for CSV 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.
[CData CSV Source] Driver = CData ODBC Driver for CSV Description = My Description URI = /PATH/TO/MyCSVFilesFolder
For specific information on using these configuration files, please refer to the help documentation (installed and found online).
The driver provides several connection properties that streamline accessing CSV data just as you would an Oracle database. Set the following properties when working with CSV data in SQL*Plus and SQL Developer. For compatibility with Oracle, you will need to set the following connection properties, in addition to authentication and other required connection properties.
MapToWVarchar=False
Set this property to map string data types to SQL_VARCHAR instead of SQL_WVARCHAR. By default, the driver uses SQL_WVARCHAR to accommodate various international character sets. You can use this property to avoid the ORA-28528 Heterogeneous Services data type conversion error when the Unicode type is returned.
MaximumColumnSize=4000
Set this property to restrict the maximum column size to 4000 characters.
IncludeDualTable=True
Set this property to mock the Oracle DUAL table. SQL Developer uses this table to test the connection.
In Linux environments, Oracle uses UTF-8 to communicate with the unixODBC Driver manager, whereas the default driver encoding is UTF-16. To resolve this, open the file /opt/cdata/cdata-driver-for-csv/lib/cdata.odbc.csv.ini in a text editor and set the encoding.
[Driver] DriverManagerEncoding = UTF-8
Follow the procedure below to set up an ODBC gateway to CSV data that enables you to query live CSV data as an Oracle database.
Create the file initmycsvdb.ora in the folder oracle-home-directory/hs/admin and add the following setting:
HS_FDS_CONNECT_INFO = "CData CSV Sys"
If you are using the Database Gateway for ODBC, your listener.ora needs to have a SID_LIST_LISTENER entry that resembles the following:
SID_LIST_LISTENER = (SID_LIST = (SID_DESC = (SID_NAME = mycsvdb) (ORACLE_HOME = your-oracle-home) (PROGRAM = dg4odbc) ) )
If you are using Heterogeneous Services, your listener.ora needs to have a SID_LIST_LISTENER entry that resembles the following:
SID_LIST_LISTENER = (SID_LIST = (SID_DESC = (SID_NAME = mycsvdb) (ORACLE_HOME = your-oracle-home) (PROGRAM = hsodbc) ) )
Add the connect descriptor below in tnsnames.ora, located in oracle-home-directory/NETWORK/admin:
mycsvdb = (DESCRIPTION= (ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=localhost)(PORT=1521)) (CONNECT_DATA=(SID=mycsvdb)) (HS=OK) )
Test the configuration with the following command:
tnsping mycsvdb
Open SQL*Plus and create the database link with the command below:
CREATE DATABASE LINK mycsvdb CONNECT TO "user" IDENTIFIED BY "password" USING 'mycsvdb';
You can now execute queries in SQL*Plus like the one below (note the double quotation marks around the table name):
SELECT * from "Customer"@mycsvdb WHERE FirstName = 'Bob';
Download a free trial of the CSV ODBC Driver to get started:
Download NowLearn more:
👁 CSV/TSV Files IconThe CSV ODBC Driver is a powerful tool that allows you to connect with live flat-file delimited data (CSV/TSV files), directly from any applications that support ODBC connectivity.
Access flat-file data like you would any standard database - read, write, and update etc. through a standard ODBC Driver interface.