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Leverage existing skills by using the JDBC standard to connect to Drift: Through drop-in integration into ETL tools like Oracle Data Integrator (ODI), the CData JDBC Driver for Drift connects real-time Drift data to your data warehouse, business intelligence, and Big Data technologies.
JDBC connectivity enables you to work with Drift just as you would any other database in ODI. As with an RDBMS, you can use the driver to connect directly to the Drift APIs in real time instead of working with flat files.
This article covers a JDBC-based ETL -- Drift to Oracle. After reverse engineering a data model of Drift entities, you will create a mapping and select a data loading strategy -- since the driver supports SQL-92, this last step can easily be accomplished by selecting the built-in SQL to SQL Loading Knowledge Module.
To install the driver, copy the driver JAR (cdata.jdbc.api.jar) and .lic file (cdata.jdbc.api.lic), located in the installation folder, into the ODI appropriate directory:
Restart ODI to complete the installation.
Reverse engineering the model retrieves metadata about the driver's relational view of Drift data. After reverse engineering, you can query real-time Drift data and create mappings based on Drift tables.
Start by setting the Profile connection property to the location of the Drift Profile on disk (e.g. C:\profiles\Drift.apip). Next, set the ProfileSettings connection property to the connection string for Drift (see below).
Drift uses OAuth-based authentication.
You must first register an application here: https://dev.drift.com. Your app will be assigned a client ID and a client secret. Set these in your connection string via the OAuthClientId and OAuthClientSecret properties. More information on setting up an OAuth application can be found at https://devdocs.drift.com/docs/.
After setting the following options in the ProfileSettings connection property, you are ready to connect:
For assistance in constructing the JDBC URL, use the connection string designer built into the Drift JDBC Driver. Either double-click the JAR file or execute the jar file from the command-line.
java -jar cdata.jdbc.api.jar
Fill in the connection properties and copy the connection string to the clipboard.
π Using the built-in connection string designer to generate a JDBC URL (Salesforce is shown.)Below is a typical connection string:
jdbc:api:Profile=C:\profiles\Drift.apip;Authscheme=OAuth;OAuthClientId=your_client_id;OAuthClientSecret=your_client_secret;CallbackUrl=your_callback_url;
After reverse engineering you can now work with Drift data in ODI.
To view Drift data, expand the Models accordion in the Designer navigator, right-click a table, and click View data.
π Viewing the data.
Follow the steps below to create an ETL from Drift. You will load Contacts entities into the sample data warehouse included in the ODI Getting Started VM.
Open SQL Developer and connect to your Oracle database. Right-click the node for your database in the Connections pane and click new SQL Worksheet.
Alternatively you can use SQLPlus. From a command prompt enter the following:
sqlplus / as sysdba
CREATE TABLE ODI_DEMO.TRG_CONTACTS (DISPLAYNAME NUMBER(20,0),Id VARCHAR2(255));
You can then run the mapping to load Drift data into Oracle.
Connect to live data from Drift with the API Driver
Connect to Drift