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Tableau Server is a visual analytics platform transforming the way businesses use data to solve problems. When paired with the CData Tableau Connector for Elasticsearch, you get access to live Elasticsearch data within Tableau Server. This article shows how to connect to Elasticsearch in Tableau Desktop, publish a Data Source to Tableau Server, and build a simple chart from that data.
The CData Tableau Connectors enable high-speed access to live Elasticsearch data in Tableau Server. Once you install the connector, you simply authenticate with Elasticsearch and you can immediately start building responsive, dynamic visualizations and dashboards. By surfacing Elasticsearch data using native Tableau data types and handling complex filters, aggregations, & other operations automatically, CData Tableau Connectors grant seamless access to Elasticsearch data.
NOTE: The CData Tableau Connectors require Tableau 2020.3 or higher. If you are using an older version of Tableau, you will need to use the CData JDBC Driver. If you wish to connect to Elasticsearch data in Tableau Cloud, you will need to use CData Connect AI.
Accessing and integrating live data from Elasticsearch has never been easier with CData. Customers rely on CData connectivity to:
Users frequently integrate Elasticsearch data with analytics tools such as Crystal Reports, Power BI, and Excel, and leverage our tools to enable a single, federated access layer to all of their data sources, including Elasticsearch.
For more information on CData's Elasticsearch solutions, check out our Knowledge Base article: CData Elasticsearch Driver Features & Differentiators.
Start by installing the CData Tableau Connector on the machine hosting Tableau Server.
java -jar cdata.tableau.elasticsearch.jar -l
If you cannot execute the java commmand from step 2, you will need to install a Java runtime environment. The name of this package differs on Red Hat-based and Debian-based systems:
| OS | Java Package |
|---|---|
| Ubuntu | openjdk-8-jre-headless |
| Debian | openjdk-8-jre-headless |
| RHEL | java-1.8.0-openjdk |
| CentOS | java-1.8.0-openjdk |
| Fedora | java-1.8.0-openjdk |
| SUSE | java-1_8_0-openjdk |
You can substitute Java 8 with a later Java release as needed.
Once the connectors are installed on the Server machine, we can configure a connection to Elasticsearch in Tableau Desktop and publish a Elasticsearch-based Data Source to Tableau Server.
Set the Server and Port connection properties to connect. To authenticate, set the User and Password properties, PKI (public key infrastructure) properties, or both. To use PKI, set the SSLClientCert, SSLClientCertType, SSLClientCertSubject, and SSLClientCertPassword properties.
The data provider uses X-Pack Security for TLS/SSL and authentication. To connect over TLS/SSL, prefix the Server value with 'https://'. Note: TLS/SSL and client authentication must be enabled on X-Pack to use PKI.
Once the data provider is connected, X-Pack will then perform user authentication and grant role permissions based on the realms you have configured.
Once you establish the connection to Elasticsearch data, you can configure which entities to visualize.
After you configure the data you wish to visualize, you can publish the Data Source to a Tableau Server instance. In Tableau Desktop:
This creates a new entry under the server's data source list, from which you an change the data source's permissions, view its history, and perform other management tasks.
π Data Source EntryNote that workstation connected to the same server will be able to use the same source in Tableau Desktop, even if the connector isn't installed there. Also, workbooks created directly on Tableau Server (via the web interface) can use this source.
With the Data Source published to Tableau Server, you are ready to visualize Elasticsearch data.
Using the CData Tableau Connector for Elasticsearch with Tableau Server, you can easily create robust visualizations and reports on Elasticsearch data. Download a free, 30-day trial and get started today.
Download a free trial of the Elasticsearch Tableau Connector to get started:
Download NowLearn more:
π Elasticsearch IconThe fastest and easiest way to connect Tableau to Elasticsearch data. Includes comprehensive high-performance data access, real-time integration, extensive metadata discovery, and robust SQL-92 support.