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URL: https://www.cdata.com/kb/tech/eloquareporting-jdbc-aws-lambda.rst

⇱ Access Live Oracle Eloqua Reporting Data in AWS Lambda


Access Live Oracle Eloqua Reporting Data in AWS Lambda

πŸ‘ Jerod Johnson
Jerod Johnson
Director, Technology Evangelism
Connect to live Oracle Eloqua Reporting data in AWS Lambda using the CData JDBC Driver.

AWS Lambda is a compute service that lets you build applications that respond quickly to new information and events. AWS Lambda functions can work with live Oracle Eloqua Reporting data when paired with the CData JDBC Driver for Oracle Eloqua Reporting. This article describes how to connect to and query Oracle Eloqua Reporting data from an AWS Lambda function built in Eclipse.

At the time this article was written (June 2022), Eclipse version 2019-12 and Java 8 were the highest versions supported by the AWS Toolkit for Eclipse.

With built-in optimized data processing, the CData JDBC Driver offers unmatched performance for interacting with live Oracle Eloqua Reporting data. When you issue complex SQL queries to Oracle Eloqua Reporting, the driver pushes supported SQL operations, like filters and aggregations, directly to Oracle Eloqua Reporting and utilizes the embedded SQL engine to process unsupported operations client-side (often SQL functions and JOIN operations). In addition, its built-in dynamic metadata querying allows you to work with and analyze Oracle Eloqua Reporting data using native data types.

Gather Connection Properties and Build a Connection String

Oracle Eloqua Reporting supports the following authentication methods:

  • Basic authentication (User and Password)
  • OAuth 2.0 code grant flow
  • OAuth 2.0 password grant flow

Basic Authentication (User and Password)

To perform authentication with a user and password, specify these properties:

  • AuthScheme: Basic.
  • Company: The company name associated with your Oracle Eloqua Reporting account.
  • User: Your login account name.
  • Password: Your login password.

OAuth Authentication (Code Grant Flow)

To authenticate with the OAuth code grant flow, you must set AuthScheme to OAuth and create a custom OAuth application. For information about how to create a custom OAuth application, see the Help documentation.

Then set the following properties:

  • InitiateOAuth: GETANDREFRESH. Used to automatically get and refresh the OAuthAccessToken.
  • OAuthClientId: The client Id assigned when you registered your application.
  • OAuthClientSecret: The client secret that was assigned when you registered your application.
  • CallbackURL: The redirect URI that was defined when you registered your application.

When you connect, the driver opens Oracle Eloqua Reporting's OAuth endpoint in your default browser. Log in and grant permissions to the application. When the access token expires, the driver refreshes it automatically.

OAuth Authentication (Password Grant Flow)

With the OAuth password grant flow, you can use your OAuth application's credentials alongside your user credentials to authenticate without the need to grant permission manually via a browser prompt. You must create an OAuth app (see the Help documentation) to use this authentication method.

Set the following properties:

  • AuthScheme: OAuthPassword
  • Company: The company's unique identifier.
  • User: Your login account name.
  • Password: Your login password.
  • OAuthClientId: The client Id assigned when you registered your custom OAuth application.
  • OAuthClientSecret: The client secret assigned when you registered your custom OAuth application.

NOTE: To use the JDBC driver in an AWS Lambda function, you will need a license (full or trial) and a Runtime Key (RTK). For more information on obtaining this license (or a trial), contact our sales team.

Built-in Connection String Designer

For assistance constructing the JDBC URL, use the connection string designer built into the Oracle Eloqua Reporting JDBC Driver. Double-click the JAR file or execute the jar file from the command line.

java -jar cdata.jdbc.oracleeloquareporting.jar
πŸ‘ Using the built-in connection string designer to generate a JDBC URL (Salesforce is shown.)

Fill in the connection properties (including the RTK) and copy the connection string to the clipboard.

Create an AWS Lambda Function

  1. Download the CData JDBC Driver for Oracle Eloqua Reporting installer, unzip the package, and run the JAR file to install the driver.
  2. Create a new AWS Lambda Java Project in Eclipse using the AWS Toolkit for Eclipse. You can follow the tutorial from AWS (amazon.com).

    For this article, set the Input Type for the project to "Custom" so we can enter a table name as the input.

    πŸ‘ Creating a new AWS Lambda Java project
  3. Add the CData JDBC Driver for Oracle Eloqua Reporting JAR file (cdata.jdbc.oracleeloquareporting.jar) to the build path. The file is found in INSTALL_PATH\lib\. πŸ‘ Adding the JDBC Driver JAR file
  4. Add the following import statements to the Java class:
    import java.sql.Connection;
    import java.sql.DriverManager;
    import java.sql.ResultSet;
    import java.sql.ResultSetMetaData;
    import java.sql.SQLException;
    import java.sql.Statement;
    
  5. Replace the body of the handleRequest method with the code below. Be sure to fill in the connection string in the DriverManager.getConnection method call.

    String query = "SELECT * FROM " + input;
    
    try {
    	Class.forName("cdata.jdbc.oracleeloquareporting.OracleEloquaReportingDriver");
    } catch (ClassNotFoundException ex) {
    	context.getLogger().log("Error: class not found");
    }
    
    Connection connection = null;
     
    try {
    	connection = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:cdata:oracleeloquareporting:RTK=52465...;AuthScheme=Basic;User=user;Password=password;Company=MyCompany;");
    } catch (SQLException ex) {
    	context.getLogger().log("Error getting connection: " + ex.getMessage());
    } catch (Exception ex) {
    	context.getLogger().log("Error: " + ex.getMessage());
    }
     
    if(connection != null)
    {
    	context.getLogger().log("Connected Successfully!\n");
    }
     
    ResultSet resultSet = null;
    try
    {
    	//executing query
    	Statement stmt = connection.createStatement();
    	resultSet = stmt.executeQuery(query);
    
    	ResultSetMetaData metaData = resultSet.getMetaData();
    	int numCols = metaData.getColumnCount();
    
    	//printing the results
    	while(resultSet.next())
    	{
    		for(int i = 1; i <= numCols; i++)
    		{
    			System.out.printf("%-25s", (resultSet.getObject(i) != null) ? resultSet.getObject(i).toString().replaceAll("\n", "") : null );
    		}
    		System.out.print("\n");
    	}
    }
    catch (SQLException ex)
    {
    	System.out.println("SQL Exception: " + ex.getMessage());
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
    	System.out.println("General exception: " + ex.getMessage());
    }
     
    String output = "query: " + query + " complete";
    return output;
    

Deploy and Run the Lambda Function

Once you build the function in Eclipse, you are ready to upload and run the function. In this article, the output is written to the AWS logs, but you can use this is a template to implement you own custom business logic to work with Oracle Eloqua Reporting data in AWS Lambda functions.

  1. Right-click the Package and select Amazon Web Services -> Upload function to AWS Lamba. πŸ‘ Uploading the function to AWS Lambda
  2. Name the function, select an IAM role, and set the timeout value to a high enough value to ensure the function completes (depending on the result size of your query).
  3. Right-click the Package and select Amazon Web Services -> Run function on AWS Lambda and set the input to the name of the Oracle Eloqua Reporting object you wish to query (i.e. ""). πŸ‘ Entering the table name as input
  4. After the job runs, you can view the output in the CloudWatch logs. πŸ‘ The data in AWS CloudWatch (Salesforce is shown).

Free Trial & More Information

Download a free, 30-day trial of the CData JDBC Driver for Oracle Eloqua Reporting and start working with your live Oracle Eloqua Reporting data in AWS Lambda. Reach out to our Support Team if you have any questions.

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Download a free trial of the Oracle Eloqua Reporting Driver to get started:

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