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Access HubSpot data with pure R script and standard SQL on any machine where R and Java can be installed. You can use the CData JDBC Driver for HubSpot and the RJDBC package to work with remote HubSpot data in R. By using the CData Driver, you are leveraging a driver written for industry-proven standards to access your data in the popular, open-source R language. This article shows how to use the driver to execute SQL queries to HubSpot and visualize HubSpot data by calling standard R functions.
CData provides the easiest way to access and integrate live data from HubSpot. Customers use CData connectivity to:
Users frequently integrate HubSpot with analytics tools such as Tableau, Power BI, and Excel, and leverage our tools to replicate HubSpot data to databases or data warehouses.
To learn about how other customers are using CData's HubSpot solutions, check out our blog: Drivers in Focus: Simplified HubSpot Connectivity.
You can match the driver's performance gains from multi-threading and managed code by running the multithreaded Microsoft R Open or by running open R linked with the BLAS/LAPACK libraries. This article uses Microsoft R Open 3.2.3, which is preconfigured to install packages from the Jan. 1, 2016 snapshot of the CRAN repository. This snapshot ensures reproducibility.
To use the driver, download the RJDBC package. After installing the RJDBC package, the following line loads the package:
library(RJDBC)
You will need the following information to connect to HubSpot as a JDBC data source:
The DBI functions, such as dbConnect and dbSendQuery, provide a unified interface for writing data access code in R. Use the following line to initialize a DBI driver that can make JDBC requests to the CData JDBC Driver for HubSpot:
driver <- JDBC(driverClass = "cdata.jdbc.hubspot.HubSpotDriver", classPath = "MyInstallationDir\lib\cdata.jdbc.hubspot.jar", identifier.quote = "'")
You can now use DBI functions to connect to HubSpot and execute SQL queries. Initialize the JDBC connection with the dbConnect function.
HubSpot uses the OAuth authentication standard. You can use the embedded OAuthClientId, OAuthClientSecret, and CallbackURL or you can obtain your own by registering an app.
See the Getting Started chapter of the help documentation for a guide to using OAuth.
For assistance in constructing the JDBC URL, use the connection string designer built into the HubSpot JDBC Driver. Either double-click the JAR file or execute the jar file from the command-line.
java -jar cdata.jdbc.hubspot.jar
Fill in the connection properties and copy the connection string to the clipboard.
👁 Using the built-in connection string designer to generate a JDBC URL (Salesforce is shown.)Below is a sample dbConnect call, including a typical JDBC connection string:
conn <- dbConnect(driver,"jdbc:hubspot:InitiateOAuth=GETANDREFRESH;")
The driver models HubSpot APIs as relational tables, views, and stored procedures. Use the following line to retrieve the list of tables:
dbListTables(conn)
You can use the dbGetQuery function to execute any SQL query supported by the HubSpot API:
prospects <- dbGetQuery(conn,"SELECT Slug, PageViews FROM Prospects")
You can view the results in a data viewer window with the following command:
View(prospects)
You can now analyze HubSpot data with any of the data visualization packages available in the CRAN repository. You can create simple bar plots with the built-in bar plot function:
par(las=2,ps=10,mar=c(5,15,4,2)) barplot(prospects$PageViews, main="HubSpot Prospects", names.arg = prospects$Slug, horiz=TRUE)👁 A basic bar plot. (Salesforce is shown.)
Download a free trial of the HubSpot Driver to get started:
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