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Apache Airflow supports the creation, scheduling, and monitoring of data engineering workflows. When paired with the CData JDBC Driver for JSON, Airflow can work with live JSON services. This article describes how to connect to and query JSON services from an Apache Airflow instance and store the results in a CSV file.
With built-in optimized data processing, the CData JDBC driver offers unmatched performance for interacting with live JSON services. When you issue complex SQL queries to JSON, the driver pushes supported SQL operations, like filters and aggregations, directly to JSON and utilizes the embedded SQL engine to process unsupported operations client-side (often SQL functions and JOIN operations). Its built-in dynamic metadata querying allows you to work with and analyze JSON services using native data types.
For assistance in constructing the JDBC URL, use the connection string designer built into the JSON JDBC Driver. Either double-click the JAR file or execute the jar file from the command-line.
java -jar cdata.jdbc.json.jar
Fill in the connection properties and copy the connection string to the clipboard.
See the Getting Started chapter in the data provider documentation to authenticate to your data source: The data provider models JSON APIs as bidirectional database tables and JSON files as read-only views (local files, files stored on popular cloud services, and FTP servers). The major authentication schemes are supported, including HTTP Basic, Digest, NTLM, OAuth, and FTP. See the Getting Started chapter in the data provider documentation for authentication guides.
After setting the and providing any authentication values, set to more closely match the data representation to the structure of your data.
The property is the controlling property over how your data is represented into tables and toggles the following basic configurations.
See the Modeling JSON Data chapter for more information on configuring the relational representation. You will also find the sample data used in the following examples. The data includes entries for people, the cars they own, and various maintenance services performed on those cars.
π Using the built-in connection string designer to generate a JDBC URL (json is shown.)To host the JDBC driver in clustered environments or in the cloud, 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.
The following are essential properties needed for our JDBC connection.
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Database Connection URL | jdbc:json:RTK=5246...;URI=C:/people.json;DataModel=Relational; |
| Database Driver Class Name | cdata.jdbc.json.JSONDriver |
A DAG in Airflow is an entity that stores the processes for a workflow and can be triggered to run this workflow. Our workflow is to simply run a SQL query against JSON services and store the results in a CSV file.
import time
from datetime import datetime
from airflow.decorators import dag, task
from airflow.providers.jdbc.hooks.jdbc import JdbcHook
import pandas as pd
# Declare Dag
@dag(dag_id="json_hook", schedule_interval="0 10 * * *", start_date=datetime(2022,2,15), catchup=False, tags=['load_csv'])
# Define Dag Function
def extract_and_load():
# Define tasks
@task()
def jdbc_extract():
try:
hook = JdbcHook(jdbc_conn_id="jdbc")
sql = """ select * from Account """
df = hook.get_pandas_df(sql)
df.to_csv("/{some_file_path}/{name_of_csv}.csv",header=False, index=False, quoting=1)
# print(df.head())
print(df)
tbl_dict = df.to_dict('dict')
return tbl_dict
except Exception as e:
print("Data extract error: " + str(e))
jdbc_extract()
sf_extract_and_load = extract_and_load()
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