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Snowflake is a leading cloud data warehouse and a popular backbone for enterprise BI, analytics, data management, and governance initiatives. Snowflake offers features such as data sharing, real-time data processing, and secure data storage which makes it a common choice for cloud data consolidation.
The CData SSIS Components enhance SQL Server Integration Services by enabling users to easily import and export data from various sources and destinations.
In this article, we explore the data type mapping considerations when exporting to Snowflake and walk through how to migrate Salesforce data to Snowflake using the CData SSIS Components for Salesforce and Snowflake.
| Snowflake Schema | CData Schema |
|---|---|
|
NUMBER, DECIMAL, NUMERIC, INT, INTEGER, BIGINT, SMALLINT, TINYINT, BYTEINT |
decimal |
|
DOUBLE, FLOAT, FLOAT4, FLOAT8, DOUBLEPRECISION, REAL |
real |
|
VARCHAR, CHAR, STRING, TEXT, VARIANT, OBJECT, ARRAY, GEOGRAPHY |
varchar |
|
BINARY, VARBINARY |
binary |
|
BOOLEAN |
bool |
|
DATE |
date |
|
DATETIME, TIMESTAMP, TIMESTAMP_LTZ, TIMESTAMP_NTZ, TIMESTAMP_TZ |
datetime |
|
TIME |
time |
Timestamps: Snowflake supports three timestamp types:
By default the CData SSIS Components write timestamps to Snowflake as TIMESTAMP_NTZ unless manually configured.
Accessing and integrating live data from Salesforce has never been easier with CData. Customers rely on CData connectivity to:
Users frequently integrate Salesforce data with:
For more information on how CData solutions work with Salesforce, check out our Salesforce integration page.
Follow the steps below to specify properties required to connect to Salesforce.
There are several authentication methods available for connecting to Salesforce: OAuth, Login (or basic), and SSO. The Login method requires you to have the username, password, and security token of the user.
The default authentication mechanism (and the one preferred by Salesforce) is OAuth. To use OAuth with CData's embedded OAuth application, leave the connection properties blank. If you have configured your own custom OAuth application with Salesforce (see the Help documentation for more information), set OAuthClientId, OAuthClientSecret, and CallbackURL to the properties for you application. Set InitiateOAuth to the desired OAuth flow ("GETANDREFRESH" will have the connector manage the entire OAuth flow).
If you do not wish do not wish to use OAuth authentication, you can use Login (or basic) authentication. Set AuthScheme to Basic, and set the User, Password, and SecurityToken properties. You can configure your security token in Salesforce.
SSO (single sign-on) can be used by setting the SSOProperties, SSOLoginUrl, and SSOExchangeURL connection properties, which allow you to authenticate to an identity provider. See the "Getting Started" chapter in the Help documentation for more information.
If your Salesforce org has MFA enforcement enabled, set MFACode to the time-based one-time passcode (TOTP) generated by your authenticator app (such as Salesforce Authenticator or Google Authenticator). MFACode applies to both OAuth and Login authentication flows.
๐ Configure the source connection (Salesforce is shown)With the Salesforce Source configured, we can configure the Snowflake connection and map the columns.
You can now run the project. After the SSIS Task has finished executing, data from your SQL table will be exported to the chosen table.
Download a free trial of the Salesforce SSIS Component to get started:
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๐ Salesforce IconPowerful SSIS Source & Destination Components that allows you to easily connect SQL Server with live Salesforce account data through SSIS Workflows.
Use the Salesforce Data Flow Components to synchronize with Salesforce Leads, Contacts, Opportunities, Accounts, etc. Perfect for data synchronization, local back-ups, workflow automation, and more!