Migrating data from Oracle Eloqua Reporting to Snowflake using CData SSIS Components.
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 Oracle Eloqua Reporting data to Snowflake using the CData SSIS Components for Oracle Eloqua Reporting and Snowflake.
Data Type Mapping
| 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 |
Special Considerations
- Casing: Snowflake enforces an exact case match by default for identifiers, so it is common to run into issues that can be attributed to mismatched casing. Set the IgnoreCase property to True in your CData SSIS Components for Snowflake connection to resolve these issues. This property directly maps to the QUOTED_IDENTIFIERS_IGNORE_CASE property in Snowflake and specifies whether Snowflake will treat identifiers as case-sensitive.
-
Timestamps: Snowflake supports three timestamp types:
- TIMESTAMP_NTZ: This timestamp stores UTC time with a specified precision. However, all operations are performed in the current session's time zone, controlled by the TIMEZONE session parameter.
- TIMESTAMP_LTZ: This timestamp stores "wallclock" time with a specified precision. All operations are performed without taking any time zone into account.
- TIMESTAMP_TZ: This timestamp stores UTC time together with an associated time zone offset. When a time zone isn't provided, the session time zone offset is used.
By default the CData SSIS Components write timestamps to Snowflake as TIMESTAMP_NTZ unless manually configured.
Prerequisites
- Visual Studio 2022
- SQL Server Integration Services Projects extension for Visual Studio 2022
- CData SSIS Components for Snowflake
- CData SSIS Components for Oracle Eloqua Reporting
Create the project and add components
-
Open Visual Studio and create a new Integration Services Project.
- Add a new Data Flow Task to the Control Flow screen and open the Data Flow Task.
-
Add a CData Oracle Eloqua Reporting Source control and a CData Snowflake Destination control to the data flow task.
Configure the Oracle Eloqua Reporting source
Follow the steps below to specify properties required to connect to Oracle Eloqua Reporting.
-
Double-click the CData Oracle Eloqua Reporting Source to open the source component editor and add a new connection.
-
In the CData Oracle Eloqua Reporting Connection Manager, configure the connection properties, then test and save the connection.
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.
-
After saving the connection, select "Table or view" and select the table or view to export into Snowflake, then close the CData Oracle Eloqua Reporting Source Editor.
Configure the Snowflake destination
With the Oracle Eloqua Reporting Source configured, we can configure the Snowflake connection and map the columns.
-
Double-click the CData Snowflake Destination to open the destination component editor and add a new connection.
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In the CData Snowflake Connection Manager, configure the connection properties, then test and save the connection.
- The component supports Snowflake user authentication, federated authentication, and SSL client authentication. To authenticate, set User and Password, and select the authentication method in the AuthScheme property. Starting with accounts created using Snowflake’s bundle 2024_08 (October 2024), password-based authentication is no longer supported due to security concerns. Instead, use alternative authentication methods such as OAuth or Private Key authentication.
Other helpful connection properties
- QueryPassthrough: When this is set to True, queries are passed through directly to Snowflake.
- ConvertDateTimetoGMT: When this is set to True, the components will convert date-time values to GMT, instead of the local time of the machine.
- IgnoreCase: A session parameter that specifies whether Snowflake will treat identifiers as case sensitive. Default: false(case is sensitive).
- BindingType: There are two kinds of binding types: DEFAULT and TEXT. DEFAULT uses the binding type DATE for the Date type, TIME for the Time type, and TIMESTAMP_* for the Timestamp_* type. TEST uses the binding type TEXT for Date, Time, and Timestamp_* types.
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After saving the connection, select a table in the Use a Table menu and in the Action menu, select Insert.
-
On the Column Mappings tab, configure the mappings from the input columns to the destination columns.
Run the project
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.