Getting Started with the CData PowerShell Cmdlets for HubDB Data
This guide explains everything you need to get started with the HubDB PowerShell Cmdlets. You'll learn how to install the cmdlets, configure your first connection, run queries, and explore next steps for working with HubDB data in PowerShell.
Installation & Licensing
System Requirements
CData PowerShell Cmdlets run anywhere PowerShell runs.
Windows
- Windows 10/11
- Windows Server 2016+
- PowerShell 5.1 or PowerShell 7+
macOS & Linux
- PowerShell 7+
- No additional system libraries required
- No architecture-specific installers
Installing the Cmdlets
CData Cmdlets are delivered through the PowerShell Gallery, ensuring a simple and consistent installation process across platforms.
Installation Steps
- Open PowerShell in Administrator mode
- Run the following command to install the cmdlet module:
Install-Module HubDBCmdlets -Repository PSGallery -Force
This command:
- Downloads the module from the official PowerShell Gallery
- Installs it into your PowerShell environment
- Registers all cmdlets for immediate use
Module Verification
To verify installation:
Get-Module -ListAvailable "*HubDB*"
Licensing
The cmdlets support both trial and fully licensed activation.
Trial Licensing
Trial activation is automatic - no key is required. Once installed, you can begin using the cmdlets immediately.
Activating a Full License
If you have purchased a full license, you will receive a product key from the CData Orders Team.
Activate Your License
Run the following command:
Set-ModuleLicense ""
You should see a confirmation message indicating successful activation.
Common Licensing Questions
Can I use my license on multiple machines?
Depending on your subscription tier. Refer to your order confirmation or contact [email protected].
I lost my license key. What do I do?
Email [email protected] with your order number to have it resent.
Can I transfer my license to another machine?
Submit a license transfer request here: https://www.cdata.com/lic/transfer/.
Where can I manage my license?
Visit the CData Customer Portal: https://portal.cdata.com/.
Connection Configuration
Once the module is installed and licensed, you can establish a connection to HubDB using the
Connect-HubDB cmdlet
After obtaining the needed connection properties, accessing HubDB data in PowerShell and preparing for replication consists of four basic steps.
There are two authentication methods available for connecting to HubDB data source: OAuth Authentication with a public HubSpot application and authentication with a Private application token.
Using a Custom OAuth App
AuthScheme must be set to "OAuth" in all OAuth flows. Be sure to review the Help documentation for the required connection properties for you specific authentication needs (desktop applications, web applications, and headless machines).
Follow the steps below to register an application and obtain the OAuth client credentials:
- Log into your HubSpot app developer account.
- Note that it must be an app developer account. Standard HubSpot accounts cannot create public apps.
- On the developer account home page, click the Apps tab.
- Click Create app.
- On the App info tab, enter and optionally modify values that are displayed to users when they connect. These values include the public application name, application logo, and a description of the application.
- On the Auth tab, supply a callback URL in the "Redirect URLs" box.
- If you're creating a desktop application, set this to a locally accessible URL like http://localhost:33333.
- If you are creating a Web application, set this to a trusted URL where you want users to be redirected to when they authorize your application.
- Click Create App. HubSpot then generates the application, along with its associated credentials.
- On the Auth tab, note the Client ID and Client secret. You will use these later to configure the driver.
Under Scopes, select any scopes you need for your application's intended functionality.
A minimum of the following scopes is required to access tables:
- hubdb
- oauth
- crm.objects.owners.read
- Click Save changes.
- Install the application into a production portal with access to the features that are required by the integration.
- Under "Install URL (OAuth)", click Copy full URL to copy the installation URL for your application.
- Navigate to the copied link in your browser. Select a standard account in which to install the application.
- Click Connect app. You can close the resulting tab.
Using a Private App
To connect using a HubSpot private application token, set the AuthScheme property to "PrivateApp."
You can generate a private application token by following the steps below:
- In your HubDB account, click the settings icon (the gear) in the main navigation bar.
- In the left sidebar menu, navigate to Integrations > Private Apps.
- Click Create private app.
- On the Basic Info tab, configure the details of your application (name, logo, and description).
- On the Scopes tab, select Read or Write for each scope you want your private application to be able to access.
- A minimum of hubdb and crm.objects.owners.read is required to access tables.
- After you are done configuring your application, click Create app in the top right.
- Review the info about your application's access token, click Continue creating, and then Show token.
- Click Copy to copy the private application token.
To connect, set PrivateAppToken to the private application token you retrieved.
Collecting HubDB Data
-
Install the module:
Install-Module HubDBCmdlets
-
Connect to HubDB:
$hubdb = Connect-HubDB -AuthScheme $AuthScheme -OAuthClientID $OAuthClientID -OAuthClientSecret $OAuthClientSecret -CallbackURL $CallbackURL -InitiateOAuth $InitiateOAuth
Querying HubDB Data in PowerShell
Once connected, you can query data using standard SQL like commands.
Example Query:
$results = Select-HubDB `
-Connection $conn `
-Table "NorthwindProducts" `
-Columns "PartitionKey,Name" `
-Where "PartitionKey != ''"
Display the results:
$results
You have now successfully accessed HubDB data from PowerShell!
Common Issues
Authentication Failed
Solution: Verify username, password, and security token. For OAuth applications, you may need to authorize CData in your application's security settings. Contact [email protected] for authorization assistance.
Network or Proxy Issues
Solution: Confirm firewall settings and outbound access. Most cloud applications use port 443.
Cmdlet Not Found
Solution: Ensure the module is installed-
Get-Module -ListAvailable "*HubDB*"
Slow Queries
Solution:
- Add filters to reduce dataset size
- Use $Limit or $Top properties where supported
- Contact [email protected] for optimization help
For additional connection troubleshooting, contact [email protected] with your specific error message.
What's Next?
Now that you have installed, licensed, and configured the PowerShell Cmdlets, here are some scenarios you can use to explore:
| PowerShell | Article Title |
|---|---|
| Piping Cmdlets | How to pipe HubDB Data to CSV in PowerShell |
| Replication | PowerShell Scripting to Replicate HubDB Data to MySQLl |
Get Support
If you need assistance:
- Technical Support: [email protected]
- Community Forum: CData Community Site
- Help Documentation: Installed locally and available online
FAQs (PowerShell Cmdlets)
Installation & Licensing
- Do I need administrator rights to install the cmdlets?
- Windows PowerShell 5.1 (Windows): Administrator rights are recommended, especially when installing modules for all users.
- PowerShell 7+ (Windows, macOS, Linux): You can install cmdlets for the current user without admin rights using:
Install-Module HubDBCmdlets -Scope CurrentUser
- Do I need to download an installer?
Not always.
CData PowerShell Cmdlets are delivered through the PowerShell Gallery. Installation is performed via:
Install-Module HubDBCmdlets -Repository PSGallery -Force
Connecting
- How do I connect to multiple accounts for the same data source?
Create separate connection objects-each with different authentication properties:
$conn1 = Connect-HubDB -User User1 -Password Pwd1
$conn2 = Connect-HubDB -User User2 -Password Pwd2
Cmdlets do not use ODBC DSNs. All connection properties are passed directly in
Connect-HubDB
Many cmdlets support proxy properties such as:
- ProxyServer
- ProxyPort
- ProxyUser
- ProxyPassword
Refer to the data-source-specific Help documentation.
Performance & Troubleshooting
- Why are my queries slow?
- Missing filters (e.g., no WHERE clause)
- Pulling large result sets
- Latency from cloud APIs
- Not using incremental strategies
- Filtering data (-Where parameter)
- Selecting only required columns
- Reviewing API throttling limits for your data source
- How do I enable logging?
Common causes:
Try:
Contact [email protected] for query optimization assistance.
Enable module logging with:
Set-ModuleLogging -Path "C:\logs\cdata.log" -Verbosity 3Upload the log file securely when working with CData Support.
Most cloud applications (Salesforce, HubSpot, Dynamics, Google APIs, etc.) use: HTTPS (443)
If your source requires additional ports, check its specific documentation or contact [email protected].
Install PowerShell 7 in the container and install the module:
pwsh -Command "Install-Module HubDBCmdlets -Force"Then authenticate normally.
General
- Where can I find all supported SQL/command operations?
- How often are PowerShell Cmdlets updated?
- Where can I find code examples?
- Basic queries
- Insert/update/delete
- OAuth flows
- File operations
- API integration
Each cmdlet includes a Help documentation set installed locally and available online: https://www.cdata.com/powershell/.
CData releases major annual updates plus incremental updates throughout the year. Check your customer portal or contact [email protected] for version availability.
Every Cmdlet includes examples in the Help documentation, plus online examples for many services: https://www.cdata.com/powershell/. Examples include:
For questions not covered in this FAQ, [email protected].