Getting Started with the CData PowerShell Cmdlets for IBM Cloud Object Storage Data

Somya Sharma
Somya Sharma
Technical Marketing Engineer
Complete guide to installing, licensing, and connecting IBM Cloud Object Storage PowerShell Cmdlets.

This guide explains everything you need to get started with the IBM Cloud Object Storage PowerShell Cmdlets. You'll learn how to install the cmdlets, configure your first connection, run queries, and explore next steps for working with IBM Cloud Object Storage 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

  1. Open PowerShell in Administrator mode
  2. Run the following command to install the cmdlet module:
    Install-Module IBMCloudObjectStorageCmdlets -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 "*IBMCloudObjectStorage*"

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 IBM Cloud Object Storage using the

Connect-IBM Cloud Object Storage cmdlet

After obtaining the needed connection properties, accessing IBM Cloud Object Storage data in PowerShell and preparing for replication consists of four basic steps.

Register a New Instance of Cloud Object Storage

If you do not already have Cloud Object Storage in your IBM Cloud account, follow the procedure below to install an instance of SQL Query in your account:

  1. Log in to your IBM Cloud account.
  2. Navigate to the page, choose a name for your instance and click Create. You will be redirected to the instance of Cloud Object Storage you just created.

Connecting using OAuth Authentication

There are certain connection properties you need to set before you can connect. You can obtain these as follows:

API Key

To connect with IBM Cloud Object Storage, you need an API Key. You can obtain this as follows:

  1. Log in to your IBM Cloud account.
  2. Navigate to the Platform API Keys page.
  3. On the middle-right corner click "Create an IBM Cloud API Key" to create a new API Key.
  4. In the pop-up window, specify the API Key name and click "Create". Note the API Key as you can never access it again from the dashboard.

Cloud Object Storage CRN

If you have multiple accounts, specify the CloudObjectStorageCRN explicitly. To find the appropriate value, you can:

  • Query the Services view. This will list your IBM Cloud Object Storage instances along with the CRN for each.
  • Locate the CRN directly in IBM Cloud. To do so, navigate to your IBM Cloud Dashboard. In the Resource List, Under Storage, select your Cloud Object Storage resource to get its CRN.

Connecting to Data

You can now set the following to connect to data:

  • InitiateOAuth: Set this to GETANDREFRESH. You can use InitiateOAuth to avoid repeating the OAuth exchange and manually setting the OAuthAccessToken.
  • ApiKey: Set this to your API key which was noted during setup.
  • CloudObjectStorageCRN (Optional): Set this to the cloud object storage CRN you want to work with. While the connector attempts to retrieve this automatically, specifying this explicitly is recommended if you have more than Cloud Object Storage account.

When you connect, the connector completes the OAuth process.

  1. Extracts the access token and authenticates requests.
  2. Saves OAuth values in OAuthSettingsLocation to be persisted across connections.

Collecting IBM Cloud Object Storage Data

  1. Install the module:

    Install-Module IBMCloudObjectStorageCmdlets
  2. Connect to IBM Cloud Object Storage:

      $ibmcloudobjectstorage = Connect-IBMCloudObjectStorage  -ApiKey $ApiKey -CloudObjectStorageCRN $CloudObjectStorageCRN -Region $Region -OAuthClientId $OAuthClientId -OAuthClientSecret $OAuthClientSecret
      

Querying IBM Cloud Object Storage Data in PowerShell

Once connected, you can query data using standard SQL like commands.

Example Query:

$results = Select-IBMCloudObjectStorage `
    -Connection $conn `
    -Table "Objects" `
    -Columns "Key,Etag" `
    -Where "Key != ''"

Display the results:

$results

You have now successfully accessed IBM Cloud Object Storage 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 "*IBM Cloud Object Storage*"

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:


Get Support

If you need assistance:

FAQs (PowerShell Cmdlets)

Installation & Licensing

  • Do I need administrator rights to install the cmdlets?
  • Not always.

    • 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 IBMCloudObjectStorageCmdlets -Scope CurrentUser
  • Do I need to download an installer?
  • CData PowerShell Cmdlets are delivered through the PowerShell Gallery. Installation is performed via:

    Install-Module IBMCloudObjectStorageCmdlets -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-IBMCloudObjectStorage -User User1 -Password Pwd1
    $conn2 = Connect-IBMCloudObjectStorage -User User2 -Password Pwd2
  • Does PowerShell Cmdlets require a DSN?
  • Cmdlets do not use ODBC DSNs. All connection properties are passed directly in

    Connect-IBM Cloud Object Storage

  • Can I connect through a proxy server?
  • 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?
  • Common causes:

    • Missing filters (e.g., no WHERE clause)
    • Pulling large result sets
    • Latency from cloud APIs
    • Not using incremental strategies

    Try:

    • Filtering data (-Where parameter)
    • Selecting only required columns
    • Reviewing API throttling limits for your data source

    Contact [email protected] for query optimization assistance.

  • How do I enable logging?
  • Enable module logging with:

    Set-ModuleLogging -Path "C:\logs\cdata.log" -Verbosity 3
    Upload the log file securely when working with CData Support.

  • What ports need to be open?
  • 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].

  • Can I use the cmdlets in containers (Docker, Kubernetes)?
  • Install PowerShell 7 in the container and install the module:

    pwsh -Command "Install-Module IBMCloudObjectStorageCmdlets -Force"
    Then authenticate normally.

General

  • Where can I find all supported SQL/command operations?
  • Each cmdlet includes a Help documentation set installed locally and available online: https://www.cdata.com/powershell/.

  • How often are PowerShell Cmdlets updated?
  • CData releases major annual updates plus incremental updates throughout the year. Check your customer portal or contact [email protected] for version availability.

  • Where can I find code examples?
  • Every Cmdlet includes examples in the Help documentation, plus online examples for many services: https://www.cdata.com/powershell/. Examples include:

    • Basic queries
    • Insert/update/delete
    • OAuth flows
    • File operations
    • API integration

For questions not covered in this FAQ, [email protected].

Ready to get started?

Download a free trial of the IBM Cloud Object Storage Cmdlets to get started:

 Download Now

Learn more:

IBM Cloud Object Storage Icon IBM Cloud Object Storage Data Cmdlets

An easy-to-use set of PowerShell Cmdlets offering real-time access to IBM Cloud Object Storage. The Cmdlets allow users to easily read, write, update, and delete live data - just like working with SQL server.