Build Trello-Connected ETL Processes in Google Data Fusion



Load the CData JDBC Driver into Google Data Fusion and create ETL processes with access live Trello data.

Google Data Fusion allows users to perform self-service data integration to consolidate disparate data. Uploading the CData JDBC Driver for Trello enables users to access live Trello data from within their Google Data Fusion pipelines. While the CData JDBC Driver enables piping Trello data to any data source natively supported in Google Data Fusion, this article walks through piping data from Trello to Google BigQuery,

Upload the CData JDBC Driver for Trello to Google Data Fusion

Upload the CData JDBC Driver for Trello to your Google Data Fusion instance to work with live Trello data. Due to the naming restrictions for JDBC drivers in Google Data Fusion, create a copy or rename the JAR file to match the following format driver-version.jar. For example: cdatatrello-2020.jar

  1. Open your Google Data Fusion instance
  2. Click the to add an entity and upload a driver
  3. On the "Upload driver" tab, drag or browse to the renamed JAR file.
  4. On the "Driver configuration" tab:
    • Name: Create a name for the driver (cdata.jdbc.trello) and make note of the name
    • Class name: Set the JDBC class name: (cdata.jdbc.trello.TrelloDriver)
  5. Click "Finish"

Connect to Trello Data in Google Data Fusion

With the JDBC Driver uploaded, you are ready to work with live Trello data in Google Data Fusion Pipelines.

  1. Navigate to the Pipeline Studio to create a new Pipeline
  2. From the "Source" options, click "Database" to add a source for the JDBC Driver
  3. Click "Properties" on the Database source to edit the properties

    NOTE: To use the JDBC Driver in Google Data Fusion, 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.

    • Set the Label
    • Set Reference Name to a value for any future references (i.e.: cdata-trello)
    • Set Plugin Type to "jdbc"
    • Set Connection String to the JDBC URL for Trello. For example:

      jdbc:trello:RTK=5246...;APIKey=myApiKey;Token=myGeneratedToken;InitiateOAuth=GETANDREFRESH;

      Trello uses token-based authentication to grant third-party applications access to their API. When a user has granted an application access to their data, the application is given a token that can be used to make requests to Trello's API.

      Trello's API can be accessed in 2 different ways. The first is using Trello's own Authorization Route, and the second is using OAuth1.0.

      • Authorization Route: At the moment of registration, Trello assigns an API key and Token to the account. See the Help documentation for information on how to connect via the Authorization route.
      • OAuth Route: Similar to using Authorization, OAuth creates an Application Id and Secret when you create your account. See the Help documentation for information on how to to connect.

      Built-in Connection String Designer

      For assistance in constructing the JDBC URL, use the connection string designer built into the Trello JDBC Driver. Either double-click the JAR file or execute the jar file from the command-line.

      java -jar cdata.jdbc.trello.jar

      Fill in the connection properties and copy the connection string to the clipboard.

    • Set Import Query to a SQL query that will extract the data you want from Trello, i.e.:
      SELECT * FROM Boards
  4. From the "Sink" tab, click to add a destination sink (we use Google BigQuery in this example)
  5. Click "Properties" on the BigQuery sink to edit the properties
    • Set the Label
    • Set Reference Name to a value like trello-bigquery
    • Set Project ID to a specific Google BigQuery Project ID (or leave as the default, "auto-detect")
    • Set Dataset to a specific Google BigQuery dataset
    • Set Table to the name of the table you wish to insert Trello data into

With the Source and Sink configured, you are ready to pipe Trello data into Google BigQuery. Save and deploy the pipeline. When you run the pipeline, Google Data Fusion will request live data from Trello and import it into Google BigQuery.

While this is a simple pipeline, you can create more complex Trello pipelines with transforms, analytics, conditions, and more. Download a free, 30-day trial of the CData JDBC Driver for Trello and start working with your live Trello data in Google Data Fusion today.

Ready to get started?

Download a free trial of the Trello Driver to get started:

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Rapidly create and deploy powerful Java applications that integrate with Trello data including List, Cards, Boards, and more!