How to connect and process ZohoExpense data from Azure Databricks

Jerod Johnson
Jerod Johnson
Director, Technology Evangelism
Use CData, Azure, and Databricks to perform data engineering and data science on live ZohoExpense data.

Databricks is a cloud-based service that provides data processing capabilities through Apache Spark. When paired with the CData JDBC Driver, customers can use Databricks to perform data engineering and data science on live ZohoExpense data. This article explains how to host the CData JDBC Driver in Azure, as well as connect to and process live ZohoExpense data in Databricks.

With built-in optimized data processing, the CData JDBC driver offers unmatched performance for interacting with live ZohoExpense data. When you issue complex SQL queries to ZohoExpense, the driver pushes supported SQL operations, like filters and aggregations, directly to ZohoExpense and utilizes the embedded SQL engine to process unsupported operations client-side (often SQL functions and JOIN operations). Its built-in dynamic metadata querying allows you to work with and analyze ZohoExpense data using native data types.

Install the CData JDBC Driver in Azure

To work with live ZohoExpense data in Databricks, install the driver through Azure Data Lake Storage (ADLS). (Please note that the method of connecting through DBFS, which previous versions of this article described, has been deprecated, but has not published an end-of-life.)

  1. Upload the JDBC JAR file to a blob container of your choice (i.e. "jdbcjars" container of the "databrickslibraries" storage account).
  2. Fetch the Account Key from the storage account by expanding "Security + networking" and clicking on "Access Keys". Show and copy whichever of the two keys you wish to use.
  3. Get the JDBC JAR file's URL by navigating to Containers, opening the specific container storing the JAR, and selecting the entry for the JDBC JAR file. This should open the file's details, where there should be a convenient button to copy the URL button to clipboard. This value will look similar to the below, though the "blob" component may vary depending on storage account type:
    https://databrickslibraries.blob.core.windows.net/jdbcjars/cdata.jdbc.salesforce.jar
  4. In the Configuration tab of your Databricks cluster, click on the Edit button and expand "Advanced options". From there, add the following Spark option (derived from the JAR URL's domain name) with your copied Account key as its value and click Confirm: spark.hadoop.fs.azure.account.key.databrickslibraries.blob.core.windows.net
  5. In the Libraries tab of your Databricks cluster, click on "Install new", and select the ADLS option. Specify the ABFSS URL for the driver JAR (also derived from the JAR URL's domain name), and click Install. The ABFSS URL should resemble the below:
    abfss://[email protected]/cdata.jdbc.salesforce.jar

Connect to ZohoExpense from Databricks

With the JAR file installed, we are ready to work with live ZohoExpense data in Databricks. Start by creating a new notebook in your workspace. Name the workbook, make sure Python is selected as the language (which should be by default), click on Connect and under General Compute select the cluster where you installed the JDBC driver (should be selected by default).

Configure the Connection to ZohoExpense

Connect to ZohoExpense by referencing the class for the JDBC Driver and constructing a connection string to use in the JDBC URL. Additionally, you will need to set the RTK property in the JDBC URL (unless you are using a Beta driver). You can view the licensing file included in the installation for information on how to set this property.

driver = "cdata.jdbc.api.APIDriver"
url = "jdbc:api:RTK=5246...;Profile=C:\profiles\ZohoExpense.apip;Authscheme=OAuth;OAuthClientId=your_client_id;OAuthClientSecret=your_client_secret;CallbackUrl=your_callback_url;"

Built-in Connection String Designer

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

java -jar cdata.jdbc.api.jar

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

Start by setting the Profile connection property to the location of the ZohoExpense Profile on disk (e.g. C:\profiles\ZohoExpense.apip). Next, set the ProfileSettings connection property to the connection string for ZohoExpense (see below).

ZohoExpense API Profile Settings

Register an OAuth application in the Zoho Developer Console to obtain your Client ID and Client Secret.

Load ZohoExpense Data

Once the connection is configured, you can load ZohoExpense data as a dataframe using the CData JDBC Driver and the connection information.

remote_table = spark.read.format ( "jdbc" ) \
	.option ( "driver" , driver) \
	.option ( "url" , url) \
	.option ( "dbtable" , "Currencies") \
	.load ()

Display ZohoExpense Data

Check the loaded ZohoExpense data by calling the display function.

display (remote_table.select ("Id"))

Analyze ZohoExpense Data in Azure Databricks

If you want to process data with Databricks SparkSQL, register the loaded data as a Temp View.

remote_table.createOrReplaceTempView ( "SAMPLE_VIEW" )

The SparkSQL below retrieves the ZohoExpense data for analysis.

result = spark.sql("SELECT Id, CurrencyName FROM SAMPLE_VIEW WHERE CurrencyCode = 'USD'")

The data from ZohoExpense is only available in the target notebook. If you want to use it with other users, save it as a table.

remote_table.write.format ( "parquet" ) .saveAsTable ( "SAMPLE_TABLE" )

Download a free, 30-day trial of the CData API Driver for JDBC and start working with your live ZohoExpense data in Azure Databricks. Reach out to our Support Team if you have any questions.

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Connect to live data from ZohoExpense with the API Driver

Connect to ZohoExpense