Note
This documentation is for a prior release of Kinetica. For the latest documentation, click here.
Using the JDBC Data Source Import wizard, tables located in another database can be imported into Kinetica via JDBC.
To import a table from a remote database into Kinetica, click on any of the data source panels listed under JDBC Data Sources on the Import landing page in Workbench.
The JDBC Data Source Import wizard appears in the right-hand pane, noting the specific source selected.
The wizard has two tabs:
- Import - contains the 5-step process for importing files from remote data sources using JDBC
- History - lists all of your previous JDBC Data Source import attempts
Import Overview
When importing, the following five steps will need to be completed:
At any step, the following actions are available at the bottom of the screen:
- Next - proceed to the next step
- Back - return to the previous step
- Cancel - exit the import process
- Import - once enough information has been specified to begin importing data, the Import button will become active
Setup
In this step, the data source used to connect to the remote database is selected.
- Create New Data Source - click to create a new
data source that connects to the remote data source, then enter its
configuration and click Create to create the data source
and proceed to the Source selection page:
- Name - enter a unique name for the data source
- URL - select either an assisted or manual scheme for
entering connection information
- Assisted - enter the parameters for connecting to the remote data source; the JDBC connection string will be built automatically and displayed in the preview box
- Manual - enter the JDBC connection string to connect to the remote data source
- Various other connection-related parameters can be specified
- Select Existing Data Source - click to select an existing
data source that connects to the remote data source and then click
Next to proceed to the Source selection
page:
- Data Source - click to open a drop-down of available data sources that connect to the remote data source and select one
Source
In this step, the source table is selected or the source query entered.
- Source - pre-selected as the name of the data source chosen in the previous step
- Remote Table - enter the name of the table located within the remote data source; click Browse Tables to pop up the remote table browsing interface and make a selection from the available tables, and click Select next to the table to import
- Remote Query - enter a query to run on the remote data source; click Verify Remote Query to ensure the query is able to be executed on the remote data source
- Subscription Options - check the Enable
box to activate a subscription to the remote data
- Poll Interval - the time (in seconds) between successive requests to the remote cluster for more data
- Increasing Column - remote table/query column to use to determine whether a remote record is new and should be imported; only records with a higher value than the highest value from the last poll will be imported
Destination
In this step, the target table to import into is selected.
- Schema - name of the schema containing the target table; if blank, the user's default schema will be used
- Table - name of the target table, which must meet table naming criteria; Workbench will suggest a table name here, if possible
- Batch Size - number of records from the source to insert into the database at a time; this can be used to tune the ingest speed for source data with many records or wide columns
- Abort on Error - check, to have the import stop at the first record import failure; any records imported by this point will remain in the target table
- Bad Records Table - when Abort on Error
is unchecked, the errant records will be written to the specified table
- Schema - schema in which the bad records table should reside
- Table - name for the bad records table
Once the destination has been specified, click Next to proceed to the Configure page.
Configure
In this step, the target table's structure can be specified, if the table does not exist. Not specifying any structure will cause the import process to infer the table's structure from the source data.
To specify a table structure, click + Add Column once for each field in the source data, then enter the specification for each column, including:
- Name - name of the column, which must meet the standard naming criteria
- Type - type of the column, and sub-type, if applicable
- Nullable - check the box if the column should allow null values
- Properties - check any properties that should apply to this
column:
- Primary Key - make this column the primary key or part of a composite primary key
- Shard Key - make this column the shard key or part of a composite shard key
- Dict. Encoded - apply dictionary encoding to the column's values, reducing storage used for columns with more often repeated data
- Init. with Now - replace empty or invalid values inserted into this column with the current date/time
- Init. with UUID - replace empty values inserted into this column with a universally unique identifier (UUID)
- Text Search - make this column full-text searchable, using FILTER_BY_STRING in search mode
To remove a column from the proposed target table, click the trash can icon at the far right of the column's definition.
Once the table configuration has been established, click Next to proceed to the Summary page.
Summary
In this step, the import configuration will be displayed.
All Source, Destination, & Error Handling configuration will be displayed in their respective sections.
The Generated SQL section will contain the SQL LOAD INTO command corresponding to the import operation that will take place. The copy-to-clipboard icon can be used to copy the SQL statement for subsequent use, to re-import data from the same file into the same table.
Once the import configuration has been confirmed, click Import to import the table's data.