Redis Connection Details¶
Introduction¶
Connector Version
This documentation is based on version 23.0.8895 of the connector.
Get Started¶
Redis Version Support
The connector models Redis instances as relational databases. The connector leverages the Redis commands to enable bidirectional access to Redis and Redis Enterprise data through SQL. Redis versions 2.8.0 and above are supported.
Establish a Connection¶
Connect to Redis¶
Set the Server
connection property to the name or address of the server your Redis instance is running on.
If your Redis server is running on a port other than the default (6379), you can specify your port in the Port
property.
Authenticate to Redis¶
The connector supports Password and ACL authentication. Connections to Redis instances that aren't password protected are supported as well.
No Authentication¶
Set the AuthScheme
property to None
. This indicates the Redis instance is not password protected (using the requirepass
directive in the configuration file).
Password¶
Set the AuthScheme
property to Password
and set the Password
property to the password used to authenticate with a password protected Redis instance using the Redis AUTH command.
ACL (Access Control List)¶
Set the following to connect:
AuthScheme
: Set this toACL
.User
: Set this to the username you use to authenticate with Redis ACL.Password
: Set this to the password you use to authenticate with Redis ACL.
Secure Redis Connections¶
You can set UseSSL
to negotiate SSL/TLS encryption when you connect.
Important Notes¶
Configuration Files and Their Paths¶
- All references to adding configuration files and their paths refer to files and locations on the Jitterbit agent where the connector is installed. These paths are to be adjusted as appropriate depending on the agent and the operating system. If multiple agents are used in an agent group, identical files will be required on each agent.
Data Model¶
The connector enables you to model Redis key-value pairs as tables.
Tables
The connector enables two major paradigms for modeling Redis key-value pairs as tables.
Modeling Redis Hashes as Tables¶
Redis key patterns can be modeled as tables. See Freeform Querying of Redis Keys for a breakdown of the different configuration options.
Freeform Querying of Redis Keys¶
It is also possible to query keys directly as if they are tables.
If you would like to query specific keys as tables, see Modeling Redis Hashes as Tables.
If you would like to query all keys in the Redis keystore from a single table, see the Keys table.
Redis Data Types
See Redis Data Types for a list of the Redis data types supported by the connector.
Stored Procedures
Use the available Stored Procedures to submit commands (in native redis-cli
syntax) to the Redis server for direct execution.
Modeling Redis Hashes as Tables¶
The connector can be configured to shape the discovered metadata.
Use the DefineTables
, TablePattern
, and PatternSeparator
connection properties to customize how tables and columns are inferred from the Redis key store.
Presume the following hashes have been created in the Redis server (either with redis-cli
or the RunCommand storec procedure).
> hmset user:1000 name "John Smith" email "john.smith@example.com" password "s3cret"
OK
> hmset user:1001 name "Mary Jones" email "mjones@example.com" password "hidden"
OK
> hmset user:1002 name "Sally Brown" email "sally.b@example.com" password "p4ssw0rd"
OK
> hmset customer:200 name "John Smith" account "123456" balance "543.21"
OK
> hmset customer:201 name "Mary Jones" account "123457" balance "654.32"
OK
> hmset customer:202 name "Sally Brown" account "123458" balance "765.43"
OK
When these properties are used to define the connector's behavior, the Redis keys will be pivoted, so that each Redis key that matches the pattern in the definition is represented as a single row in the table. Each value associated with that Redis key becomes a column for the table.
DefineTables Property¶
The DefineTables
connection property allows you to explicitly define the names of the tables that will appear. To do so, set the property to a comma-separated string of name-value pairs, where the name is the name of the table and the value is the pattern used to assign Redis keys to that table.
The connector aggregates all of the Redis keys that match the specified patterns.
DefineTables=Users=user:*,Customers=customer:*;
With the property set as above, the Users and Customers tables will be exposed. If you were to query the tables, you would see the following results:
SELECT * FROM Users¶
RedisKey | name | password | |
---|---|---|---|
user:1000 | John Smith | john.smith@example.com | s3cret |
user:1001 | Mary Jones | mjones@example.com | hidden |
user:1002 | Sally Brown | sally.b@example | p4ssw0rd |
SELECT * FROM Customers¶
RedisKey | name | account | balance |
---|---|---|---|
customer:200 | John Smith | 123456 | 543.21 |
customer:201 | Mary Jones | 123456 | 654.32 |
customer:202 | Sally Brown | 123456 | 765.43 |
TablePattern Property¶
The TablePattern
connection property allows you to define the separator(s) that determine how the connector defines tables. For the Redis keys described above, "user" and "customer" would be defined as tables if the separator is set to ":" since the unique piece of each Redis key appears after the ":". If you have a need to structure the tables differently, to drill down further, you can include multiple instances of the separator. Set the property to a pattern that includes the separator(s) needed to define your table structure. (Below is the default value.)
You can also manually specify the pattern separator indepently from the TablePattern
using the PatternSeparator
property.
TablePattern=*:*;
With the property set as above, the user and customer tables will be exposed. If you were to query the tables, you would see the following results:
SELECT * FROM user¶
RedisKey | name | password | |
---|---|---|---|
user:1000 | John Smith | john.smith@example.com | s3cret |
user:1001 | Mary Jones | mjones@example.com | hidden |
user:1002 | Sally Brown | sally.b@example | p4ssw0rd |
SELECT * FROM customer¶
RedisKey | name | account | balance |
---|---|---|---|
customer:200 | John Smith | 123456 | 543.21 |
customer:201 | Mary Jones | 123456 | 654.32 |
customer:202 | Sally Brown | 123456 | 765.43 |
Freeform Querying of Redis Keys¶
The most direct way to work with Redis data with the connector is to use a Redis key as a table name. Below you will find sample data, queries, and results based on Redis data types.
Note
This page contains redis-cli
syntax. Use either your own instance of redis-cli or the RunCommand procedure to send queries from the connector to the Redis server for direct execution.
Redis Strings¶
Create a string in Redis:
> set mykey somevalue
OK
If you perform a SELECT query on mykey
the connector will return the following:
SELECT * FROM mykey¶
RedisKey | ValueIndex | Value | RedisType | ValueScore |
---|---|---|---|---|
mykey | 1 | somevalue | String | NULL |
Redis Lists¶
Create a list in Redis:
> rpush mylist A B C
(integer) 3
If you perform a SELECT query on mylist
the connector will return the following:
SELECT * FROM mylist¶
RedisKey | ValueIndex | Value | RedisType | ValueScore |
---|---|---|---|---|
mylist | 1 | A | List | NULL |
mylist | 2 | B | List | NULL |
mylist | 3 | C | List | NULL |
Deleting Redis Lists¶
List type records can also be removed using DELETE statements, though they must be performed by specifying the Value column in the WHERE clause:
DELETE FROM Keys WHERE Value = 'myvalue' AND RedisKey = 'mylist'
Note that using ValueIndex in the WHERE clause of the DELETE statement is not supported.
Redis Sets¶
Create a set in Redis:
> sadd myset 1 2 3
(integer) 3
If you perform a SELECT query on myset
the connector will return the following (note that Redis can return the elements of a set in any order):
SELECT * FROM myset¶
RedisKey | ValueIndex | Value | RedisType | ValueScore |
---|---|---|---|---|
myset | 1 | 2 | Set | NULL |
myset | 2 | 1 | Set | NULL |
myset | 3 | 3 | Set | NULL |
Redis Sorted Sets¶
Create a ZSet (sorted set) in Redis:
> zadd hackers 1940 "Alan Kay" 1957 "Sophie Wilson" 1953 "Richard Stallman" 1949 "Anita Borg"
(integer) 9
If you perform a SELECT query on hackers
the connector will return the following:
SELECT * FROM hackers¶
RedisKey | ValueIndex | Value | RedisType | ValueScore |
---|---|---|---|---|
hackers | 1 | Alan Kay | ZSet | 1940 |
hackers | 2 | Anita Borg | ZSet | 1949 |
hackers | 3 | Richard Stallman | ZSet | 1953 |
hackers | 4 | Sophie Wilson | ZSet | 1957 |
Redis Hashes¶
Create a hash in Redis:
> hmset user:1000 username antirez birthyear 1977 verified 1
OK
If you perform a SELECT query on user:1000
the connector will return the following:
SELECT * FROM user:1000¶
RedisKey | ValueIndex | Value | RedisType | ValueScore |
---|---|---|---|---|
user:1000 | username | antirez | Hash | NULL |
user:1000 | birthyear | 1977 | Hash | NULL |
user:1000 | verified | 1 | Hash | NULL |
Querying Key Patterns as Tables¶
You can retrieve multiple Redis keys at once by using a pattern (e.g., "user:*") as a table name. For example, start by adding several keys to Redis that match a pattern:
> hmset user:1000 name "John Smith" email "john.smith@example.com" password "s3cret"
OK
> hmset user:1001 name "Mary Jones" password "hidden" email "mjones@example.com"
OK
If you use user:*
as the table name, the connector will retrieve all Redis key-value pairs whose keys match the pattern. You can see the expected results below:
SELECT * FROM [user:*]¶
RedisKey | ValueIndex | Value | RedisType | ValueScore |
---|---|---|---|---|
user:1000 | name | John Smith | Hash | NULL |
user:1000 | john.smith@example.com | Hash | NULL | |
user:1000 | password | s3cret | Hash | NULL |
user:1001 | name | Mary Jones | Hash | NULL |
user:1001 | mjones@example.com | Hash | NULL | |
user:1001 | password | hidden | Hash | NULL |
Redis Data Types¶
Redis Data Types Supported by the Connector¶
- Binary-safe Strings.
- Lists: collections of string elements sorted according to the order of insertion. They are basically linked lists.
- Sets: collections of unique, unsorted string elements.
- Sorted Sets (ZSets): similar to sets but where every string element is associated to a floating number value, called score. The elements are always taken sorted by their score, so unlike sets it is possible to retrieve a range of elements (for example you may ask: give me the top 10, or the bottom 10).
- Hashes: maps composed of fields associated with values. Both the field and the value are strings. This is very similar to Ruby or Python hashes.
Tables¶
The connector models the data in Redis as a list of tables in a relational database that can be queried using standard SQL statements.
Redis Connector Tables¶
Name | Description |
---|---|
Keys | Returns keys present in the Redis store. |
Keys¶
Returns keys present in the Redis store.
This table allows you to query all Redis keys in one place. It models Redis key metadata in exactly the same way as described in Freeform Querying of Redis Keys.
Columns¶
Name | Type | ReadOnly | Description |
---|---|---|---|
RedisKey [KEY] | String | True | The name of the Redis key. |
ValueIndex | String | True | Varies by type: 1 for strings; the one-based index for sets, lists, and sorted sets; or the associated field name for hashes. |
Value | String | True | The value associated with the Redis key. |
RedisType | String | True | The type associated with the Redis key. |
ValueScore | Double | True | NULL for strings, lists, sets, and hashes. Returns the associated score for sorted sets. |
Stored Procedures¶
Stored procedures are function-like interfaces that extend the functionality of the connector beyond simple SELECT/INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE operations with Redis.
Stored procedures accept a list of parameters, perform their intended function, and then return any relevant response data from Redis, along with an indication of whether the procedure succeeded or failed.
Redis Connector Stored Procedures¶
Name | Description |
---|---|
CreateSchema | Creates a custom schema file based on the specified columns. |
RunBatchCommand | Sequentially executes a batch of Redis commands using either a temporary table or a batch file. |
RunCommand | Passes a command to the Redis server for direct execution. Use standard redis-cli syntax. |
CreateSchema¶
Creates a custom schema file based on the specified columns.
Define Tables Manually¶
It is also possible to define the fields and patterns of a table directly using the connector's CreateSchema stored procedure. The table definitions generated by CreateSchema are plain text configuration files that are easy to extend.
To create a schema, you can invoke the CreateSchema procedure using EXECUTE. It accepts these five parameters:
TableName
is the name of the table to be created.KeyPattern
contains a key pattern as described in rpgusingproperties.Columns
contains a column separated list of names, not including RedisKey. These will be used as the attributes of any hashes inserted into the table.Description
is optional, and contains a free-form note about the table. If not provided, it will be left blank.OutputFolder
is optional, and contains the path of the folder the schema file is written to. If not provided, theLocation
connection property is used.
For example, you can create a basic schema using a query like this:
EXECUTE CreateSchema TableName = 'users', KeyPattern = 'user:*', Columns = 'name,email,password'
Once a schema has been defined, it can be used as a table in SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE statements. Any values inserted into the table will be formatted as hashes. For example, the query:
INSERT INTO users (RedisKey, name, email, password) VALUES ('user:1000', 'John Smith', 'john.smith@example.com', 's3cret')
Will generate this Redis command:
hmset user:1000 name "John Smith" email "john.smith@example.com" password "s3cret"
Input¶
Name | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
TableName | String | True | The name for the new table. |
KeyPattern | String | True | The Redis Key pattern for table. |
Columns | String | True | A comma-separated list of columns to include in the schema file. |
Description | String | False | An optional description for the table. |
WriteToFile | String | False | Whether to write the contents of this stored procedure to a file or not (Default = true) needs to be set to false to output FileStream of FileData |
Result Set Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
Success | String | Whether or not the schema was created successfully. |
SchemaFile | String | The generated schema file. |
FileData | String | File data that will be outputted encoded in Base64 if the WriteToFile=False and FileStream inputs are not set. |
RunBatchCommand¶
Sequentially executes a batch of Redis commands using either a temporary table or a batch file.
Batch commands are much more efficient because the connector does not need to send and wait for single commands to complete. Instead, the connector will send several commands and wait for them as a group.
Method 1: Batch File¶
Create a text document and populate it with one Redis command per line without any delimiters. Empty lines are skipped.
For example:
set key1 value1
set key2 value2
set key3 value3
Then, invoke the procedure with the path to the file supplied in the CommandFile input.
EXECUTE RunBatchCommand CommandFile = "C:\Users\username\Public Documents\batchfile.txt"
TEMP Tables¶
Populate a temporary table with Redis commands.
INSERT INTO Commands#TEMP (CommandLine) VALUES ("rpush mylist value1")
INSERT INTO Commands#TEMP (CommandLine) VALUES ("rpush mylist value2")
INSERT INTO Commands#TEMP (CommandLine) VALUES ("rpush mylist value3")
Then, invoke the procedure with the name of the temporary table provided in the CommandTable input.
EXECUTE RunBatchCommand CommandTable = "Commands#TEMP"
Input¶
Name | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
CommandTable | String | False | Specifies a temporary table to be used in generating a batch of Redis commands for direct execution on the Redis server. |
CommandFile | String | False | The path to a file containing a batch of Redis commands. These commands will be sequentially and directly executed on the Redis server. |
KeyType | String | False | The format for the Redis server output. 'AUTO' returns the keys in list format (nested lists will each be one compound result). 'HASH' returns the keys as a hash (each group is a row, each property gets its own column). The allowed values are AUTO, HASH. The default value is AUTO. |
Result Set Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
\* | String | Output will vary for each collection. |
RunCommand¶
Passes a command to the Redis server for direct execution. Use standard redis-cli
syntax.
Running Redis Commands Directly¶
You can use this procedure to run a command directly that isn't exposed by the usual CRUD operations on tables. For example, the FLUSHDB
command removes all keys from the current database:
EXECUTE RunCommand @CommandLine = 'FLUSHDB'
You can also run commands which require parameters by separating them with spaces, the same as in redis-cli. Double-quotes are also available if you need to embed spaces into a parameter value:
EXECUTE RunCommand @CommandLine = 'INFO "CPU"'
The connector will process the results of the command and return them in the appropriate format. For cases like FLUSHDB
or INFO
where the result is a simple value or a flat array, each element will be returned as a separate row.
'# CPU'
'used_cpu_sys:1272.08'
'used_cpu_user:537.84'
'used_cpu_sys_children:4.81'
'used_cpu_user_children:98.89'
More complex results, like the values returned from the COMMAND
command, will be separated by row and then converted to JSON for final output.
'["slowlog","-2",[["admin"]],"0","0","0"]'
'["persist","2",[["write","fast"]],"1","1","1"]'
'["zrevrangebylex","-4",[["readonly"]],"1","1","1"]'
'["sinter","-2",[["readonly","sort_for_script"]],"1","-1","1"]'
'["lrange","4",[["readonly"]],"1","1","1"]'
'["hmset","-4",[["write","denyoom","fast"]],"1","1","1"]'
'["lpush","-3",[["write","denyoom","fast"]],"1","1","1"]'
'["zremrangebyscore","4",[["write"]],"1","1","1"]'
'["FT.DICTDEL","-1",[["readonly"]],"1","1","1"]'
...
Input¶
Name | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
CommandLine | String | False | The command to pass directly to the Redis server for execution. |
KeyType | String | False | The format for the Redis server output. 'AUTO' returns the keys in list format (nested lists will each be one compound result). 'HASH' returns the keys as a hash (each group is a row, each property gets its own column). The allowed values are AUTO, HASH. The default value is AUTO. |
Result Set Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
\* | String | Output will vary for each collection. |
System Tables¶
You can query the system tables described in this section to access schema information, information on data source functionality, and batch operation statistics.
Schema Tables¶
The following tables return database metadata for Redis:
- sys_catalogs: Lists the available databases.
- sys_schemas: Lists the available schemas.
- sys_tables: Lists the available tables and views.
- sys_tablecolumns: Describes the columns of the available tables and views.
- sys_procedures: Describes the available stored procedures.
- sys_procedureparameters: Describes stored procedure parameters.
- sys_keycolumns: Describes the primary and foreign keys.
- sys_indexes: Describes the available indexes.
Data Source Tables¶
The following tables return information about how to connect to and query the data source:
- sys_connection_props: Returns information on the available connection properties.
- sys_sqlinfo: Describes the SELECT queries that the connector can offload to the data source.
Query Information Tables¶
The following table returns query statistics for data modification queries, including batch operations:
- sys_identity: Returns information about batch operations or single updates.
sys_catalogs¶
Lists the available databases.
The following query retrieves all databases determined by the connection string:
SELECT * FROM sys_catalogs
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The database name. |
sys_schemas¶
Lists the available schemas.
The following query retrieves all available schemas:
SELECT * FROM sys_schemas
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The database name. |
SchemaName | String | The schema name. |
sys_tables¶
Lists the available tables.
The following query retrieves the available tables and views:
SELECT * FROM sys_tables
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The database containing the table or view. |
SchemaName | String | The schema containing the table or view. |
TableName | String | The name of the table or view. |
TableType | String | The table type (table or view). |
Description | String | A description of the table or view. |
IsUpdateable | Boolean | Whether the table can be updated. |
sys_tablecolumns¶
Describes the columns of the available tables and views.
The following query returns the columns and data types for the Customers table:
SELECT ColumnName, DataTypeName FROM sys_tablecolumns WHERE TableName='Customers'
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The name of the database containing the table or view. |
SchemaName | String | The schema containing the table or view. |
TableName | String | The name of the table or view containing the column. |
ColumnName | String | The column name. |
DataTypeName | String | The data type name. |
DataType | Int32 | An integer indicating the data type. This value is determined at run time based on the environment. |
Length | Int32 | The storage size of the column. |
DisplaySize | Int32 | The designated column's normal maximum width in characters. |
NumericPrecision | Int32 | The maximum number of digits in numeric data. The column length in characters for character and date-time data. |
NumericScale | Int32 | The column scale or number of digits to the right of the decimal point. |
IsNullable | Boolean | Whether the column can contain null. |
Description | String | A brief description of the column. |
Ordinal | Int32 | The sequence number of the column. |
IsAutoIncrement | String | Whether the column value is assigned in fixed increments. |
IsGeneratedColumn | String | Whether the column is generated. |
IsHidden | Boolean | Whether the column is hidden. |
IsArray | Boolean | Whether the column is an array. |
IsReadOnly | Boolean | Whether the column is read-only. |
IsKey | Boolean | Indicates whether a field returned from sys_tablecolumns is the primary key of the table. |
sys_procedures¶
Lists the available stored procedures.
The following query retrieves the available stored procedures:
SELECT * FROM sys_procedures
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The database containing the stored procedure. |
SchemaName | String | The schema containing the stored procedure. |
ProcedureName | String | The name of the stored procedure. |
Description | String | A description of the stored procedure. |
ProcedureType | String | The type of the procedure, such as PROCEDURE or FUNCTION. |
sys_procedureparameters¶
Describes stored procedure parameters.
The following query returns information about all of the input parameters for the SelectEntries stored procedure:
SELECT * FROM sys_procedureparameters WHERE ProcedureName='SelectEntries' AND Direction=1 OR Direction=2
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The name of the database containing the stored procedure. |
SchemaName | String | The name of the schema containing the stored procedure. |
ProcedureName | String | The name of the stored procedure containing the parameter. |
ColumnName | String | The name of the stored procedure parameter. |
Direction | Int32 | An integer corresponding to the type of the parameter: input (1), input/output (2), or output(4). input/output type parameters can be both input and output parameters. |
DataTypeName | String | The name of the data type. |
DataType | Int32 | An integer indicating the data type. This value is determined at run time based on the environment. |
Length | Int32 | The number of characters allowed for character data. The number of digits allowed for numeric data. |
NumericPrecision | Int32 | The maximum precision for numeric data. The column length in characters for character and date-time data. |
NumericScale | Int32 | The number of digits to the right of the decimal point in numeric data. |
IsNullable | Boolean | Whether the parameter can contain null. |
IsRequired | Boolean | Whether the parameter is required for execution of the procedure. |
IsArray | Boolean | Whether the parameter is an array. |
Description | String | The description of the parameter. |
Ordinal | Int32 | The index of the parameter. |
sys_keycolumns¶
Describes the primary and foreign keys.
The following query retrieves the primary key for the Customers table:
SELECT * FROM sys_keycolumns WHERE IsKey='True' AND TableName='Customers'
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The name of the database containing the key. |
SchemaName | String | The name of the schema containing the key. |
TableName | String | The name of the table containing the key. |
ColumnName | String | The name of the key column. |
IsKey | Boolean | Whether the column is a primary key in the table referenced in the TableName field. |
IsForeignKey | Boolean | Whether the column is a foreign key referenced in the TableName field. |
PrimaryKeyName | String | The name of the primary key. |
ForeignKeyName | String | The name of the foreign key. |
ReferencedCatalogName | String | The database containing the primary key. |
ReferencedSchemaName | String | The schema containing the primary key. |
ReferencedTableName | String | The table containing the primary key. |
ReferencedColumnName | String | The column name of the primary key. |
sys_foreignkeys¶
Describes the foreign keys.
The following query retrieves all foreign keys which refer to other tables:
SELECT * FROM sys_foreignkeys WHERE ForeignKeyType = 'FOREIGNKEY_TYPE_IMPORT'
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The name of the database containing the key. |
SchemaName | String | The name of the schema containing the key. |
TableName | String | The name of the table containing the key. |
ColumnName | String | The name of the key column. |
PrimaryKeyName | String | The name of the primary key. |
ForeignKeyName | String | The name of the foreign key. |
ReferencedCatalogName | String | The database containing the primary key. |
ReferencedSchemaName | String | The schema containing the primary key. |
ReferencedTableName | String | The table containing the primary key. |
ReferencedColumnName | String | The column name of the primary key. |
ForeignKeyType | String | Designates whether the foreign key is an import (points to other tables) or export (referenced from other tables) key. |
sys_primarykeys¶
Describes the primary keys.
The following query retrieves the primary keys from all tables and views:
SELECT * FROM sys_primarykeys
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The name of the database containing the key. |
SchemaName | String | The name of the schema containing the key. |
TableName | String | The name of the table containing the key. |
ColumnName | String | The name of the key column. |
KeySeq | String | The sequence number of the primary key. |
KeyName | String | The name of the primary key. |
sys_indexes¶
Describes the available indexes. By filtering on indexes, you can write more selective queries with faster query response times.
The following query retrieves all indexes that are not primary keys:
SELECT * FROM sys_indexes WHERE IsPrimary='false'
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CatalogName | String | The name of the database containing the index. |
SchemaName | String | The name of the schema containing the index. |
TableName | String | The name of the table containing the index. |
IndexName | String | The index name. |
ColumnName | String | The name of the column associated with the index. |
IsUnique | Boolean | True if the index is unique. False otherwise. |
IsPrimary | Boolean | True if the index is a primary key. False otherwise. |
Type | Int16 | An integer value corresponding to the index type: statistic (0), clustered (1), hashed (2), or other (3). |
SortOrder | String | The sort order: A for ascending or D for descending. |
OrdinalPosition | Int16 | The sequence number of the column in the index. |
sys_connection_props¶
Returns information on the available connection properties and those set in the connection string.
When querying this table, the config connection string should be used:
jdbc:cdata:redis:config:
This connection string enables you to query this table without a valid connection.
The following query retrieves all connection properties that have been set in the connection string or set through a default value:
SELECT * FROM sys_connection_props WHERE Value <> ''
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
Name | String | The name of the connection property. |
ShortDescription | String | A brief description. |
Type | String | The data type of the connection property. |
Default | String | The default value if one is not explicitly set. |
Values | String | A comma-separated list of possible values. A validation error is thrown if another value is specified. |
Value | String | The value you set or a preconfigured default. |
Required | Boolean | Whether the property is required to connect. |
Category | String | The category of the connection property. |
IsSessionProperty | String | Whether the property is a session property, used to save information about the current connection. |
Sensitivity | String | The sensitivity level of the property. This informs whether the property is obfuscated in logging and authentication forms. |
PropertyName | String | A camel-cased truncated form of the connection property name. |
Ordinal | Int32 | The index of the parameter. |
CatOrdinal | Int32 | The index of the parameter category. |
Hierarchy | String | Shows dependent properties associated that need to be set alongside this one. |
Visible | Boolean | Informs whether the property is visible in the connection UI. |
ETC | String | Various miscellaneous information about the property. |
sys_sqlinfo¶
Describes the SELECT query processing that the connector can offload to the data source.
Discovering the Data Source's SELECT Capabilities¶
Below is an example data set of SQL capabilities. Some aspects of SELECT functionality are returned in a comma-separated list if supported; otherwise, the column contains NO.
Name | Description | Possible Values |
---|---|---|
AGGREGATE_FUNCTIONS | Supported aggregation functions. | AVG , COUNT , MAX , MIN , SUM , DISTINCT |
COUNT | Whether COUNT function is supported. | YES , NO |
IDENTIFIER_QUOTE_OPEN_CHAR | The opening character used to escape an identifier. | [ |
IDENTIFIER_QUOTE_CLOSE_CHAR | The closing character used to escape an identifier. | ] |
SUPPORTED_OPERATORS | A list of supported SQL operators. | = , > , < , >= , <= , <> , != , LIKE , NOT LIKE , IN , NOT IN , IS NULL , IS NOT NULL , AND , OR |
GROUP_BY | Whether GROUP BY is supported, and, if so, the degree of support. | NO , NO_RELATION , EQUALS_SELECT , SQL_GB_COLLATE |
STRING_FUNCTIONS | Supported string functions. | LENGTH , CHAR , LOCATE , REPLACE , SUBSTRING , RTRIM , LTRIM , RIGHT , LEFT , UCASE , SPACE , SOUNDEX , LCASE , CONCAT , ASCII , REPEAT , OCTET , BIT , POSITION , INSERT , TRIM , UPPER , REGEXP , LOWER , DIFFERENCE , CHARACTER , SUBSTR , STR , REVERSE , PLAN , UUIDTOSTR , TRANSLATE , TRAILING , TO , STUFF , STRTOUUID , STRING , SPLIT , SORTKEY , SIMILAR , REPLICATE , PATINDEX , LPAD , LEN , LEADING , KEY , INSTR , INSERTSTR , HTML , GRAPHICAL , CONVERT , COLLATION , CHARINDEX , BYTE |
NUMERIC_FUNCTIONS | Supported numeric functions. | ABS , ACOS , ASIN , ATAN , ATAN2 , CEILING , COS , COT , EXP , FLOOR , LOG , MOD , SIGN , SIN , SQRT , TAN , PI , RAND , DEGREES , LOG10 , POWER , RADIANS , ROUND , TRUNCATE |
TIMEDATE_FUNCTIONS | Supported date/time functions. | NOW , CURDATE , DAYOFMONTH , DAYOFWEEK , DAYOFYEAR , MONTH , QUARTER , WEEK , YEAR , CURTIME , HOUR , MINUTE , SECOND , TIMESTAMPADD , TIMESTAMPDIFF , DAYNAME , MONTHNAME , CURRENT_DATE , CURRENT_TIME , CURRENT_TIMESTAMP , EXTRACT |
REPLICATION_SKIP_TABLES | Indicates tables skipped during replication. | |
REPLICATION_TIMECHECK_COLUMNS | A string array containing a list of columns which will be used to check for (in the given order) to use as a modified column during replication. | |
IDENTIFIER_PATTERN | String value indicating what string is valid for an identifier. | |
SUPPORT_TRANSACTION | Indicates if the provider supports transactions such as commit and rollback. | YES , NO |
DIALECT | Indicates the SQL dialect to use. | |
KEY_PROPERTIES | Indicates the properties which identify the uniform database. | |
SUPPORTS_MULTIPLE_SCHEMAS | Indicates if multiple schemas may exist for the provider. | YES , NO |
SUPPORTS_MULTIPLE_CATALOGS | Indicates if multiple catalogs may exist for the provider. | YES , NO |
DATASYNCVERSION | The Data Sync version needed to access this driver. | Standard , Starter , Professional , Enterprise |
DATASYNCCATEGORY | The Data Sync category of this driver. | Source , Destination , Cloud Destination |
SUPPORTSENHANCEDSQL | Whether enhanced SQL functionality beyond what is offered by the API is supported. | TRUE , FALSE |
SUPPORTS_BATCH_OPERATIONS | Whether batch operations are supported. | YES , NO |
SQL_CAP | All supported SQL capabilities for this driver. | SELECT , INSERT , DELETE , UPDATE , TRANSACTIONS , ORDERBY , OAUTH , ASSIGNEDID , LIMIT , LIKE , BULKINSERT , COUNT , BULKDELETE , BULKUPDATE , GROUPBY , HAVING , AGGS , OFFSET , REPLICATE , COUNTDISTINCT , JOINS , DROP , CREATE , DISTINCT , INNERJOINS , SUBQUERIES , ALTER , MULTIPLESCHEMAS , GROUPBYNORELATION , OUTERJOINS , UNIONALL , UNION , UPSERT , GETDELETED , CROSSJOINS , GROUPBYCOLLATE , MULTIPLECATS , FULLOUTERJOIN , MERGE , JSONEXTRACT , BULKUPSERT , SUM , SUBQUERIESFULL , MIN , MAX , JOINSFULL , XMLEXTRACT , AVG , MULTISTATEMENTS , FOREIGNKEYS , CASE , LEFTJOINS , COMMAJOINS , WITH , LITERALS , RENAME , NESTEDTABLES , EXECUTE , BATCH , BASIC , INDEX |
PREFERRED_CACHE_OPTIONS | A string value specifies the preferred cacheOptions. | |
ENABLE_EF_ADVANCED_QUERY | Indicates if the driver directly supports advanced queries coming from Entity Framework. If not, queries will be handled client side. | YES , NO |
PSEUDO_COLUMNS | A string array indicating the available pseudo columns. | |
MERGE_ALWAYS | If the value is true, The Merge Mode is forcibly executed in Data Sync. | TRUE , FALSE |
REPLICATION_MIN_DATE_QUERY | A select query to return the replicate start datetime. | |
REPLICATION_MIN_FUNCTION | Allows a provider to specify the formula name to use for executing a server side min. | |
REPLICATION_START_DATE | Allows a provider to specify a replicate startdate. | |
REPLICATION_MAX_DATE_QUERY | A select query to return the replicate end datetime. | |
REPLICATION_MAX_FUNCTION | Allows a provider to specify the formula name to use for executing a server side max. | |
IGNORE_INTERVALS_ON_INITIAL_REPLICATE | A list of tables which will skip dividing the replicate into chunks on the initial replicate. | |
CHECKCACHE_USE_PARENTID | Indicates whether the CheckCache statement should be done against the parent key column. | TRUE , FALSE |
CREATE_SCHEMA_PROCEDURES | Indicates stored procedures that can be used for generating schema files. |
The following query retrieves the operators that can be used in the WHERE clause:
SELECT * FROM sys_sqlinfo WHERE Name = 'SUPPORTED_OPERATORS'
Note that individual tables may have different limitations or requirements on the WHERE clause; refer to the Data Model section for more information.
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
NAME | String | A component of SQL syntax, or a capability that can be processed on the server. |
VALUE | String | Detail on the supported SQL or SQL syntax. |
sys_identity¶
Returns information about attempted modifications.
The following query retrieves the Ids of the modified rows in a batch operation:
SELECT * FROM sys_identity
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
Id | String | The database-generated ID returned from a data modification operation. |
Batch | String | An identifier for the batch. 1 for a single operation. |
Operation | String | The result of the operation in the batch: INSERTED, UPDATED, or DELETED. |
Message | String | SUCCESS or an error message if the update in the batch failed. |
sys_information¶
Describes the available system information.
The following query retrieves all columns:
SELECT * FROM sys_information
Columns¶
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
Product | String | The name of the product. |
Version | String | The version number of the product. |
Datasource | String | The name of the datasource the product connects to. |
NodeId | String | The unique identifier of the machine where the product is installed. |
HelpURL | String | The URL to the product's help documentation. |
License | String | The license information for the product. (If this information is not available, the field may be left blank or marked as 'N/A'.) |
Location | String | The file path location where the product's library is stored. |
Environment | String | The version of the environment or rumtine the product is currently running under. |
DataSyncVersion | String | The tier of Sync required to use this connector. |
DataSyncCategory | String | The category of Sync functionality (e.g., Source, Destination). |
Advanced Configurations Properties¶
The advanced configurations properties are the various options that can be used to establish a connection. This section provides a complete list of the options you can configure. Click the links for further details.
Property | Description |
---|---|
AuthScheme | The authentication mechanism that the provider will use to authenticate with Redis. |
Server | The host name or IP address of the server hosting the Redis instance. |
Port | The port for the Redis database. |
LogicalDatabase | The index of the Redis Logical Database. |
User | The username provided for authentication with Redis ACL. |
Password | The password used to authenticate with Redis. |
EnableCluster | This field sets whether the Redis Cluster Mode is enabled. |
UseSSL | This field sets whether SSL is enabled. |
ReplicaSet | This property allows you to specify multiple servers in addition to the one configured in Server and Port . Specify both a server name and port; separate servers with a comma. |
Property | Description |
---|---|
DefineTables | Define the tables exposed by the provider using table names and Redis key patterns. |
PatternSeparator | Define the table pattern's delimiter. |
ReaderEndpoints | The slave hosts and port array, which indicates the Redis Master/Slave cluster's slave instances, are split by a comma. |
TablePattern | Define the tables exposed by the provider using Redis key patterns. |
Property | Description |
---|---|
SSLClientCert | The TLS/SSL client certificate store for SSL Client Authentication (2-way SSL). |
SSLClientCertType | The type of key store containing the TLS/SSL client certificate. |
SSLClientCertPassword | The password for the TLS/SSL client certificate. |
SSLClientCertSubject | The subject of the TLS/SSL client certificate. |
SSLStartMode | This property determines how the provider starts the SSL negotiation. |
SSLServerCert | The certificate to be accepted from the server when connecting using TLS/SSL. |
Property | Description |
---|---|
SSHAuthMode | The authentication method used when establishing an SSH Tunnel to the service. |
SSHClientCert | A certificate to be used for authenticating the SSHUser. |
SSHClientCertPassword | The password of the SSHClientCert key if it has one. |
SSHClientCertSubject | The subject of the SSH client certificate. |
SSHClientCertType | The type of SSHClientCert private key. |
SSHServer | The SSH server. |
SSHPort | The SSH port. |
SSHUser | The SSH user. |
SSHPassword | The SSH password. |
SSHServerFingerprint | The SSH server fingerprint. |
UseSSH | Whether to tunnel the Redis connection over SSH. Use SSH. |
Property | Description |
---|---|
Location | A path to the directory that contains the schema files defining tables, views, and stored procedures. |
BrowsableSchemas | This property restricts the schemas reported to a subset of the available schemas. For example, BrowsableSchemas=SchemaA, SchemaB, SchemaC. |
Tables | This property restricts the tables reported to a subset of the available tables. For example, Tables=TableA, TableB, TableC. |
Views | Restricts the views reported to a subset of the available tables. For example, Views=ViewA, ViewB, ViewC. |
Property | Description |
---|---|
IgnoreTypeErrors | Removes support for the specified data types and ignores casting exceptions for those types. |
MaxRows | Limits the number of rows returned when no aggregation or GROUP BY is used in the query. This takes precedence over LIMIT clauses. |
Other | These hidden properties are used only in specific use cases. |
ParallelMode | This option sets whether the provider should use multiple connections when connecting to Redis. |
PseudoColumns | This property indicates whether or not to include pseudo columns as columns to the table. |
QueryTimeout | The timeout in seconds for which the provider will wait for the query response. The default value is -1, which indicates the provider should never time out. |
RowScanDepth | The maximum number of rows to scan to look for the columns available in a table. |
TableScanDepth | The maximum number of keys to scan when looking for tables available in your Redis database. |
Timeout | The value in seconds until the timeout error is thrown, canceling the operation. |
UserDefinedViews | A filepath pointing to the JSON configuration file containing your custom views. |
Authentication¶
This section provides a complete list of authentication properties you can configure.
Property | Description |
---|---|
AuthScheme | The authentication mechanism that the provider will use to authenticate with Redis. |
Server | The host name or IP address of the server hosting the Redis instance. |
Port | The port for the Redis database. |
LogicalDatabase | The index of the Redis Logical Database. |
User | The username provided for authentication with Redis ACL. |
Password | The password used to authenticate with Redis. |
EnableCluster | This field sets whether the Redis Cluster Mode is enabled. |
UseSSL | This field sets whether SSL is enabled. |
ReplicaSet | This property allows you to specify multiple servers in addition to the one configured in Server and Port . Specify both a server name and port; separate servers with a comma. |
AuthScheme¶
The authentication mechanism that the provider will use to authenticate with Redis.
Possible Values¶
Password
, ACL
, None
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
Password
Remarks¶
Choose one of the following:
None
: Indicates that the Redis instance is not password protected (using therequirepass
directive in the configuration file).Password
: The connector attempts to connect using the AUTH Redis command, using Password.ACL
: The connector authenticates using ACL credentials.
Server¶
The host name or IP address of the server hosting the Redis instance.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The host name or IP address of the server hosting the Redis instance.
Port¶
The port for the Redis database.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
6379
Remarks¶
The port for the Redis database.
LogicalDatabase¶
The index of the Redis Logical Database.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
0
Remarks¶
The index of the Redis Logical Database. The default value is 0.
User¶
The username provided for authentication with Redis ACL.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The username provided for authentication with Redis ACL.
Password¶
The password used to authenticate with Redis.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The password used to authenticate with Redis.
EnableCluster¶
This field sets whether the Redis Cluster Mode is enabled.
Data Type¶
bool
Default Value¶
false
Remarks¶
This field sets whether the Redis Cluster Mode is enabled.
UseSSL¶
This field sets whether SSL is enabled.
Data Type¶
bool
Default Value¶
false
Remarks¶
This field sets whether the connector will attempt to negotiate TLS/SSL connections to the server. By default, the connector checks the server's certificate against the system's trusted certificate store. To specify another certificate, set SSLServerCert.
ReplicaSet¶
This property allows you to specify multiple servers in addition to the one configured in Server and Port . Specify both a server name and port; separate servers with a comma.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
This property only works when EnableCluster is True. This property allows you to specify the other servers in the replica set in addition to the one configured in Server and Port. You must specify all servers in the replica set using ReplicaSet
, Server, and Port.
Specify both a server name and port in ReplicaSet
; separate servers with a comma. For example:
Server=localhost;Port=6379;ReplicaSet=localhost:6380,localhost:6381;
To find the primary server, the connector queries the servers in ReplicaSet
and the server specified by Server and Port.
Connection¶
This section provides a complete list of connection properties you can configure.
Property | Description |
---|---|
DefineTables | Define the tables exposed by the provider using table names and Redis key patterns. |
PatternSeparator | Define the table pattern's delimiter. |
ReaderEndpoints | The slave hosts and port array, which indicates the Redis Master/Slave cluster's slave instances, are split by a comma. |
TablePattern | Define the tables exposed by the provider using Redis key patterns. |
DefineTables¶
Define the tables exposed by the provider using table names and Redis key patterns.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
This property is used to define the key pattern within Redis that will appear as tables. The value is a comma-separated list of name-value pairs in the form [Table Name]=[Redis key pattern]. Table Name is the name of the table you want to use for the data and will be used when issuing queries. The Redis key pattern is the pattern to be used to group and pivot corresponding keys into the named table.
For example:
DefineTables="DefinedTable1=table1:*,DefinedTable2=table2:*"
Given this value, all of the keys that begin with "table1:" will be found in DefinedTable1
, while all keys that begin with "table2:" will be found in DefinedTable2
.
If there is any conflict between tables defined with this property and those defined by the TablePattern, these statically defined tables will take precedence.
PatternSeparator¶
Define the table pattern's delimiter.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
:
Remarks¶
This property is used in tandem with TablePattern to define the delimiter character for the pattern, which determines where the table names derived from the key pattern will end.
This is especially useful when there is more than one delimiter in your TablePattern.
For example, if TablePattern is set to *@*:*
and there is a key called "first@second:1", a pattern separator of "@" produces the table name "first" and a PatternSeparator of ":" produces the table name "first@second".
Note that the behavior of the pattern separator is greedy, meaning the last instance of the separator character is used to specify the end of the table name.
For example, if there is a key called "first:second:1", a pattern separator of ":" produces the table name "first:second".
ReaderEndpoints¶
The slave hosts and port array, which indicates the Redis Master/Slave cluster's slave instances, are split by a comma.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The slave hosts and port array indicate the Redis Master/Slave cluster's slave instances. For example: 'ReaderEndpoints=app:6381,app:6382;'
TablePattern¶
Define the tables exposed by the provider using Redis key patterns.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
*:*
Remarks¶
This property is used to define the key patterns within Redis that will appear as tables. The value is a Redis key pattern. The Redis key pattern is a string pattern containing a separator to determine a hierarchical structure for the key-values stored in the Redis data store. Any other string patterns in the value will limit which keys will be pivoted and returned as tables.
For example, TablePattern="*:*"
causes the ":" character to be used as the separator. Given the following keys,
user:1001, user:1002, user:1003, admin:001, admin:002, admin:003
two tables would be exposed, user and admin, with the related keys corresponding to individual rows in each table.
SSL¶
This section provides a complete list of SSL properties you can configure.
Property | Description |
---|---|
SSLClientCert | The TLS/SSL client certificate store for SSL Client Authentication (2-way SSL). |
SSLClientCertType | The type of key store containing the TLS/SSL client certificate. |
SSLClientCertPassword | The password for the TLS/SSL client certificate. |
SSLClientCertSubject | The subject of the TLS/SSL client certificate. |
SSLStartMode | This property determines how the provider starts the SSL negotiation. |
SSLServerCert | The certificate to be accepted from the server when connecting using TLS/SSL. |
SSLClientCert¶
The TLS/SSL client certificate store for SSL Client Authentication (2-way SSL).
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The name of the certificate store for the client certificate.
The SSLClientCertType field specifies the type of the certificate store specified by SSLClientCert
. If the store is password protected, specify the password in SSLClientCertPassword.
SSLClientCert
is used in conjunction with the SSLClientCertSubject field in order to specify client certificates. If SSLClientCert
has a value, and SSLClientCertSubject is set, a search for a certificate is initiated. See SSLClientCertSubject for more information.
Designations of certificate stores are platform-dependent.
The following are designations of the most common User and Machine certificate stores in Windows:
Property | Description |
---|---|
MY | A certificate store holding personal certificates with their associated private keys. |
CA | Certifying authority certificates. |
ROOT | Root certificates. |
SPC | Software publisher certificates. |
In Java, the certificate store normally is a file containing certificates and optional private keys.
When the certificate store type is PFXFile, this property must be set to the name of the file. When the type is PFXBlob, the property must be set to the binary contents of a PFX file (for example, PKCS12 certificate store).
SSLClientCertType¶
The type of key store containing the TLS/SSL client certificate.
Possible Values¶
USER
, MACHINE
, PFXFILE
, PFXBLOB
, JKSFILE
, JKSBLOB
, PEMKEY_FILE
, PEMKEY_BLOB
, PUBLIC_KEY_FILE
, PUBLIC_KEY_BLOB
, SSHPUBLIC_KEY_FILE
, SSHPUBLIC_KEY_BLOB
, P7BFILE
, PPKFILE
, XMLFILE
, XMLBLOB
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
USER
Remarks¶
This property can take one of the following values:
Property | Description |
---|---|
USER - default | For Windows, this specifies that the certificate store is a certificate store owned by the current user. Note that this store type is not available in Java. |
MACHINE | For Windows, this specifies that the certificate store is a machine store. Note that this store type is not available in Java. |
PFXFILE | The certificate store is the name of a PFX (PKCS12) file containing certificates. |
PFXBLOB | The certificate store is a string (base-64-encoded) representing a certificate store in PFX (PKCS12) format. |
JKSFILE | The certificate store is the name of a Java key store (JKS) file containing certificates. Note that this store type is only available in Java. |
JKSBLOB | The certificate store is a string (base-64-encoded) representing a certificate store in JKS format. Note that this store type is only available in Java. |
PEMKEY_FILE | The certificate store is the name of a PEM-encoded file that contains a private key and an optional certificate. |
PEMKEY_BLOB | The certificate store is a string (base64-encoded) that contains a private key and an optional certificate. |
PUBLIC_KEY_FILE | The certificate store is the name of a file that contains a PEM- or DER-encoded public key certificate. |
PUBLIC_KEY_BLOB | The certificate store is a string (base-64-encoded) that contains a PEM- or DER-encoded public key certificate. |
SSHPUBLIC_KEY_FILE | The certificate store is the name of a file that contains an SSH-style public key. |
SSHPUBLIC_KEY_BLOB | The certificate store is a string (base-64-encoded) that contains an SSH-style public key. |
P7BFILE | The certificate store is the name of a PKCS7 file containing certificates. |
PPKFILE | The certificate store is the name of a file that contains a PuTTY Private Key (PPK). |
XMLFILE | The certificate store is the name of a file that contains a certificate in XML format. |
XMLBLOB | The certificate store is a string that contains a certificate in XML format. |
SSLClientCertPassword¶
The password for the TLS/SSL client certificate.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
If the certificate store is of a type that requires a password, this property is used to specify that password to open the certificate store.
SSLClientCertSubject¶
The subject of the TLS/SSL client certificate.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
*
Remarks¶
When loading a certificate the subject is used to locate the certificate in the store.
If an exact match is not found, the store is searched for subjects containing the value of the property. If a match is still not found, the property is set to an empty string, and no certificate is selected.
The special value "*" picks the first certificate in the certificate store.
The certificate subject is a comma separated list of distinguished name fields and values. For example, "CN=www.server.com, OU=test, C=US, E=support@company.com". The common fields and their meanings are shown below.
Field | Meaning |
---|---|
CN | Common Name. This is commonly a host name like www.server.com. |
O | Organization |
OU | Organizational Unit |
L | Locality |
S | State |
C | Country |
E | Email Address |
If a field value contains a comma, it must be quoted.
SSLStartMode¶
This property determines how the provider starts the SSL negotiation.
Possible Values¶
Automatic
, Implicit
, Explicit
, None
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
None
Remarks¶
The SSLStartMode
property may have one of the following values:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Automatic | If the remote port is set to the standard plain text port of the protocol (where applicable), the connector will behave the same as if SSLStartMode is set to Explicit. In all other cases, SSL negotiation will be implicit. |
Implicit | The SSL negotiation will start immediately after the connection is established. |
Explicit | The connector will first connect in plaintext, and then explicitly start SSL negotiation through a protocol command such as STARTTLS. |
None | No SSL negotiation, no SSL security. All communication will be in plain text mode. |
SSLServerCert¶
The certificate to be accepted from the server when connecting using TLS/SSL.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
If using a TLS/SSL connection, this property can be used to specify the TLS/SSL certificate to be accepted from the server. Any other certificate that is not trusted by the machine is rejected.
This property can take the following forms:
Description | Example |
---|---|
A full PEM Certificate (example shortened for brevity) | -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIChTCCAe4CAQAwDQYJKoZIhv......Qw== -----END CERTIFICATE----- |
A path to a local file containing the certificate | C:\\cert.cer |
The public key (example shortened for brevity) | -----BEGIN RSA PUBLIC KEY----- MIGfMA0GCSq......AQAB -----END RSA PUBLIC KEY----- |
The MD5 Thumbprint (hex values can also be either space or colon separated) | ecadbdda5a1529c58a1e9e09828d70e4 |
The SHA1 Thumbprint (hex values can also be either space or colon separated) | 34a929226ae0819f2ec14b4a3d904f801cbb150d |
If not specified, any certificate trusted by the machine is accepted.
Certificates are validated as trusted by the machine based on the System's trust store. The trust store used is the 'javax.net.ssl.trustStore' value specified for the system. If no value is specified for this property, Java's default trust store is used (for example, JAVA_HOME\lib\security\cacerts).
Use '*' to signify to accept all certificates. Note that this is not recommended due to security concerns.
SSH¶
This section provides a complete list of SSH properties you can configure.
Property | Description |
---|---|
SSHAuthMode | The authentication method used when establishing an SSH Tunnel to the service. |
SSHClientCert | A certificate to be used for authenticating the SSHUser. |
SSHClientCertPassword | The password of the SSHClientCert key if it has one. |
SSHClientCertSubject | The subject of the SSH client certificate. |
SSHClientCertType | The type of SSHClientCert private key. |
SSHServer | The SSH server. |
SSHPort | The SSH port. |
SSHUser | The SSH user. |
SSHPassword | The SSH password. |
SSHServerFingerprint | The SSH server fingerprint. |
UseSSH | Whether to tunnel the Redis connection over SSH. Use SSH. |
SSHAuthMode¶
The authentication method used when establishing an SSH Tunnel to the service.
Possible Values¶
None
, Password
, Public_Key
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
Password
Remarks¶
- None: No authentication is performed. The current User value is ignored, and the connection is logged in as anonymous.
- Password: The connector uses the values of User and Password to authenticate the user.
- Public_Key: The connector uses the values of User and SSHClientCert to authenticate the user. SSHClientCert must have a private key available for this authentication method to succeed.
SSHClientCert¶
A certificate to be used for authenticating the SSHUser.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
SSHClientCert
must contain a valid private key in order to use public key authentication. A public key is optional, if one is not included then the connector generates it from the private key. The connector sends the public key to the server and the connection is allowed if the user has authorized the public key.
The SSHClientCertType field specifies the type of the key store specified by SSHClientCert
. If the store is password protected, specify the password in SSHClientCertPassword.
Some types of key stores are containers which may include multiple keys. By default the connector will select the first key in the store, but you can specify a specific key using SSHClientCertSubject.
SSHClientCertPassword¶
The password of the SSHClientCert key if it has one.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
This property is only used when authenticating to SFTP servers with SSHAuthMode set to PublicKey and SSHClientCert set to a private key.
SSHClientCertSubject¶
The subject of the SSH client certificate.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
*
Remarks¶
When loading a certificate the subject is used to locate the certificate in the store.
If an exact match is not found, the store is searched for subjects containing the value of the property.
If a match is still not found, the property is set to an empty string, and no certificate is selected.
The special value "*" picks the first certificate in the certificate store.
The certificate subject is a comma separated list of distinguished name fields and values. For instance "CN=www.server.com, OU=test, C=US, E=example@jbexample.com". Common fields and their meanings are displayed below.
Field | Meaning |
---|---|
CN | Common Name. This is commonly a host name like www.server.com. |
O | Organization |
OU | Organizational Unit |
L | Locality |
S | State |
C | Country |
E | Email Address |
If a field value contains a comma it must be quoted.
SSHClientCertType¶
The type of SSHClientCert private key.
Possible Values¶
USER
, MACHINE
, PFXFILE
, PFXBLOB
, JKSFILE
, JKSBLOB
, PEMKEY_FILE
, PEMKEY_BLOB
, PPKFILE
, PPKBLOB
, XMLFILE
, XMLBLOB
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
PEMKEY_FILE
Remarks¶
This property can take one of the following values:
Types | Description | Allowed Blob Values |
---|---|---|
MACHINE/USER | Not available on this platform. | Blob values are not supported. |
JKSFILE/JKSBLOB | A Java keystore file. Must contain both a certificate and a private key. Only available in Java. | base64-only |
PFXFILE/PFXBLOB | A PKCS12-format (.pfx) file. Must contain both a certificate and a private key. | base64-only |
PEMKEY_FILE/PEMKEY_BLOB | A PEM-format file. Must contain an RSA, DSA, or OPENSSH private key. Can optionally contain a certificate matching the private key. | base64 or plain text. Newlines may be replaced with spaces when providing the blob as text. |
PPKFILE/PPKBLOB | A PuTTY-format private key created using the puttygen tool. | base64-only |
XMLFILE/XMLBLOB | An XML key in the format generated by the .NET RSA class: RSA.ToXmlString(true) . | base64 or plain text. |
SSHServer¶
The SSH server.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The SSH server.
SSHPort¶
The SSH port.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
22
Remarks¶
The SSH port.
SSHUser¶
The SSH user.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The SSH user.
SSHPassword¶
The SSH password.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The SSH password.
SSHServerFingerprint¶
The SSH server fingerprint.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The SSH server fingerprint.
UseSSH¶
Whether to tunnel the Redis connection over SSH. Use SSH.
Data Type¶
bool
Default Value¶
false
Remarks¶
By default the connector will attempt to connect directly to Redis. When this option is enabled, the connector will instead establish an SSH connection with the SSHServer and tunnel the connection to Redis through it.
Schema¶
This section provides a complete list of schema properties you can configure.
Property | Description |
---|---|
Location | A path to the directory that contains the schema files defining tables, views, and stored procedures. |
BrowsableSchemas | This property restricts the schemas reported to a subset of the available schemas. For example, BrowsableSchemas=SchemaA, SchemaB, SchemaC. |
Tables | This property restricts the tables reported to a subset of the available tables. For example, Tables=TableA, TableB, TableC. |
Views | Restricts the views reported to a subset of the available tables. For example, Views=ViewA, ViewB, ViewC. |
Location¶
A path to the directory that contains the schema files defining tables, views, and stored procedures.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
%APPDATA%\Redis Data Provider\Schema
Remarks¶
The path to a directory which contains the schema files for the connector (.rsd files for tables and views, .rsb files for stored procedures). The folder location can be a relative path from the location of the executable. The Location
property is only needed if you want to customize definitions (for example, change a column name, ignore a column, and so on) or extend the data model with new tables, views, or stored procedures.
If left unspecified, the default location is "%APPDATA%\Redis Data Provider\Schema" with %APPDATA%
being set to the user's configuration directory:
Platform | %APPDATA% |
---|---|
Windows | The value of the APPDATA environment variable |
Mac | ~/Library/Application Support |
Linux | ~/.config |
BrowsableSchemas¶
This property restricts the schemas reported to a subset of the available schemas. For example, BrowsableSchemas=SchemaA,SchemaB,SchemaC.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
Listing the schemas from databases can be expensive. Providing a list of schemas in the connection string improves the performance.
Tables¶
This property restricts the tables reported to a subset of the available tables. For example, Tables=TableA,TableB,TableC.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
Listing the tables from some databases can be expensive. Providing a list of tables in the connection string improves the performance of the connector.
This property can also be used as an alternative to automatically listing views if you already know which ones you want to work with and there would otherwise be too many to work with.
Specify the tables you want in a comma-separated list. Each table should be a valid SQL identifier with any special characters escaped using square brackets, double-quotes or backticks. For example, Tables=TableA,[TableB/WithSlash],WithCatalog.WithSchema.`TableC With Space`.
Note that when connecting to a data source with multiple schemas or catalogs, you will need to provide the fully qualified name of the table in this property, as in the last example here, to avoid ambiguity between tables that exist in multiple catalogs or schemas.
Views¶
Restricts the views reported to a subset of the available tables. For example, Views=ViewA,ViewB,ViewC.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
Listing the views from some databases can be expensive. Providing a list of views in the connection string improves the performance of the connector.
This property can also be used as an alternative to automatically listing views if you already know which ones you want to work with and there would otherwise be too many to work with.
Specify the views you want in a comma-separated list. Each view should be a valid SQL identifier with any special characters escaped using square brackets, double-quotes or backticks. For example, Views=ViewA,[ViewB/WithSlash],WithCatalog.WithSchema.`ViewC With Space`.
Note that when connecting to a data source with multiple schemas or catalogs, you will need to provide the fully qualified name of the table in this property, as in the last example here, to avoid ambiguity between tables that exist in multiple catalogs or schemas.
Miscellaneous¶
This section provides a complete list of miscellaneous properties you can configure.
Property | Description |
---|---|
IgnoreTypeErrors | Removes support for the specified data types and ignores casting exceptions for those types. |
MaxRows | Limits the number of rows returned when no aggregation or GROUP BY is used in the query. This takes precedence over LIMIT clauses. |
Other | These hidden properties are used only in specific use cases. |
ParallelMode | This option sets whether the provider should use multiple connections when connecting to Redis. |
PseudoColumns | This property indicates whether or not to include pseudo columns as columns to the table. |
QueryTimeout | The timeout in seconds for which the provider will wait for the query response. The default value is -1, which indicates the provider should never time out. |
RowScanDepth | The maximum number of rows to scan to look for the columns available in a table. |
TableScanDepth | The maximum number of keys to scan when looking for tables available in your Redis database. |
Timeout | The value in seconds until the timeout error is thrown, canceling the operation. |
UserDefinedViews | A filepath pointing to the JSON configuration file containing your custom views. |
IgnoreTypeErrors¶
Removes support for the specified data types and ignores casting exceptions for those types.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
A comma-separated list of data types for which to ignore casting exceptions and treat as strings. For example, IgnoreTypeErrors=Date,Time.
If the value can be parsed as the specified type, it is returned as a string; otherwise, the value is returned as NULL instead.
MaxRows¶
Limits the number of rows returned when no aggregation or GROUP BY is used in the query. This takes precedence over LIMIT clauses.
Data Type¶
int
Default Value¶
-1
Remarks¶
Limits the number of rows returned when no aggregation or GROUP BY is used in the query. This takes precedence over LIMIT clauses.
Other¶
These hidden properties are used only in specific use cases.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
The properties listed below are available for specific use cases. Normal driver use cases and functionality should not require these properties.
Specify multiple properties in a semicolon-separated list.
Integration and Formatting¶
Property | Description |
---|---|
DefaultColumnSize | Sets the default length of string fields when the data source does not provide column length in the metadata. The default value is 2000. |
ConvertDateTimeToGMT | Determines whether to convert date-time values to GMT, instead of the local time of the machine. |
RecordToFile=filename | Records the underlying socket data transfer to the specified file. |
ParallelMode¶
This option sets whether the provider should use multiple connections when connecting to Redis.
Data Type¶
bool
Default Value¶
false
Remarks¶
The default is that parallel mode is disabled, which means that the connector will use only one connection when communicating with Redis. This works well for smaller databases, but can cause performance and memory usage issues on larger databases.
If parallel mode is enabled, the connector will open different connections to Redis for discovering keys and reading data. This makes interacting with larger databases more efficient but can add overhead for smaller databases.
If parallel mode is enabled, you can tune how much memory is used by the connector by using the hidden MaxPageSize property (see Other). The default value is 5, but you can increase it to make the connector faster or decrease it to make the connector use less memory.
PseudoColumns¶
This property indicates whether or not to include pseudo columns as columns to the table.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
This setting is particularly helpful in Entity Framework, which does not allow you to set a value for a pseudo column unless it is a table column. The value of this connection setting is of the format "Table1=Column1, Table1=Column2, Table2=Column3". You can use the "*" character to include all tables and all columns; for example, "*=*".
QueryTimeout¶
The timeout in seconds for which the provider will wait for the query response. The default value is -1, which indicates the provider should never time out.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
-1
Remarks¶
The timeout in seconds for which the connector will wait for the query response. The default value is -1, which indicates the connector should never time out.
RowScanDepth¶
The maximum number of rows to scan to look for the columns available in a table.
Data Type¶
int
Default Value¶
50
Remarks¶
The columns in a table must be determined by scanning table rows. This value determines the maximum number of rows that will be scanned.
Setting a high value may decrease performance. Setting a low value may prevent the data type from being determined properly, especially when there is null data.
TableScanDepth¶
The maximum number of keys to scan when looking for tables available in your Redis database.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
-1
Remarks¶
Since Redis is schemaless, the connector determines tables by finding keys that match the TablePattern. This value determines the maximum number of keys that will be scanned for each entry in TablePattern.
To disable this limit and always scan all keys, set the value of this property to "-1". Otherwise, set this property to a positive integer to limit the keys scanned to that amount.
Timeout¶
The value in seconds until the timeout error is thrown, canceling the operation.
Data Type¶
int
Default Value¶
60
Remarks¶
If Timeout
= 0, operations do not time out. The operations run until they complete successfully or until they encounter an error condition.
If Timeout
expires and the operation is not yet complete, the connector throws an exception.
UserDefinedViews¶
A filepath pointing to the JSON configuration file containing your custom views.
Data Type¶
string
Default Value¶
""
Remarks¶
User Defined Views are defined in a JSON-formatted configuration file called UserDefinedViews.json
. The connector automatically detects the views specified in this file.
You can also have multiple view definitions and control them using the UserDefinedViews
connection property. When you use this property, only the specified views are seen by the connector.
This User Defined View configuration file is formatted as follows:
- Each root element defines the name of a view.
- Each root element contains a child element, called
query
, which contains the custom SQL query for the view.
For example:
{
"MyView": {
"query": "SELECT * FROM Customers WHERE MyColumn = 'value'"
},
"MyView2": {
"query": "SELECT * FROM MyTable WHERE Id IN (1,2,3)"
}
}
Use the UserDefinedViews
connection property to specify the location of your JSON configuration file. For example:
"UserDefinedViews", C:\Users\yourusername\Desktop\tmp\UserDefinedViews.json
Note that the specified path is not embedded in quotation marks.