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Twitter Icon Twitter JDBC Driver

A straightforward interface to connect any Java application with Twitter integration capabilities including Search, GeoSearch, UserInfo, DirectMessages, Followers, and more!

Integrate Twitter with External Services using SnapLogic



Use CData JDBC drivers in SnapLogic to integrate Twitter with External Services.

SnapLogic is an integration platform-as-a-service (iPaaS) that allows users to create data integration flows with no code. When paired with the CData JDBC Drivers, users get access to live data from more than 250+ SaaS, Big Data and NoSQL sources, including Twitter, in their SnapLogic workflows.

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

Connect to Twitter in SnapLogic

To connect to Twitter data in SnapLogic, download and install the CData Twitter JDBC Driver. Follow the installation dialog. When the installation is complete, the JAR file can be found in the installation directory (C:/Program Files/CData/CData JDBC Driver for Twitter/lib by default).

Upload the Twitter JDBC Driver

After installation, upload the JDBC JAR file to a location in SnapLogic (for example, projects/Jerod Johnson) from the Manager tab.

Configure the Connection

Once the JDBC Driver is uploaded, we can create the connection to Twitter.

  1. Navigate to the Designer tab
  2. Expand "JDBC" from Snaps and drag a "Generic JDBC - Select" snap onto the designer
  3. Click Add Account (or select an existing one) and click "Continue"
  4. In the next form, configure the JDBC connection properties:
    • Under JDBC JARs, add the JAR file we previously uploaded
    • Set JDBC Driver Class to cdata.jdbc.twitter.TwitterDriver
    • Set JDBC URL to a JDBC connection string for the Twitter JDBC Driver, for example:

      jdbc:twitter:RTK=XXXXXX;InitiateOAuth=GETANDREFRESH

      NOTE: RTK is a trial or full key. Contact our Support team for more information.

      Built-In Connection String Designer

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

      java -jar cdata.jdbc.twitter.jar

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

      All tables require authentication. You can connect using your User and Password or OAuth. To authenticate using OAuth, you can use the embedded OAuthClientId, OAuthClientSecret, and CallbackURL or you can register an app to obtain your own.

      If you intend to communicate with Twitter only as the currently authenticated user, then you can obtain the OAuthAccessToken and OAuthAccessTokenSecret directly by registering an app.

      See the Getting Started chapter in the help documentation for a guide to using OAuth.

  5. After entering the connection properties, click "Validate" and "Apply"

Read Twitter Data

In the form that opens after validating and applying the connection, configure your query.

  • Set Schema name to "Twitter"
  • Set Table name to a table for Twitter using the schema name, for example: "Twitter"."Tweets" (use the drop-down to see the full list of available tables)
  • Add Output fields for each item you wish to work with from the table

Save the Generic JDBC - Select snap.

With connection and query configured, click the end of the snap to preview the data (highlighted below).

Once you confirm the results are what you expect, you can add additional snaps to funnel your Twitter data to another endpoint.

Piping Twitter Data to External Services

For this article, we will load data in a Google Spreadsheet. You can use any of the supported snaps, or even use a Generic JDBC snap with another CData JDBC Driver, to move data into an external service.

  1. Start by dropping a "Worksheet Writer" snap onto the end of the "Generic JDBC - Select" snap.
  2. Add an account to connect to Google Sheets
  3. Configure the Worksheet Writer snap to write your Twitter data to a Google Spreadsheet

You can now execute the fully configured pipeline to extract data from Twitter and push it into a Google Spreadsheet.

Piping External Data to Twitter

As mentioned above, you can also use the JDBC Driver for Twitter in SnapLogic to write data to Twitter. Start by adding a Generic JDBC - Insert or Generic JDBC - Update snap to the dashboard.

  1. Select the existing "Account" (connection) or create a new one
  2. Configure the query:
    • Set Schema name to "Twitter"
    • Set Table name to a table for Twitter using the schema name, for example: "Twitter"."Tweets" (use the drop-down to see the full list of available tables)
  3. Save the Generic JDBC - Insert/Update snap

At this point, you have configured a snap to write data to Twitter, inserting new records or updating existing ones.

More Information & Free Trial

Using the CData JDBC Driver for Twitter you can create a pipeline in SnapLogic for integrating Twitter data with external services. For more information about connecting to Twitter, check at our CData JDBC Driver for Twitter page. Download a free, 30 day trial of the CData JDBC Driver for Twitter and get started today.