Generic - Columnar database extractor (Java)
- Navigate to Administration > ETL & SYSTEM TASKS > ETL tasks.
- In the ETL tasks page, click Add > Add ETL under the Last run tab.
In the Add ETL page, set values for the following properties under each expandable tab.
Basic properties
Advanced properties
- Click Save.
You return to the Last run tab under the ETL tasks page. - Validate the results in simulation mode: In the ETL tasks table under ETL tasks > Last run, locate your ETL (ETL task name), click
to run the ETL.
After you run the ETL, the Last exit column in the ETL tasks table will display one of the following values:- OK: The ETL executed without any error in simulation mode.
- WARNING: The ETL execution returned some warnings in simulation mode. Check the ETL log.
- ERROR: The ETL execution returned errors and was unsuccessful. Edit the active Run configuration and try again.
- Switch the ETL to production mode: To do this, perform the following task:
- In the ETL tasks table under ETL tasks > Last run, click the ETL under the Name column.
- In the Run configurations table in the ETL details page, click
to edit the active run configuration.
- In the Edit run configuration page, navigate to the Run configuration expandable tab and set Execute in simulation mode to No.
- Click Save.
- Locate the ETL in the ETL tasks table and click
to Run it, or schedule an ETL run.
After you run the ETL, or schedule the ETL for a run, it will extract the data form the source and transfer it to the BMC Helix Continuous Optimization database.
Configuring the ETL
The following sample query can be used to extract generic data. It can be used as a template to create custom extraction queries:
SELECT d.ts as TS, d.interval as DURATION, d.id as DS_SYSNM, d.name as SYSNM, d.fsname as SUBOBJNM, d.avgvalue as BYFS_FREE, d.size as BYFS_SIZE
from my_table d and d.ts > ?
from my_table d and d.ts > ?
You can use the :PARL placeholder parameter one or multiple times in a query; the parameter is replaced by the last saved lastcounter value.
#Example 1
SELECT d.ts as TS, d.interval as DURATION, d.id as DS_SYSNM, d.name as SYSNM, d.fsname as SUBOBJNM, d.avgvalue as BYFS_FREE, d.size as BYFS_SIZE
from my_table d and d.ts > :PARL
#Example 2
SELECT d.ts as TS, d.ats as ACTIVITYDATE, d.interval as DURATION, d.id as DS_SYSNM, d.name as SYSNM, d.fsname as SUBOBJNM, d.avgvalue as BYFS_FREE, d.size as BYFS_SIZE from my_table d and d.ts > :PARL OR d.ats > :PARL
SELECT d.ts as TS, d.interval as DURATION, d.id as DS_SYSNM, d.name as SYSNM, d.fsname as SUBOBJNM, d.avgvalue as BYFS_FREE, d.size as BYFS_SIZE
from my_table d and d.ts > :PARL
#Example 2
SELECT d.ts as TS, d.ats as ACTIVITYDATE, d.interval as DURATION, d.id as DS_SYSNM, d.name as SYSNM, d.fsname as SUBOBJNM, d.avgvalue as BYFS_FREE, d.size as BYFS_SIZE from my_table d and d.ts > :PARL OR d.ats > :PARL
Tip: For faster searching, add an asterisk to the end of your partial query. Example: cert*