Fluvio SQL Sink connector
The SQL Sink connector reads records from Fluvio topic, applies configured transformations, and
sends new records to the SQL database (via INSERT statements).
- PostgreSQL
- SQLite
| Model | PostgreSQL | SQLite |
|---|---|---|
| Bool | BOOL | BOOLEAN |
| Char | CHAR | INTEGER |
| SmallInt | SMALLINT, SMALLSERIAL, INT2 | INTEGER |
| Int | INT, SERIAL, INT4 | INTEGER |
| BigInt | BIGINT, BIGSERIAL, INT8 | BIGINT, INT8 |
| Float | REAL, FLOAT4 | REAL |
| DoublePrecision | DOUBLE PRECISION, FLOAT8 | REAL |
| Text | VARCHAR, CHAR(N), TEXT, NAME | TEXT |
| Bytes | BYTEA | BLOB |
| Numeric | NUMERIC | REAL |
| Timestamp | TIMESTAMP | DATETIME |
| Date | DATE | DATE |
| Time | TIME | TIME |
| Uuid | UUID | BLOB, TEXT |
| Json | JSON, JSONB | TEXT |
The SQL Sink connector expects the data in Fluvio SQL Model in JSON format.
In order to work with different data formats or data structures, transformations can be applied.
The transformation is a SmartModule pulled from the SmartModule Hub. Transformations are chained according to the order
in the config. If a SmartModule requires configuration, it is passed via with section of transforms entry.
| Option | default | type | description |
|---|---|---|---|
| url | - | String | SQL database conection url |
apiVersion: 0.1.0
meta:
version: 0.3.3
name: my-sql-connector
type: sql-sink
topic: sql-topic
create-topic: true
secrets:
- name: DB_USERNAME
- name: DB_PASSWORD
- name: DB_HOST
- name: DB_PORT
- name: DB_NAME
sql:
url: 'postgresql://${{ secrets.DB_USERNAME }}:${{ secrets.DB_PASSWORD }}@${{ secrets.DB_HOST }}:${{ secrets.DB_PORT }}/${{ secrets.DB_NAME }}'
The connector can use secrets in order to hide sensitive information.
apiVersion: 0.1.0
meta:
version: 0.3.3
name: my-sql-connector
type: sql-sink
topic: sql-topic
secrets:
- name: DATABASE_URL
sql:
url: ${{ secrets.DATABASE_URL }}
Let’s look at the example of the connector with one transformation named infinyon/json-sql. The transformation takes
records in JSON format and creates SQL insert operation to topic_message table. The value from device.device_id
JSON field will be put to device_id column and the entire json body to record column.
The JSON record:
{
"device": {
"device_id": 1
}
}
The SQL database (Postgres):
CREATE TABLE topic_message (device_id int, record json);
Connector configuration file:
# connector-config.yaml
apiVersion: 0.1.0
meta:
version: 0.3.3
name: json-sql-connector
type: sql-sink
topic: sql-topic
create-topic: true
secrets:
- name: DATABASE_URL
sql:
url: ${{ secrets.DATABASE_URL }}
transforms:
- uses: infinyon/json-sql
with:
mapping:
table: "topic_message"
map-columns:
"device_id":
json-key: "device.device_id"
value:
type: "int"
default: "0"
required: true
"record":
json-key: "$"
value:
type: "jsonb"
required: true
You can use Fluvio cdk tool to deploy the connector:
cdk deploy start --config connector-config.yaml
To delete the connector run:
cdk deploy shutdown --name json-sql-connector
After you run the connector you will see records in your database table.
See more in our Build MQTT to SQL Pipeline and Build HTTP to SQL Pipeline tutorials.
Every step would be same except the connector config and the behavior of the connector after deployment.
We have a operation parameter which defaults to insert but we can pass upsert here to specify we want to do an upsert operation.
Upsert additionaly takes an unique-columns argument. unique-columns specifies the list indices or column names to check for uniqueness of a record.
If a record with same value in unique-columns exists in the database, it will be updated. If no record exists with same value, the given record will
be inserted.
Connector configuration file for upsert (assuming device_id is a unique column or an index in the database):
# connector-config.yaml
apiVersion: 0.1.0
meta:
version: 0.3.3
name: json-sql-connector
type: sql-sink
topic: sql-topic
create-topic: true
secrets:
- name: DATABASE_URL
sql:
url: ${{ secrets.DATABASE_URL }}
transforms:
- uses: infinyon/json-sql
with:
mapping:
operation: "upsert"
unique-columns:
- "device_id"
table: "topic_message"
map-columns:
"device_id":
json-key: "device.device_id"
value:
type: "int"
default: "0"
required: true
"record":
json-key: "$"
value:
type: "jsonb"
required: true
See more about upsert in our blog.
Note: the blog doesn’t use json-sql smartmodule and has hardcoded records for demonstration. sql-connector is intended to be used with json-sql.