Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

nodejs-dataworks

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
3
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

nodejs-dataworks

nodejs library for DataWorks apis

  • 0.1.2
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
1
Created
Source

Introduction

nodejs-dataworks is a module library for IBM DataWorks APIs. At this time, only the data load APIs are covered by this library, but more DataWorks APIs will be covered over time including "Address Cleansing" and "Data Profiling" apis.
As a reference, The Simple Data Pipe example app is using nodejs-dataworks to programmatically create activities for moving data from Cloudant to DashDB. (See the documentation here.)

This post provides documentation on how to use our DataWorks client library for Node.js.

How to use the library

var dataworks = require("dataworks").dataload;
var dwInstance = new dataworks();
...

Let's take a deeper look at what's happening behind the var dwInstance = new dataworks(); code.

By default the library will automatically try to find a service bound to the application using a regular expression that contains the word "dataworks" in its name. If you know the service you want to bind to, you can always pass it as an option object like so:

var dwInstance = new dataworks({dwServiceName: "myDataWorksServiceName"});

Once the DataWorks service is found in Bluemix's VCAP_SERVICES environment variable, the library will extract the credential information (url, userid, password) and use it in all subsequent API calls.

Note:

####listActivities API#### All these APIs use the callback pattern, i.e., you pass a callback function that takes an error object and an array of activities as arguments.

dwInstance.listActivities( function( err, activities ){
   if ( err ){
	return console.log( "Unable to get list of activities: %s", err );
   }
   console.log( "activities: %s", require('util').inspect( activities ) );
});
...

####getActivity API#### Query an activity by its id:

dwInstance.getActivity( activityId, function( err, activity ){
   if ( err ){
	return console.log( "Unable to get activity for id %s : %s", activityId, err );
   }
   console.log( "activity: %s", require('util').inspect( activity ) );
});
...

####getActivityByName API#### Query an activity by its name.

Note: return value can be null.

dwInstance.getActivityByName( activityName, function( err, activity ){
   if ( err ){
	return console.log( "Unable to get activity for name %s : %s", activityName, err );
   }
   console.log( "activity: %s", require('util').inspect( activity ) );
});
...

####deleteActivity API#### Delete an activity by its ID:

dwInstance.deleteActivity( activityId, function( err ){
   if ( err ){
	return console.log( "Unable to delete activity for id %s : %s", activityId, err );
   }
   console.log( "activity successfully deleted" );
});
...

####createActivity API#### Create a new activity by specifying the source and target connection.

Note: this library uses a factory to create connections. At this time, only Cloudant and DashDB are supported.

  var srcConnection = dwInstance.newConnection("cloudant");  //Create a source connection for cloudant
  srcConnection.setDbName( "sf_campaign__c" );   //Set the cloudant db name for the source connection
  srcConnection.addTable( {
     name: "sf_campaign__c".toUpperCase()
  });   //Specify the table
  var targetConnection = dwInstance.newConnection("dashDB"); //Create a target connection for dashDB
  targetConnection.setSourceConnection( srcConnection ); //Simply set the associated source connection
  dwInstance.createActivity({
	name: "test",
	desc: "Test instance",
	srcConnection: srcConnection,
	targetConnection: targetConnection
  }, function( err, activity ){
	if ( err ){
		return console.log("Unable to create activity: %s", err);
	}
	console.log("SuccessFully created a new activity: %s", util.inspect( activity, { showHidden: true, depth: null } ) );
  });
...

####runActivity API#### Run an activity by its ID:

dwInstance.runActivity( activityId, function( err, activityRun ){
   if ( err ){
	return console.log( "Unable to run activity for id %s : %s", activityId, err );
   }
   console.log( "activity successfully run: %s", require('util').inspect( activityRun ) );
});
...

####monitorActivityRun API#### Monitor an activity run by its ID:

  dwInstance.runActivity( activityId, function( err, activityRun ){
   if ( err ){
	return console.log( "Unable to run activity for id %s : %s", activityId, err );
   }
		
   var monitor = function(){
       dwInstance.monitorActivityRun( activityId, activityRun.id, function( err, activityRun ){
            if ( err ){
	        return console.log("Error retrieving activity run details %s", err );
	    }
	    if ( dwInstance.isFinished( activityRun.status ) ){   //Query whether the activity is finished
		 return console.log("ActivityRun complete");
	    }
            console.log( "Activity Running: %s", util.inspect( activityRun, { showHidden: true, depth: null } ));
	    setTimeout( monitor, 5000 ); //Poll again in 5s
	})
   };
   console.log("SuccessFully submitted a activity for running. Waiting for results...: %s", util.inspect( activityRun, { showHidden: true, depth: null } ) );
   setTimeout( monitor, 5000 );
});
...

####listActivityRuns API#### List all activity runs for a specified activity:

dwInstance.listActivityRuns( activityId, function( err, activityRuns ){
   if ( err ){
	return console.log( "Unable to get activity runs for activity id %s : %s", activityId, err );
   }
   console.log( "List of activity runs: %s", require('util').inspect( activityRuns ) );
});
...

####deleteActivityRun API#### Delete an activity run by its ID:

dwInstance.deleteActivityRun( activityId, activityRunId, function( err ){
   if ( err ){
	return console.log( "Unable to delete activity run for id %s and activity id %s : %s", activityRunId, activityId, err );
   }
   console.log( "Successfully deleted activity Run id %s", activityRunId );
});
...

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 25 Aug 2015

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc