Configuring the Adapter for Teradata

In this section:

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Configuring the adapter consists of specifying connection and authentication information for each of the connections you want to establish.


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Declaring Connection Attributes

How to:

Reference:

In order to connect to a Teradata database server, the adapter requires connection and authentication information. You supply this information using the SET CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES command. You can:

You can declare connections to more than one Teradata database server by including multiple SET CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES commands. The actual connection to the Teradata Server takes place when the first query that references the connection is issued. If you issue multiple SET CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES commands:



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Procedure: How to Declare Connection Attributes

You can configure the adapter from either the Web Console or the Data Management Console.

  1. From the Web Console menu bar, click Adapters.

    or

    From the Data Management Console, expand the Adapters folder.

    The Adapters folder opens.

  2. Expand the Available folder, if it is not already expanded.
  3. Expand the appropriate group folder and the specific adapter folder. The group folder is described in the connection attributes reference.
  4. Right-click the adapter name and/or version and select Configure.

    The Add Adapter to Configuration pane opens.

  5. Enter values for the parameters required by the adapter, as described in the connection attributes reference.
  6. Click Configure. The configured adapter is added to the Adapters list in the navigation pane.


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Reference: Connection Attributes for Teradata

The Teradata adapter is under the SQL group folder.

The following list describes the connection attributes for which you can supply values. To complete the attribute declaration, click the Configure button.

Note that the release numbers on the Web Console for DBMS Add and DBMS Change panes refer to the Teradata ODBC driver, not the Teradata DBMS release.

Connection Name

This is the logical name used to identify this particular set of connection attributes.

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Datasource or Server

Valid Teradata data source name (DSN). There is no default DSN; you must enter a value.

For the ODBC interface, this DSN name should match the User, System, or File DSN configured in the ODBC Administrator on Windows or the DSN entry in the $HOME/.odbc.ini file on UNIX.

For the CLI interface, this field is labeled SERVER and requires a valid Teradata TDP value. On Windows and UNIX, this is the value of i_dbcpath in the clispb.dat file. The default is DBC or <default>. This value may also be derived from the host file entry for the TD server. For example, if the host file contains td13cop1, then the server value will be td13. Refer to the Teradata Tools and Utilities documentation for details.

Security

There are two methods by which a user can be authenticated when connecting to a database server:

  • Explicit. The user ID and password are explicitly specified for each connection and passed to the database, at connection time, for authentication.
  • Password Passthru. The user ID and password received from the client application are passed to the database, at connection time, for authentication.
User

Primary authorization ID by which you are known to the data source.

Password

Password associated with the primary authorization ID.

Select profile

Select a profile from the drop-down menu to indicate the level of profile in which to store the CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES command. The global profile, edasprof.prf, is the default.

If you wish to create a new profile, either a user profile (user.prf) or a group profile if available on your platform (using the appropriate naming convention), choose New Profile from the drop-down menu and enter a name in the Profile Name field (the extension is added automatically).

Store the connection attributes in the server profile (edasprof).



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Syntax: How to Declare Connection Attributes Manually
ENGINE SQLDBC SET CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES {connection DSN_name|Server} 
/userid,password

where:

SQLDBC

Indicates the adapter. You can omit this value if you previously issued the SET SQLENGINE command.

connection

This is the logical name used to identify this particular set of connection attributes.

Note that one blank space is required between connection and DSN_name.

DSN_name

For the Adapter for Teradata ODBC, this is the Teradata Data Source Name (DSN) you wish to access. It must match an entry in the odbc.ini file.

Server

For the Adapter for Teradata CLI, this is the Teradata Director Program number (TDPn), where n is the number. This is the value of i_dbcpath in the clispb.dat file.

userid

Is the primary authorization ID by which you are known to Teradata.

password

Is the password associated with the primary authorization ID.



Example: Declaring Connection Attributes

The following SET CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES command connects to the Teradata database server named SAMPLESERVER with an explicit user ID (MYUSER) and password (PASS). To ensure security, specify connection attributes from the Web Console, which encrypts the password before adding it to the server profile.

ENGINE SQLDBC SET CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES CON1 SAMPLESERVER/MYUSER,PASS


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Reference: Updating the Connection String for Teradata

The syntax for the CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES command for this adapter has been enhanced to include a logical connection name that is designed to support the porting of applications from development to production environments. This enhanced syntax may necessitate the migration of existing CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES commands.

The Web Console Migrate option migrates your server settings to the newer release. To access this option, select Workspace, then Configuration/Monitor from the menu bar. Right-click Migrate from the Server folder in the navigation pane, and select Configure. On the Migrate pane, type the full path of the configuration instance directory (EDACONF) and click the Migrate button. This is the recommended approach.

If you choose not to use the Migrate option, please note the following information:


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Overriding the Default Connection

How to:

Once connections have been defined, the connection named in the first SET CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES command serves as the default connection. You can override this default using the SET DEFAULT_CONNECTION command.



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Syntax: How to Change the Default Connection
ENGINE SQLDBC SET DEFAULT_CONNECTION connection

where:

SQLDBC

Indicates the adapter. You can omit this value if you previously issued the SET SQLENGINE command.

connection

Is the connection defined in a previously issued SET CONNECTION_ATTRIBUTES command. If this name was not previously declared, the following message is issued:

FOC1671, Command out of sequence

Note:



Example: Selecting the Default Connection

The following SET DEFAULT_CONNECTION command selects the database server named SAMPLENAME as the default database server:

ENGINE SQLDBC SET DEFAULT_CONNECTION SAMPLENAME

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Controlling the Connection Scope

How to:

The SET AUTODISCONNECT command controls the persistence of connections when using the adapter for each of the connections you want to establish.



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Syntax: How to Control the Connection Scope
ENGINE SQLDBC SET AUTODISCONNECT ON {FIN|COMMAND|COMMIT}

where:

SQLDBC

Indicates the adapter. You can omit this value if you previously issued the SET SQLENGINE command.

FIN

Disconnects automatically only after the session has been terminated. FIN is the default value.

COMMAND

Disconnects automatically after each request. Depending on how often the event occurs, the SET AUTODISCONNECT command may result in considerable overhead. Almost all of this overhead is not related to the server. It is related to the operating system and the data source.

COMMIT

Disconnects automatically only after COMMIT or ROLLBACK is issued as a native SQL command.


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