Snowflake (via Collector method) - v3.1.0
About Collectors
Pre-requisites
Python 3.6 - 3.9
Access to K landing directory
Access to Snowflake (see section below)
Snowflake Access
Create a Snowflake user with read access to following tables in the Snowflake database.
account_usage.history
account_usage.views
account_usage.tables
account_usage.columns
account_usage.copy_history
account_usage.grants_to_roles
account_usage.grants_to_users
account_usage.schemata
account_usage.databases
You can use the following code:
Log in with a user that has the permissions to create a role/user
--Create a new role for the Catalog user
Create role CATALOG_READ_ONLY;
--Grant the role access to the Accoutn usage schema
grant select on all tables in schema SNOWFLAKE.ACCOUNT_USAGE to CATALOG_READ_ONLY;
--Create a new user for K and grant it the role (remove the [])
create user [kada_user] password=['abc123!@#'] default_role = CATALOG_READ_ONLY default_warehouse = [warehouse];
From the above record down the following to be used for the setup
User name / Password
Role
Warehouse
Snowflake account (found in the URL of your Snowflake instance - between https:// and .snowflakecomputing.com/…)
If you want the connect to Snowflake via Key Pair Authentication, follow these steps https://docs.snowflake.com/en/user-guide/key-pair-auth#step-1-generate-the-private-key and attach the key to the user you created.
Step 1: Create the Source in K
Create a Snowflake source in K
Go to Settings, Select Sources and click Add Source
Select “Load from File” option
Give the source a Name - e.g. Snowflake Production
Add the Host name for the Snowflake Server
Click Finish Setup
Step 2: Getting Access to the Source Landing Directory
Step 3: Install the Collector
It is recommended to use a python environment such as pyenv or pipenv if you are not intending to install this package at the system level.
You can download the latest Core Library and Snowflake whl via Platform Settings → Sources → Download Collectors
Run the following command to install the collector.
pip install kada_collectors_extractors_<version>-none-any.whl
You will also need to install the latest common library kada_collectors_lib for this collector to function properly.
pip install kada_collectors_lib-<version>-none-any.whl
Some python packages also have dependencies on the OS level packages, so you may be required to install additional OS packages if the below fails to install. These are some known possible packages you may require depending on your OS, this is not exhaustive and only serves as a guide.
OS | Packages |
---|---|
CentOS | libffi-devel |
Ubuntu | libssl-dev |
Please also see https://docs.snowflake.com/en/user-guide/python-connector-install.html
Step 4: Configure the Collector
The collector requires a set of parameters to connect to and extract metadata from Snowflake
FIELD | FIELD TYPE | DESCRIPTION | EXAMPLE |
---|---|---|---|
account | string | Snowflake account | “abc123.australia-east.azure” |
username | string | Username to log into the snowflake account, if use_private_key is true, this must be the user associated to the private key |
|
password | string | Password to log into the snowflake account, if use_private_key is true then this is the password/passphrase to that private key, if your private key for some reason is NOT encrypted, then you can leave this blank. |
|
information_database | string | Database where all the required tables are located, generally this is snowflake | “snowflake” |
role | string | The role to access the required account_usage tables, generally this is accountadmin | “accountadmin” |
warehouse | string | The warehouse to execute the queries against | “xs_analytics” |
databases | list<string> | A list of databases to extract from Snowflake | [“dwh”, “adw”] |
login_timeout | integer | The max amount of time in seconds allowed for the extractor to establish and authenticate a connection, generally 5 is sufficient but if you have a slow network you can increase this up to 20 | 5 |
output_path | string | Absolute path to the output location where files are to be written | “/tmp/output” |
mask | boolean | To enable masking or not | true |
compress | boolean | To gzip the output or not | true |
use_private_key | boolean | To use private key or not | true |
private_key | string | The private key value as text. The key requires formatting
| |
host | string | The host value for snowflake that was onboarded in K | “abc123.australia-east.azure.snowflakecomputing.com” |
These parameters can be added directly into the run or you can use pass the parameters in via a JSON file. The following is an example you can use that is included in the example run code below.
kada_snowflake_extractor_config.json
Step 5: Run the Collector
The following code is an example of how to run the extractor. You may need to uplift this code to meet any code standards at your organisation.
This can be executed in any python environment where the whl has been installed.
This is the wrapper script: kada_snowflake_extractor.py
If your organisation has a proxy operating on where this script runs and you are using an private link for snowflake you may encounter an issue resulting in a 403 error when fetching result batches.
In such a scenario this is due to the private link not requiring a proxy but the s3 data fetch which snowflake uses requires a proxy, you will need to set the following.
export HTTP_PROXY=”http://username:password@proxyserver.company.com:80”
export HTTPS_PROXY=”http://username:password@proxyserver.company.com:80”
Then explicitly call out snowflake itself to not use a proxy
export NO_PROXY=”.snowflakecomputing.com”
On a windows setup you would use “set” instead of “export” in the command line.
Advance options:
If you wish to maintain your own high water mark files elsewhere you can use the above section’s script as a guide on how to call the extractor. The configuration file is simply the keyword arguments in JSON format. Refer to this document for more information Collector Integration General Notes | Storing HWM in another location
If you are handling external arguments of the runner yourself, you’ll need to consider additional items for the run method. Refer to this document for more information Collector Integration General Notes | The run method
account: snowflake account
username: username to sign into snowflake
password: password to sign into snowflake
information_database: database with snowflake level information
databases: list of databases to extract
role: role with access to the database with snowflake level information
output_path: full or relative path to where the outputs should go
warehouse: specify a different warehouse if required, otherwise the default will be used
login_timeout: The timeout for snowflake Auth
mask: To mask the META/DATABASE_LOG files or not
compress: To gzip output files or not
use_private_key: Using private/public RSA keys
private_key: the private key value in plain text not byte encoded
host: The host value onboarded in K
Step 6: Check the Collector Outputs
K Extracts
A set of files (eg metadata, databaselog, linkages, events etc) will be generated. These files will appear in the output_path directory you set in the configuration details
High Water Mark File
A high water mark file is created in the same directory as the execution called snowflake_hwm.txt and produce files according to the configuration JSON. This file is only produced if you call the publish_hwm method.
Step 7: Push the Extracts to K
Once the files have been validated, you can push the files to the K landing directory.
You can use Azure Storage Explorer if you want to initially do this manually. You can push the files using python as well (see Airflow example below)
Example: Using Airflow to orchestrate the Extract and Push to K