Salesforce Translators

The Salesforce translator supports the SELECT, DELETE, INSERT, UPSERT, and UPDATE operations against a Salesforce.com account.

Salesforce API Version Support

salesforce

The translator, known by the type name salesforce, provides Salesforce API 34.0 support. The translator must be used with the corresponding Salesforce resource adapter of the same API version. Salesforce API version 34.0 support has been removed.

salesforce-34

The translator, known by the type name of salesforce-34, provides Salesforce API 34.0 support. The translator must be used with the corresponding Salesforce resource adapter of the same API version.

salesforce-41

The translator, known by the type name of salesforce-41, provides Salesforce API 41.0 support. The translator must be used with the corresponding Salesforce resource adapter of the same API version.

Other API Versions

If you need connectivity to an API version other than what is built in, please utilize the project https://github.com/teiid/salesforce to generate new resource adapter / translator pair.

Execution Properties

Name Description Default

MaxBulkInsertBatchSize

Batch Size to use to insert bulk inserts

2048

SupportsGroupBy

Supports Group By Pushdown. Set to false to have Teiid process group by aggregations, such as those returning more than 2000 rows which error in SOQL.

true

The Salesforce translator can import metadata.

Import Properties

Property Name Description Required Default

NormalizeNames

If the importer should attempt to modify the object/field names so that they can be used unquoted.

false

true

excludeTables

A case-insensitive regular expression that when matched against a table name will exclude it from import. Applied after table names are retrieved. Use a negative look-ahead (?!<inclusion pattern>).* to act as an inclusion filter.

false

n/a

includeTables

A case-insensitive regular expression that when matched against a table name will be included during import. Applied after table names are retrieved from source.

false

n/a

importStatstics

Retrieves cardinalities during import using the REST API explain plan feature.

false

false

ModelAuditFields

Add Audit Fields To Model. This includes CreatedXXX, LastModifiedXXX, and SystemModstamp fields.

false

false

NOTE: When both includeTables and excludeTables patterns are present during the import, the includeTables pattern matched first, then the excludePatterns will be applied.

Note
If you need connectivity to an API version other than what is built in, you may try to use an existing connectivity pair, but in some circumstances - especially accessing a later remote api from an older java api - this is not possible and results in what appears to be hung connections. Please raise an issue if you cannot successfully access a specific API version.

Extension Metadata Properties

Salesforce is not relational database, however Teiid provides ways to map Saleforce data into relational constructs like Tables and Procedures. You can define a foreign Table using DDL in Teiid VDB, which maps to Salesforce’s SObject. At runtime, to interpret this table back to a SObject, Teiid decorates or tags this table definition with additional metadata. For example, a table is defined as

CREATE FOREIGN TABLE Pricebook2 (
	Id string,
	Name string,
	IsActive boolean,
	IsStandard boolean,
	Description string,
	IsDeleted boolean)
	OPTIONS (
	  UPDATABLE 'TRUE',
	  "teiid_sf:Supports Query" 'TRUE');

In the above the property in OPTIONS clause with property "teiid_sf:Supports Query" annotating that this tables supports SELECT commands. The below are list of metadata extension properties that can be used on Salesforce schema.

Property Name Description Required Default Applies To

Supports Query

The table supports SELECT commands

false

true

Table

Supports Retrieve

The table supports retrieval of results as result of SELECT commands

false

true

Table

SQL Processing

Salesforce does not provide the same set of functionality as a relational database. For example, Salesforce does not support arbitrary joins between tables. However, working in combination with the Teiid Query Planner, the Salesforce connector supports nearly all of the SQL syntax supported by the Teiid.

The Salesforce Connector executes SQL commands by "pushing down" the command to Salesforce whenever possible, based on the supported capabilities. Teiid will automatically provide additional database functionality when the Salesforce Connector does not explicitly provide support for a given SQL construct. In cases where certain SQL capabilities cannot be pushed down to Salesforce, Teiid will push down the capabilities that are supported, and fetch a set of data from Salesforce. Then, Teiid will evaluate the additional capabilities, creating a subset of the original data set. Finally, Teiid will pass the result to the client.

If you are issuing queries with a group by clause and receive an error for salesforce related to queryMore not being supported, you may either add limits or set the execution property SupportsGroupBy to false.

SELECT array_agg(Reports) FROM Supervisor where Division = 'customer support';

Neither Salesforce nor the Salesforce Connector support the array_agg() scalar, but they do support CompareCriteriaEquals, so the query that is passed to Salesforce by the connector will be transformed to this query.

SELECT Reports FROM Supervisor where Division = 'customer support';

The array_agg() function will be applied by the Teiid Query Engine to the result set returned by the connector.

In some cases multiple calls to the Salesforce application will be made to support the SQL passed to the connector.

DELETE From Case WHERE Status = 'Closed';

The API in Salesforce to delete objects only supports deleting by ID. In order to accomplish this the Salesforce connector will first execute a query to get the IDs of the correct objects, and then delete those objects. So the above DELETE command will result in the following two commands.

SELECT ID From Case WHERE Status = 'Closed';
DELETE From Case where ID IN (<result of query>);

NOTE: The Salesforce API DELETE call is not expressed in SQL, but the above is an equivalent SQL expression.

It’s useful to be aware of unsupported capabilities, in order to avoid fetching large data sets from Salesforce and making you queries as performant as possible. See all Supported Capabilities.

Selecting from Multi-Select Picklists

A multi-select picklist is a field type in Salesforce that can contain multiple values in a single field. Query criteria operators for fields of this type in SOQL are limited to EQ, NE, includes and excludes. The full Salesforce documentation for selecting from mullti-select picklists can be found at the following link Querying Mulit-select Picklists

Teiid SQL does not support the includes or excludes operators, but the Salesforce connector provides user defined function definitions for these operators that provided equivalent functionality for fields of type multi-select. The definition for the functions is:

boolean includes(Column column, String param)
boolean excludes(Column column, String param)

For example, take a single multi-select picklist column called Status that contains all of these values.

  • current

  • working

  • critical

For that column, all of the below are valid queries:

SELECT * FROM Issue WHERE true = includes (Status, 'current, working' );
SELECT * FROM Issue WHERE true = excludes (Status, 'current, working' );
SELECT * FROM Issue WHERE true = includes (Status, 'current;working, critical' );

EQ and NE criteria will pass to Salesforce as supplied. For example, these queries will not be modified by the connector.

SELECT * FROM Issue WHERE Status = 'current';
SELECT * FROM Issue WHERE Status = 'current;critical';
SELECT * FROM Issue WHERE Status != 'current;working';

Selecting All Objects

The Salesforce connector supports the calling the queryAll operation from the Salesforce API. The queryAll operation is equivalent to the query operation with the exception that it returns data about all current and deletedobjects in the system.

The connector determines if it will call the query or queryAll operation via reference to the isDeleted property present on each Salesforce object, and modeled as a column on each table generated by the importer. By default this value is set to False when the model is generated and thus the connector calls query. Users are free to change the value in the model to True, changing the default behaviour of the connector to be queryAll.

The behavior is different if isDeleted is used as a parameter in the query. If the isDeleted column is used as a parameter in the query, and the value is 'true' the connector will call queryAll.

select * from Contact where isDeleted = true;

If the isDeleted column is used as a parameter in the query, and the value is 'false' the connector perform the default behavior will call query.

select * from Contact where isDeleted = false;

Selecting Updated Objects

If the option is selected when importing metadata from Salesforce, a GetUpdated procedure is generated in the model with the following structure:

GetUpdated (ObjectName IN string,
    StartDate IN datetime,
    EndDate IN datetime,
    LatestDateCovered OUT datetime)
returns
    ID string

See the description of the GetUpdated operation in the Salesforce documentation for usage details.

Selecting Deleted Objects

If the option is selected when importing metadata from Salesforce, a GetDeleted procedure is generated in the model with the following structure:

GetDeleted (ObjectName IN string,
    StartDate IN datetime,
    EndDate IN datetime,
    EarliestDateAvailable OUT datetime,
    LatestDateCovered OUT datetime)
returns
    ID string,
    DeletedDate datetime

See the description of the GetDeleted operation in the Salesforce documentation for usage details.

Relationship Queries

Salesforce does not support joins like a relational database, but it does have support for queries that include parent-to-child or child-to-parent relationships between objects. These are termed Relationship Queries. The SalesForce connector supports Relationship Queries through Outer Join syntax.

SELECT Account.name, Contact.Name from Contact LEFT OUTER JOIN Account
on Contact.Accountid = Account.id

This query shows the correct syntax to query a SalesForce model with to produce a relationship query from child to parent. It resolves to the following query to SalesForce.

SELECT Contact.Account.Name, Contact.Name FROM Contact
select Contact.Name, Account.Name from Account Left outer Join Contact
on Contact.Accountid = Account.id

This query shows the correct syntax to query a SalesForce model with to produce a relationship query from parent to child. It resolves to the following query to SalesForce.

SELECT Account.Name, (SELECT Contact.Name FROM
Account.Contacts) FROM Account

See the description of the Relationship Queries operation in the SalesForce documentation for limitations.

Bulk Insert Queries

SalesForce translator also supports bulk insert statements using JDBC batch semantics or SELECT INTO semantics. The batch size is determined by the execution property MaxBulkInsertBatchSize, which can be overridden in the vdb file. The default value of the batch is 2048. The bulk insert feature uses the async REST based API exposed by Salesforce for execution for better performance.

Bulk Selects

When quering large tables (typically over 10,000,000 records) or if experiencing timeouts with just result batching, Teiid can issue queries to Salesforce using the bulk API. When using a bulk select, PK chunking will be enabled if supported by the query.

The use of the bulk api requires a source hint in the query:

SELECT /*+ sh salesforce:'bulk' */ Name ... FROM Account

Where salesforce is the source name of the target source.

The default chunk size of 100,000 records will be used.

Note: this feature is only supported by Salsforce API equal to greater than 28.

Supported Capabilities

The following are the capabilities supported by the Salesforce Connector. These SQL constructs will be pushed down to Salesforce.

  • SELECT command

  • INSERT Command

  • UPDATE Command

  • DELETE Command

  • NotCriteria

  • OrCriteria

  • CompareCriteriaEquals

  • CompareCriteriaOrdered

  • IsNullCritiera

  • InCriteria

  • LikeCriteria - Supported for String fields only.

  • RowLimit

  • Basic Aggregates

  • OuterJoins with join criteria KEY

Native Queries

Salesforce procedures may optionally have native queries associated with them - see Parameterizable Native Queries. The operation prefix (select;, insert;, update;, delete; - see below for more) must be present in the native-query, but it will not be issued as part of the query to the source.

Example DDL for a SF native procedure
CREATE FOREIGN PROCEDURE proc (arg1 integer, arg2 string) OPTIONS ("teiid_rel:native-query" 'search;SELECT ... complex SOQL ... WHERE col1 = $1 and col2 = $2') returns (col1 string, col2 string, col3 timestamp);

Direct Query Procedure

This feature is turned off by default because of the security risk this exposes to execute any command against the source. To enable this feature, override the execution property called _SupportsDirectQueryProcedure to true.

Tip
By default the name of the procedure that executes the queries directly is native. Override the execution property _DirectQueryProcedureName to change it to another name.

The Salesforce translator provides a procedure to execute any ad-hoc SOQL query directly against the source without Teiid parsing or resolving. Since the metadata of this procedure’s results are not known to Teiid, they are returned as an object array. ARRAYTABLE can be used construct tabular output for consumption by client applications. Teiid exposes this procedure with a simple query structure as follows:

Select

Select Example
SELECT x.* FROM (call sf_source.native('search;SELECT Account.Id, Account.Type, Account.Name FROM Account')) w,
 ARRAYTABLE(w.tuple COLUMNS "id" string , "type" string, "name" String) AS x

from the above code, the "search" keyword followed by a query statement.

Note
The SOQL is treated as a parameterized native query so that parameter values may be inserted in the query string properly - see Parameterizable Native Queries

The results returned by search may contain the object Id as the first column value regardless of whether it was selected. Also queries that select columns from multiple object types will not be correct.

Delete

Delete Example
SELECT x.* FROM (call sf_source.native('delete;', 'id1', 'id2')) w,
 ARRAYTABLE(w.tuple COLUMNS "updatecount" integer) AS x

form the above code, the "delete;" keyword followed by the ids to delete as varargs.

Create or Update

Create Example
SELECT x.* FROM
 (call sf_source.native('create;type=table;attributes=one,two,three', 'one', 2, 3.0)) w,
 ARRAYTABLE(w.tuple COLUMNS "update_count" integer) AS x

form the above code, the "create" or "update" keyword must be followed by the following properties. Attributes must be matched positionally by the procedure variables - thus in the example attribute two will be set to 2.

Property Name Description Required

type

Table Name

Yes

attributes

comma separated list of names of the columns

no

The values for each attribute is specified as separate argument to the "native" procedure.

Update is similar to create, with one more extra property called "id", which defines identifier for the record.

Update Example
SELECT x.* FROM
 (call sf_source.native('update;id=pk;type=table;attributes=one,two,three', 'one', 2, 3.0)) w,
 ARRAYTABLE(w.tuple COLUMNS "update_count" integer) AS x
Tip
By default the name of the procedure that executes the queries directly is called native, however user can + set override execution property vdb file to change it.

JCA Resource Adapter

The resource adapter for this translator is provided through Salesforce Data Sources. Refer to Admin Guide for configuration.

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