Jira Connector for Azure Data Factory (SSIS)
Jira Connector can be used to integrate Jira and your defined data source, e.g. Microsoft SQL, Oracle, Excel, Power BI, etc. Get, write, delete Issues, Users, Worklogs, Comments just in a few clicks! You can use this connector to integrate Jira data inside SSIS and SQL Server. Let's take a look at the steps below to see how exactly to accomplish that.
Download
Documentation
If you are new with SSIS and ZappySys SSIS PowerPack then check below links to get started.
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Connect to Jira in other apps
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Create SSIS package
First of all, create an SSIS package, which will connect to Jira in SSIS.
Once you do that, you are one step closer to deploying and running it in Azure-SSIS integration runtime in Azure Data Factory (ADF).
Then simply proceed to the next step - creating and configuring Azure Blob Storage Container.
Prepare custom setup files for Azure-SSIS runtime
Now it's time to start preparing custom setup files for Azure-SSIS runtime.
During Azure-SSIS runtime creation you can instruct ADF to perform a custom setup on a VM (Azure-SSIS node);
i.e. to run the custom installer, copy files, execute PowerShell scripts, etc.
In that case, your custom setup files are downloaded and run in the Azure-SSIS node (a VM) when you start the runtime.
In this section we will prepare custom setup files so that you can run SSIS packages with SSIS PowerPack connectors inside in Azure-SSIS runtime.
Trial Users
Use the step below if you are a Trial User, when you did not purchase a license key.
Proceed with these steps:
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Download SSIS PowerPack trial installer.
Make sure you don't rename the installer and keep it named as SSISPowerPackSetup_64bit_Trial.msi.
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Create a text file and name it main.cmd (make it all lowercase, very important).
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Copy and paste this script into it and save it:
set DIR=%CUSTOM_SETUP_SCRIPT_LOG_DIR%
echo Calling Step 1 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
dir /s /b > "%DIR%\file_list.txt"
echo Calling Step 2 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
::Install SSIS PowerPack
msiexec /i "SSISPowerPackSetup_64bit_Trial.msi" ADDLOCAL=ALL /q /L*V "%DIR%\powerpack_trial_install_log.txt"
echo Calling Step 3 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
dir "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\*Zappy*.*" /s /b >> "%DIR%\installed_files.txt"
dir "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SQL Server\*Zappy*.*" /s /b >> "%DIR%\installed_files.txt"
echo DONE : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
echo complete
This is the entry-point script that is executed when Azure-SSIS runtime is started.
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At last! You are ready to upload these two files — main.cmd & SSISPowerPackSetup_64bit_Trial.msi — into your Azure Blob Storage container's folder, which we will do in the Upload custom setup files to Azure Blob Storage container step.
Paid Customers
Use the steps below if you are a Paid Customer, when you purchased a license.
Proceed with these steps:
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Download SSIS PowerPack paid installer.
Make sure you don't rename the installer and keep it named as SSISPowerPackSetup_64bit.msi.
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Have your SSIS PowerPack license key handy, we will need it in the below script.
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Create a text file and name it main.cmd (make it all lowercase, very important).
- Copy and paste the below script into it.
- Paste your license key by replacing parameter's
--register
argument with your real license key.
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Finally, save main.cmd:
set DIR=%CUSTOM_SETUP_SCRIPT_LOG_DIR%
echo Calling Step 1 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
dir /s /b > "%DIR%\file_list.txt"
echo Calling Step 2 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
::Install SSIS PowerPack
msiexec /i "SSISPowerPackSetup_64bit.msi" ADDLOCAL=ALL /q /L*V "%DIR%\powerpack_install_log.txt"
echo Calling Step 3 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
::Activate PowerPack license (Optional)
"C:\Program Files (x86)\ZappySys\SSIS PowerPack (64 bit)\LicenseManager.exe" -p SSISPowerPack --register "lgGAAO0-----REPLACE-WITH-YOUR-LICENSE-KEY-----czM=" --logfile "%DIR%\powerpack_register_log.txt"
::Show System Info
echo Calling Step 4 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
"C:\Program Files (x86)\ZappySys\SSIS PowerPack (64 bit)\LicenseManager.exe" -i -l "%DIR%\sysinfo_log.txt"
echo Calling Step 5 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
dir "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\*Zappy*.*" /s /b >> "%DIR%\installed_files.txt"
dir "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SQL Server\*Zappy*.*" /s /b >> "%DIR%\installed_files.txt"
echo DONE : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
echo complete
This is the entry-point script that is executed when Azure-SSIS runtime is started.
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At last! You are ready to upload these two files — main.cmd & SSISPowerPackSetup_64bit.msi — into your Azure Blob Storage container's folder, which we will do in the Upload custom setup files to Azure Blob Storage container step.
Upload custom setup files to Azure Blob Storage container
Within Azure Blob Storage container we will store custom setup files we prepared in the previous step so that Azure-SSIS can use them in custom setup process.
Just perform these very simple, but very important steps:
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Create Azure Blob Storage container, if you haven't done it already
Make sure you create and use Azure Blob Storage container instead of Azure Data Lake Storage folder.
Azure Data Lake Storage won't allow creating an SAS URI for the container, which is a crucial step in the process.
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Find Blob Containers node, right-click on it and hit Create Blob Container option:
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Upload the two custom setup files — main.cmd & the MSI installer — into your Azure Blob Storage container's folder:
- It was easy, wasn't it? It's time we create an SAS URI in the next step.
Create SAS URI for Azure Blob Container
Once you have custom setup files prepared, it's time we generate an SAS URI.
This SAS URI will be used by a new Azure-SSIS runtime to install SSIS PowerPack inside the runtime's node, a VM.
Let's proceed together by performing the steps below:
- Install and launch Azure Storage Explorer.
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Right-click on the Storage Accounts node and then hit Connect to Azure storage... menu item:
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Proceed by right-clicking on that container node and select Get Shared Access Signature... option.
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Next, set the Expiry time field to a date far in the future.
If you restart Azure-SSIS runtime and your SAS URI is expired by that time, it will not start.
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Select Read, Create, Write, and List permissions:
We also recommend to add Delete permission too to support future functionality.
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Copy SAS URL to the clipboard and save it for the next step:
You can also generate and copy SAS URL from within Azure Portal itself:
Create Azure-SSIS integration runtime
Once you have the SAS URL we obtained in the previous step, we are ready to move on to create an Azure-SSIS runtime in Azure Data Factory:
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Firstly, perform the steps described in Create an Azure-SSIS integration runtime article in Azure Data Factory reference.
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In Advanced settings page section, configure Custom setup container SAS URI you obtained in the previous step:
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And you are done! That was quick! You can see your Azure-SSIS runtime up and running:
The custom setup script is executed only once — at the time an Azure-SSIS runtime is started.
It is also executed if you stop and start Azure-SSIS runtime again.
Deploy SSIS package in Visual Studio
We are ready to deploy the SSIS package to Azure-SSIS runtime. Once you do that, proceed to the next step for the grand finale!
Execute SSIS package in SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS)
After all hard work, we are ready to execute SSIS package in SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS):
- Connect to the SQL Server which is linked to your Azure-SSIS runtime and contains SSISDB database.
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Navigate to Integration Services Catalog » Your Folder » Your Project » Your Package, right-click on it, and hit Execute...:
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To view the status of the past execution, navigate to
Integration Services Catalog » Your Folder » Your Project » Your Package, right-click on it, and select Reports » Standard Reports » All Executions menu item:
Scenarios
Moving SSIS PowerPack license to another Azure-SSIS runtime
If you are a Paid Customer, there will be a time when you no longer use Azure-SSIS runtime or you need to use your license on a different ADF instance.
To transfer a license from one Azure-SSIS runtime to another, perform these steps:
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Copy & paste this script into main.cmd we used in the previous step:
set DIR=%CUSTOM_SETUP_SCRIPT_LOG_DIR%
echo Calling Step 1 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
dir /s /b > "%DIR%\file_list.txt"
echo Calling Step 2 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
::Install SSIS PowerPack
msiexec /i "SSISPowerPackSetup_64bit.msi" ADDLOCAL=ALL /q /L*V "%DIR%\powerpack_install_log.txt"
echo Calling Step 3 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
::De-Activate same license
"C:\Program Files (x86)\ZappySys\SSIS PowerPack (64 bit)\LicenseManager.exe" -p SSISPowerPack --unregister --logfile "%DIR%\powerpack_un_register_log.txt"
::Show System Info
echo Calling Step 4 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
"C:\Program Files (x86)\ZappySys\SSIS PowerPack (64 bit)\LicenseManager.exe" -i -l "%DIR%\sysinfo_log.txt"
echo Calling Step 5 : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
dir "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\*Zappy*.*" /s /b >> "%DIR%\installed_files.txt"
dir "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SQL Server\*Zappy*.*" /s /b >> "%DIR%\installed_files.txt"
echo DONE : %TIME% >> "%DIR%\steps_log.txt"
echo complete
- Start Azure-SSIS runtime.
This will unregister your license on the original Azure-SSIS runtime.
- Stop Azure-SSIS runtime to deallocate resources in Azure.
- Now you are free to activate it on another Azure-SSIS runtime.
Advanced topics
Actions supported by Jira Connector
Jira Connector support following actions for REST API integration. If some actions are not listed below then you can easily edit Connector file and enhance out of the box functionality.
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Parameter |
Description |
CustomColumnsRegex |
Enter regular expression for custom columns which you like to output. Use Pipe to type keys (internal names for columns). You can use Regex too (e.g. field_100\d+ )
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[
Read more...]
Parameter |
Description |
ProjectIdOrKey |
Project ID or Key, uniquely representing a project
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EnableUndo |
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Parameter |
Description |
IssueIdOrKey |
Enter Issue ID or Key
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NotifyUsers |
Whether a notification email about the issue update is sent to all watchers. Possible values: true, false
Option |
Value |
true |
true |
false |
false |
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OverrideScreenSecurity |
Whether screen security should be overridden to enable hidden fields to be edited. Possible values: true, false
Option |
Value |
true |
true |
false |
false |
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OverrideEditableFlag |
Whether screen security should be overridden to enable uneditable fields to be edited. Possible values: true, false
Option |
Value |
true |
true |
false |
false |
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[
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Parameter |
Description |
IssueIdOrKey |
Enter Issue ID or Key
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Parameter |
Description |
Issue Key(s) or Ids - Comma Separated (PRJA-10,PRJA-13) |
Use comma separated IDs or Keys for Issues. 1000 ids max or JIRA internal limit for Payload.
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Parameter |
Description |
Issue Key(s) or Ids - Comma Separated (PRJA-10,PRJA-13) |
Use comma separated IDs or Keys for Issues. 1000 ids max or JIRA internal limit for Payload.
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Returns a paginated list of all changelogs for an issue sorted by date, starting from the oldest. OAuth scopes required: read:issue-meta:jira, read:avatar:jira, read:issue.changelog:jira [
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Parameter |
Description |
IssueId Or Key |
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Returns a paginated list of all changelogs and fields updated for an issue sorted by date, starting from the oldest. OAuth scopes required: read:issue-meta:jira, read:avatar:jira, read:issue.changelog:jira [
Read more...]
Parameter |
Description |
IssueId Or Key |
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Returns changelogs for an issue specified by a list of changelog IDs. OAuth scopes required: read:issue-meta:jira, read:avatar:jira, read:issue.changelog:jira [
Read more...]
Parameter |
Description |
IssueId Or Key |
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Comma Separated ChangeLog Ids |
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Get custom field contexts
Returns a paginated list list of contexts for a custom field. OAuth scopes required: read:field:jira, read:custom-field-contextual-configuration:jira [
Read more...]
Parameter |
Description |
FieldId |
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Get custom field context options
Returns a paginated list of all custom field option for a context. Options are returned first then cascading options, in the order they display in Jira. OAuth scopes required: read:field.option:jira [
Read more...]
Parameter |
Description |
FieldId |
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ContextId |
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This is generic endpoint. Use this endpoint when some actions are not implemented by connector. Just enter partial URL (Required), Body, Method, Header etc. Most parameters are optional except URL. [
Read more...]
Parameter |
Description |
Url |
API URL goes here. You can enter full URL or Partial URL relative to Base URL. If it is full URL then domain name must be part of ServiceURL or part of TrustedDomains
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Body |
Request Body content goes here
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IsMultiPart |
Set this option if you want to upload file(s) (i.e. POST RAW file data) or send data using Multi-Part encoding method (i.e. Content-Type: multipart/form-data). Multi-Part request allows you to mix key/value and upload files in same request. On the other hand raw upload allows only single file upload (without any key/value)
==== Raw Upload (Content-Type: application/octet-stream) =====
To upload single file in raw mode check this option and specify full file path starting with @ sign in the Body (e.g. @c:\data\myfile.zip )
==== Form-Data / Multipart Upload (Content-Type: multipart/form-data) =====
To treat your Request data as multi part fields you must specify key/value pairs separated by new lines into RequestData field (i.e. Body). Each key value pair is entered on new-line and key/value are separated using equal sign (=). Preceding and trailing spaces are ignored also blank lines are ignored.
If field value has some any special character(s) then use escape sequence (e.g. For NewLine: \r\n, For Tab: \t, For at (@): \@). When value of any field starts with at sign (@) its automatically treated as File you want to upload. By default file content type is determined based on extension however you can supply content type manually for any field using this way [ YourFileFieldName.Content-Type=some-content-type ]. By default File Upload Field always includes Content-Type in the request (non file fields do not have content-type by default unless you supply manually). For some reason if you dont want to use Content-Type header in your request then supply blank Content-Type to exclude this header altogather [e.g. SomeFieldName.Content-Type= ]. In below example we have supplied Content-Type for file2 and SomeField1, all other fields are using default content-type.
See below Example of uploading multiple files along with additional fields. If some API requires you to pass Content-Type: multipart/form-data rather than multipart/form-data then manually set Request Header => Content-Type: multipart/mixed (it must starts with multipart/ else will be ignored).
file1=@c:\data\Myfile1.txt
file2=@c:\data\Myfile2.json
file2.Content-Type=application/json
SomeField1=aaaaaaa
SomeField1.Content-Type=text/plain
SomeField2=12345
SomeFieldWithNewLineAndTab=This is line1\r\nThis is line2\r\nThis is \ttab \ttab \ttab
SomeFieldStartingWithAtSign=\@MyTwitterHandle
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Filter |
Enter filter to extract array from response. Example: $.rows[*] --OR-- $.customers[*].orders[*]. Check your response document and find out hierarchy you like to extract
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Headers |
Headers for Request. To enter multiple headers use double pipe or new line after each {header-name}:{value} pair
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Conclusion
In this article we discussed how to connect to Jira in Azure Data Factory (SSIS) and integrate data without any coding. Click here to Download Jira Connector for Azure Data Factory (SSIS) and try yourself see how easy it is. If you still have any question(s) then ask here or simply click on live chat icon below and ask our expert (see bottom-right corner of this page).
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