Getting Started
Connecting to JSON
Establishing a Connection shows how to authenticate to JSON and configure any necessary connection properties in a JDBC URL. You can also configure driver capabilities through the available Connection properties, from data modeling to firewall traversal. The Advanced Settings section shows how to set up more advanced configurations and troubleshoot connection errors.
Connecting to JDBC Data Sources
The CData JDBC Driver for JSON provides full support for integration into Java applications, including Eclipse, NetBeans, IntelliJ IDEA, and many other Integrated Development Environments, as well as J2EE applications running on a Java server such as Tomcat. You can find JSP, console, and swing demos in the installation folder.
Java Version Support
To deploy the driver JAR file, you must have Java Development Kit (JDK) 1.8 or higher installed on your system.JSON Version Support
The driver models local and remote JSON data sources as bidirectional tables. These can be local JSON files or remote JSON streams: RESTful APIs or file stores hosted on FTP servers or popular cloud storage providers. The driver abstracts processing JSON data and connecting to the remote data: HTTP/FTP, SSL/TLS, and authentication: The major authentication schemes are supported, including HTTP Basic, Digest, FTP, NTLM, and OAuth.See Also
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Create Connection Objects
See Connecting from Code to create JDBC Connection objects. -
Query Data from Code
See Executing Statements and Using Prepared Statements to execute SQL statements to JSON tables. -
Connect from Java-Based Tools
See Using from Tools shows how to connect to JSON and query data from several popular database tools.