Linux DSN Configuration
This section describes how to set up ODBC connectivity and configure DSNs on several Linux distributions: Debian-based systems, like Ubuntu, and Red Hat Linux platforms, like Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) and Fedora.
Minimum Linux Versions
Here are the minimum supported versions for Red Hat-based and Debian-based systems:
OS | Min. Version |
Ubuntu | 18.04 |
Debian | 10 |
RHEL | 8 |
Fedora | 28 |
SUSE | 15 |
Installing the Driver Dependencies
Run the following commands as root or with sudo to install the necessary dependencies:
- Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install libc6 libstdc++6 zlib1g libgcc1
- RHEL/Fedora:
yum install glibc libstdc++ zlib libgcc
Installing the Driver
You can use standard package management systems to install the driver.
On Debian-based systems, like Ubuntu, run the following command with root or sudo:
dpkg -i /path/to/driver/setup/SAPAribaSourceODBCDriverforUnix.deb
On systems that support the RPM package format, run the following command with root or sudo:
rpm -ivh /path/to/driver/SAPAribaSourceODBCDriverforUnix.rpm
Licensing the Driver
Run the following commands to license the driver. To activate a trial, omit the <key> input.
cd /opt/cdata/cdata-odbc-driver-for-saparibasource/bin/
sudo ./install-license.sh <key>
Connecting through the Driver Manager
The driver manager loads the driver and passes function calls from the application to the driver. You need to register the driver with the driver manager and you define DSNs in the driver manager's configuration files.
The driver installation registers the driver with the unixODBC driver manager and creates a system DSN. The unixODBC driver manager can be used from Python and from many other applications. Your application may embed another driver manager.
Creating the DSN
See Using unixODBC to install unixODBC and configure DSNs. See Using the DataDirect Driver Manager to create a DSN to connect to OBIEE, Informatica, and SAS.
Connecting to SAP Ariba
Set the following to connect:
- API: Specify which API you would like the driver to retrieve SAP Ariba data from. Select the Supplier, Sourcing Project Management, or Contract API based on your business role.
- DataCenter: The data center where your account's data is hosted.
- Realm: The name of the site you want to access.
- Environment: Indicate whether you are connecting to a test, sandbox, or production environment.
If you are connecting to the Supplier Data API or the Contract API, additionally set the following:
- User: Id of the user on whose behalf API calls are invoked.
- PasswordAdapter: The password associated with the authenticating User.
Finally, if you're connecting to the Supplier API, set ProjectId to the Id of the sourcing project you want to retrieve data from.
Authenticating to SAP Ariba
Authentication to SAP Ariba APIs is handled via OAuth. SAP Ariba's OAuth flow requires no user interaction.
OAuthClient
Set the AuthScheme to OAuthClient.
You need to register an application with the service to obtain the APIKey, OAuthClientId and OAuthClientSecret.
See Creating a Custom OAuth App for information about creating an application.
InitiateOAuth defaults to GETANDREFRESH for the OAuthClient authentication scheme.
Automatic OAuth
Get and Refresh the OAuth Access Token
After setting the following, you are ready to connect:
- APIKey: The Application key in your app settings.
- OAuthClientId: The OAuth Client Id in your app settings.
- OAuthClientSecret: The OAuth Secret in your app settings.
When you connect, the driver automatically completes the OAuth process:
- The driver obtains an access token from SAP Ariba and uses it to request data.
- The driver refreshes the access token automatically when it expires.
- The OAuth values are saved in memory relative to the location specified in OAuthSettingsLocation.
Manual OAuth
Get an OAuth Access Token
Set the following connection properties to obtain the OAuthAccessToken:
- APIKey: The Application key in your app settings.
- OAuthClientId: The OAuth Client Id in your app settings.
- OAuthClientSecret: The OAuth Secret in your app settings.
Then call the GetOAuthAccessToken stored procedure. Set the GrantType input to client_credentials or openapi_2lo (available for legacy users). If not specified, GrantType defaults to client_credentials.
After you have obtained the access and refresh tokens, you can connect to data and refresh the OAuth access token either automatically or manually.
Automatic Refresh of the OAuth Access Token
To have the driver automatically refresh the OAuth access token, set the following on the first data connection.
- InitiateOAuth: REFRESH.
- APIKey: The Application key in your app settings.
- OAuthClientId: The OAuth Client Id in your app settings.
- OAuthClientSecret: The OAuth Secret in your app settings.
- OAuthAccessToken: The access token returned by GetOAuthAccessToken.
- OAuthRefreshToken: The refresh token returned by GetOAuthAccessToken.
Manual Refresh of the OAuth Access Token
The only value needed to manually refresh the OAuth access token when connecting to data is the OAuth refresh token. Use the RefreshOAuthAccessToken stored procedure to manually refresh the OAuthAccessToken after the ExpiresIn parameter value returned by GetOAuthAccessToken has elapsed, then set the following connection properties:
- APIKey: The Application key in your app settings.
- OAuthClientId: The OAuth Client Id in your app settings.
- OAuthClientSecret: The OAuth Secret in your app settings.
Then call RefreshOAuthAccessToken with OAuthRefreshToken set to the OAuth refresh token returned by GetOAuthAccessToken. After the new tokens have been retrieved, open a new connection by setting the OAuthAccessToken property to the value returned by RefreshOAuthAccessToken.
Finally, store the OAuth refresh token so that you can use it to manually refresh the OAuth access token after it has expired.
Refreshing OAuth Values
The driver can refresh the temporary OAuth access tokens obtained during the browser-based OAuth authentication exchange. By default, the driver saves the encrypted tokens in the odbc.ini file corresponding to the DSN. Access to this odbc.ini file can be restricted in the case of System DSNs.
To enable the automatic token exchange, you can give the driver write access to the system odbc.ini. Or, you can set the OAuthSettingsLocation connection property to an alternate file path, to which the driver would have read and write access.
OAuthSettingsLocation=/tmp/oauthsettings.txt
Installing Dependencies for OAuth Authentication
The OAuth authentication standard requires the authenticating user to interact with SAP Ariba, using a web-browser. If the first OAuth interaction is to be done on the same machine the driver is installed on, for example, a desktop application, the driver needs access to the xdg-open program, which opens the default browser.
To satisfy this dependency, install the corresponding package with your package manager:
Debian/Ubuntu Package | RHEL/Fedora Package | File |
xdg-utils | xdg-utils | xdg-open |
Set the Driver Encoding
The ODBC drivers need to specify which encoding to use with the ODBC Driver Manager. By default, the CData ODBC Drivers for Unix are configured to use UTF-16 which is compatible with unixODBC, but other Driver Managers may require alternative encoding.
Alternatively, if you are using the ODBC driver from an application that uses the ANSI ODBC API it may be necessary to set the ANSI code page. For example, to import Japanese characters in an ANSI application, you can specify the code page in the config file '/opt/cdata/cdata-odbc-driver-for-saparibasource/lib/cdata.odbc.saparibasource.ini':
[Driver]
AnsiCodePage = 932