tap-snowflake
is a Singer tap for Snowflake.
Built with the Meltano Tap SDK for Singer Taps.
pipx install git+https://github.com/MeltanoLabs/tap-snowflake.git
A full list of supported settings and capabilities for this tap is available by running:
tap-snowflake --about
This Singer tap will automatically import any environment variables within the working directory's
.env
if the --config=ENV
is provided, such that config values will be considered if a matching
environment variable is set either in the terminal context or in the .env
file.
Standard username
and password
auth is supported.
This tap is built using the Meltano SDK and therefore supports a BATCH
message type, in
addition to the RECORD
messages of the Singer spec. This can be enabled either by adding the following to your config.json
:
{
// ...
"batch_config": {
"encoding": {
"format": "jsonl",
"compression": "gzip"
},
"storage": {
"root": "file://tests/core/resources",
"prefix": "test-batch"
}
}
}
or its equivalent to your meltano.yml
config:
plugins:
extractors:
- name: tap-snowflake
config:
batch_config:
encoding:
format: jsonl
compression: gzip
storage:
root: "file://tests/core/resources"
prefix: test-batch
Note: This variant of tap-snowflake
does not yet support the INCREMENTAL
replication strategy in BATCH
mode. Follow here for updates.
You can easily run tap-snowflake
by itself or in a pipeline using Meltano.
tap-snowflake --version
tap-snowflake --help
tap-snowflake --config CONFIG --discover > ./catalog.json
pipx install poetry
poetry install
Create tests within the tap_snowflake/tests
subfolder and
then run:
poetry run pytest
You can also test the tap-snowflake
CLI interface directly using poetry run
:
poetry run tap-snowflake --help
Testing with Meltano
Note: This tap will work in any Singer environment and does not require Meltano. Examples here are for convenience and to streamline end-to-end orchestration scenarios.
Your project comes with a custom meltano.yml
project file already created. Open the meltano.yml
and follow any "TODO" items listed in
the file.
Next, install Meltano (if you haven't already) and any needed plugins:
# Install meltano
pipx install meltano
# Initialize meltano within this directory
cd tap-snowflake
meltano install
Now you can test and orchestrate using Meltano:
# Test invocation:
meltano invoke tap-snowflake --version
# OR run a test `elt` pipeline:
meltano elt tap-snowflake target-jsonl
See the dev guide for more instructions on how to use the SDK to develop your own taps and targets.