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Elastic Oracle connector reference

This connector is available as a self-managed connector. This self-managed connector is compatible with Elastic versions 8.6.0+. To use this connector, satisfy all self-managed connector requirements.

To create a new Oracle connector:

  1. In the Kibana UI, navigate to the Search → Content → Connectors page from the main menu, or use the global search field.
  2. Follow the instructions to create a new Oracle self-managed connector.

You can use the Elasticsearch Create connector API to create a new self-managed Oracle self-managed connector.

For example:

 PUT _connector/my-oracle-connector {
  "index_name": "my-elasticsearch-index",
  "name": "Content synced from Oracle",
  "service_type": "oracle"
}

Refer to the Elasticsearch API documentation for details of all available Connector APIs.

To use this connector as a self-managed connector, see Self-managed connectors.

The database user requires CONNECT and DBA privileges and must be the owner of the tables to be indexed.

To set up a secure connection the Oracle service must be installed on the system where the connector is running.

Follow these steps:

  1. Set the oracle_home parameter to your Oracle home directory. If configuration files are not at the default location, set the wallet_configuration_path parameter.

  2. Create a directory to store the wallet.

    $ mkdir $ORACLE_HOME/ssl_wallet
    
  3. Create file named sqlnet.ora at $ORACLE_HOME/network/admin and add the following content:

    WALLET_LOCATION = (SOURCE = (METHOD = FILE) (METHOD_DATA = (DIRECTORY = $ORACLE_HOME/ssl_wallet)))
    SSL_CLIENT_AUTHENTICATION = FALSE
    SSL_VERSION = 1.0
    SSL_CIPHER_SUITES = (SSL_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA)
    SSL_SERVER_DN_MATCH = ON
    
  4. Run the following commands to create a wallet and attach an SSL certificate. Replace the file name with your file name.

    $ orapki wallet create -wallet path-to-oracle-home/ssl_wallet -auto_login_only
    $ orapki wallet add -wallet path-to-oracle-home/ssl_wallet -trusted_cert -cert path-to-oracle-home/ssl_wallet/root_ca.pem -auto_login_only
    

For more information, refer to this Amazon RDS documentation about Oracle SSL. Oracle docs: https://docs.oracle.com/database/121/DBSEG/asossl.htm#DBSEG070.

For additional operations, see Connectors UI in Kibana.

Oracle Database versions 18c, 19c and 21c are compatible with Elastic connector frameworks.

Use the following configuration fields to set up the connector:

connection_source
Determines the Oracle source: Service Name or SID. Default value is SID. Select Service Name if connecting to a pluggable database.
sid
SID of the database.
service_name
Service name for the database.
host
The IP address or hostname of the Oracle database server. Default value is 127.0.0.1.
port
Port number of the Oracle database server.
username
Username to use to connect to the Oracle database server.
password
Password to use to connect to the Oracle database server.
tables

Comma-separated list of tables to monitor for changes. Default value is *. Examples:

  • TABLE_1, TABLE_2
  • *
oracle_protocol
Protocol which the connector uses to establish a connection. Default value is TCP. For secure connections, use TCPS.
oracle_home
Path to Oracle home directory to run connector in thick mode for secured connection. For unsecured connections, keep this field empty.
wallet_configuration_path
Path to SSL Wallet configuration files.
fetch_size
Number of rows to fetch per request. Default value is 50.
retry_count
Number of retry attempts after failed request to Oracle Database. Default value is 3.

You can deploy the Oracle connector as a self-managed connector using Docker. Follow these instructions.

Refer to DOCKER.md in the elastic/connectors repo for more details.

Find all available Docker images in the official registry.

Tip

We also have a quickstart self-managed option using Docker Compose, so you can spin up all required services at once: Elasticsearch, Kibana, and the connectors service. Refer to this README in the elastic/connectors repo for more information.

  • Tables with no primary key defined are skipped.
  • If the table’s system change number (SCN) value is not between the min(SCN) and max(SCN) values of the SMON_SCN_TIME table, the connector will not be able to retrieve the most recently updated time. Data will therefore index in every sync. For more details refer to the following discussion thread.
  • The sys user is not supported, as it contains 1000+ system tables. If you need to work with the sys user, use either sysdba or sysoper and configure this as the username.
Note
  • Files bigger than 10 MB won’t be extracted.
  • Permissions are not synced. All documents indexed to an Elastic deployment will be visible to all users with access to that Elastic Deployment.

Basic sync rules are identical for all connectors and are available by default.

Advanced sync rules are not available for this connector in the present version. Currently, filtering is controlled by ingest pipelines.

The connector framework enables operators to run functional tests against a real data source. Refer to Connector testing for more details.

To execute a functional test for the Oracle connector, run the following command:

make ftest NAME=oracle

By default, this will use a medium-sized dataset. To make the test faster add the DATA_SIZE=small argument:

make ftest NAME=oracle DATA_SIZE=small

There are no known issues for this connector.

See Known issues for any issues affecting all connectors.

See Troubleshooting.

See Security.

This connector is built with the Elastic connector framework.

This connector uses the generic database connector source code (branch main, compatible with Elastic 9.0).

View additional code specific to this data source (branch main, compatible with Elastic 9.0).