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Create a source connection and dataflow for Oracle NetSuite Entities using the Flow Service API
Read the following tutorial to learn how to bring contacts and customer data from your Oracle NetSuite Activities Entities account to Adobe Experience Platform using the Flow Service API.
Getting started
This guide requires a working understanding of the following components of Experience Platform:
- Sources: Experience Platform allows data to be ingested from various sources while providing you with the ability to structure, label, and enhance incoming data using Platform services.
- Sandboxes: Experience Platform provides virtual sandboxes which partition a single Platform instance into separate virtual environments to help develop and evolve digital experience applications.
The following sections provide additional information that you will need to know in order to successfully connect to Oracle NetSuite Entities using the Flow Service API.
Authentication
Read the Oracle NetSuite overview for information on how to retrieve your authentication credentials.
Using Platform APIs
For information on how to successfully make calls to Platform APIs, see the guide on getting started with Platform APIs.
Connect Oracle NetSuite Entities to Platform using the Flow Service API
The following outlines the steps you need to make in order to authenticate your Oracle NetSuite Entities source, create a source connection, and create a dataflow to bring your customer and contact data to Experience Platform.
Create a base connection base-connection
A base connection retains information between your source and Platform, including your source’s authentication credentials, the current state of the connection, and your unique base connection ID. The base connection ID allows you to explore and navigate files from within your source and identify the specific items that you want to ingest, including information regarding their data types and formats.
To create a base connection ID, make a POST request to the /connections
endpoint while providing your Oracle NetSuite Entities authentication credentials as part of the request body.
API format
POST /connections
Request
The following request creates a base connection for Oracle NetSuite Entities:
curl -X POST \
'https://platform.adobe.io/data/foundation/flowservice/connections' \
-H 'Authorization: Bearer {ACCESS_TOKEN}' \
-H 'x-api-key: {API_KEY}' \
-H 'x-gw-ims-org-id: {ORG_ID}' \
-H 'x-sandbox-name: {SANDBOX_NAME}' \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d '{
"name": "Oracle NetSuite Entities base connection",
"description": "Authenticated base connection for Oracle NetSuite Entities",
"connectionSpec": {
"id": "fdf850b4-5a8d-4a5a-9ce8-4caef9abb2a8",
"version": "1.0"
},
"auth": {
"specName": "OAuth2 Client Credential",
"params": {
"clientId": "{CLIENT_ID}",
"clientSecret": "{CLIENT_SECRET}"
"accessTokenUrl": "{ACCESS_TOKEN_URL}",
"accessToken": "{ACCESS_TOKEN_URL}"
}
}
}'
name
description
connectionSpec.id
auth.specName
auth.params.clientId
7fce.....b42f
.auth.params.clientSecret
5c98.....1b46
.auth.params.accessTokenUrl
https://{ACCOUNT_ID}.suitetalk.api.netsuite.com/services/rest/auth/oauth2/v1/token
where you will replace ACCOUNT_ID with your NetSuite Account ID.auth.params.accessToken
eyJr......f4V0
.Response
A successful response returns the newly created base connection, including its unique connection identifier (id
). This ID is required to explore your source’s file structure and contents in the next step.
{
"id": "60c81023-99b4-4aae-9c31-472397576dd2",
"etag": "\"fa003785-0000-0200-0000-6555c5310000\""
}
Explore your source explore
Once you have your base connection ID, you can now exploree the content and structure of your source data by performing a GET request to the /connections
endpoint while providing your base connection ID as a query parameter.
API format
GET /connections/{BASE_CONNECTION_ID}/explore?objectType=rest&object={OBJECT}&fileType={FILE_TYPE}&preview={PREVIEW}&sourceParams={SOURCE_PARAMS}
Request
When performing GET requests to explore your source’s file structure and contents, you must include the query parameters that are listed in the table below:
{BASE_CONNECTION_ID}
objectType=rest
rest
.{OBJECT}
json
.fileType=json
json
is the only supported file type.{PREVIEW}
{SOURCE_PARAMS}
Defines parameters for the source file you want to bring to Platform. To retrieve the accepted format-type for {SOURCE_PARAMS}
, you must encode the entire string in base64.
Oracle NetSuite Entities supports both customer and contact data retrieval. Depending on which object type you are leveraging, pass one of the below :
customer
: Retrieve specific customer data, including details such as customer names, addresses, and key identifiers.contact
: Retrieve contact names, emails, phone numbers, and any custom contact-related fields associated with customers.
For Oracle NetSuite Entities, to retrieve contact data the value for {SOURCE_PARAMS}
is passed as {"object_type":"customer"}
. When encoded in base64, it equates to eyAib2JqZWN0X3R5cGUiOiAiY3VzdG9tZXIifQ%3D%3D
as shown below.
code language-shell |
---|
|
For Oracle NetSuite Entities, to retrieve contact data the value for {SOURCE_PARAMS}
is passed as {"object_type":"contact"}
. When encoded in base64, it equates to eyAib2JqZWN0X3R5cGUiOiAiY29udGFjdCJ9
as shown below.
code language-shell |
---|
|
Response
Similarly, depending on which object type you are leveraging the response received is as below:
A successful response returns a structure as below.
accordion | ||
---|---|---|
Select to view the JSON payload | ||
|
A successful response returns a structure as below.
accordion | ||
---|---|---|
Select to view the JSON payload | ||
|
Create a source connection source-connection
You can create a source connection by making a POST request to the /sourceConnections
endpoint of the Flow Service API. A source connection consists of a connection ID, a path to the source data file, and a connection spec ID.
API format
POST /sourceConnections
Request
The following request creates a source connection for Oracle NetSuite Entities:
When retrieving customer data the object_type
property value should be customer
.
code language-shell |
---|
|
When retrieving contact data the object_type
property value should be contact
.
code language-shell |
---|
|
name
description
baseConnectionId
connectionSpec.id
data.format
json
.object_type
Oracle NetSuite Entities supports both customer and contact retrieval. Depending on which entity you want, pass one of the below :
customer
: Retrieve specific customer data, including details such as customer names, addresses, and key identifiers.contact
: Retrieve contact names, emails, phone numbers, and any custom contact-related fields associated with customers.
Response
A successful response returns the unique identifier (id
) of the newly created source connection. This ID is required in a later step to create a dataflow.
{
"id": "574c049f-29fc-411f-be0d-f80002025f51",
"etag": "\"0704acb3-0000-0200-0000-6555c5470000\""
}
Create a target XDM schema target-schema
In order for the source data to be used in Platform, a target schema must be created to structure the source data according to your needs. The target schema is then used to create a Platform dataset in which the source data is contained.
A target XDM schema can be created by performing a POST request to the Schema Registry API.
For detailed steps on how to create a target XDM schema, see the tutorial on creating a schema using the API.
Create a target dataset target-dataset
A target dataset can be created by performing a POST request to the Catalog Service API, providing the ID of the target schema within the payload.
For detailed steps on how to create a target dataset, see the tutorial on creating a dataset using the API.
Create a target connection target-connection
A target connection represents the connection to the destination where the ingested data is to be stored. To create a target connection, you must provide the fixed connection spec ID that corresponds to the data lake. This ID is: c604ff05-7f1a-43c0-8e18-33bf874cb11c
.
You now have the unique identifiers a target schema a target dataset and the connection spec ID to the data lake. Using these identifiers, you can create a target connection using the Flow Service API to specify the dataset that will contain the inbound source data.
API format
POST /targetConnections
Request
The following request creates a target connection for Oracle NetSuite Entities:
curl -X POST \
'https://platform.adobe.io/data/foundation/flowservice/targetConnections' \
-H 'Authorization: Bearer {ACCESS_TOKEN}' \
-H 'x-api-key: {API_KEY}' \
-H 'x-gw-ims-org-id: {ORG_ID}' \
-H 'x-sandbox-name: {SANDBOX_NAME}' \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d '{
"name": "Oracle NetSuite Entities Target Connection Generic Rest",
"description": " Oracle NetSuite Entities Connection Generic Rest",
"connectionSpec": {
"id": "c604ff05-7f1a-43c0-8e18-33bf874cb11c",
"version": "1.0"
},
"data": {
"format": "parquet_xdm",
"schema": {
"id": "https://ns.adobe.com/{TENANT_ID}/schemas/325fd5394ba421246b05c0a3c2cd5efeec2131058a63d473",
"version": "1.2"
}
},
"params": {
"dataSetId": "65004470082ac828d2c3d6a0"
}
}'
name
description
connectionSpec.id
6b137bf6-d2a0-48c8-914b-d50f4942eb85
.data.format
params.dataSetId
Response
A successful response returns the new target connection’s unique identifier (id
). This ID is required in later steps.
{
"id": "382fc614-3c5b-46b9-a971-786fb0ae6c5d",
"etag": "\"e0016100-0000-0200-0000-655707a40000\""
}
Create a mapping mapping
In order for the source data to be ingested into a target dataset, it must first be mapped to the target schema that the target dataset adheres to. This is achieved by performing a POST request to Data Prep API with data mappings defined within the request payload.
API format
POST /conversion/mappingSets
Request
The following request creates a mapping for DNL NetSuite Entities
curl -X POST \
'https://platform.adobe.io/data/foundation/conversion/mappingSets' \
-H 'Authorization: Bearer {ACCESS_TOKEN}' \
-H 'x-api-key: {API_KEY}' \
-H 'x-gw-ims-org-id: {ORG_ID}' \
-H 'x-sandbox-name: {SANDBOX_NAME}' \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d '{
"outputSchema": {
"schemaRef": {
"id": "https://ns.adobe.com/{TENANT_ID}/schemas/b156e6f818f923e048199173c45e55e20fd2487f5eb03d22",
"contentType": "application/vnd.adobe.xed-full+json;version=1"
}
},
"mappings": [
{
"sourceType": "ATTRIBUTE",
"source": "items.id",
"destination": "_extconndev.NS_ID"
},
{
"sourceType": "ATTRIBUTE",
"source": "items.entitytitle",
"destination": "_extconndev.NS_entity_title"
},
{
"sourceType": "ATTRIBUTE",
"source": "items.datecreated",
"destination": "_extconndev.NS_datecreated"
},
{
"sourceType": "ATTRIBUTE",
"destination": "_extconndev.NS_email",
"source": "items.email"
},
{
"sourceType": "ATTRIBUTE",
"source": "items.lastmodifieddate",
"destination": "_extconndev.NS_lastmodified"
}
]
}'
outputSchema.schemaRef.id
mappings.sourceType
mappings.source
mappings.destination
Response
A successful response returns details of the newly created mapping including its unique identifier (id
). This value is required in a later step to create a dataflow.
{
"id": "ddf0592bcc9d4ac391803f15f2429f87",
"version": 0,
"createdDate": 1597784069368,
"modifiedDate": 1597784069368,
"createdBy": "{CREATED_BY}",
"modifiedBy": "{MODIFIED_BY}"
}
Create a flow flow
The last step towards bringing data from Oracle NetSuite Entities to Platform is to create a dataflow. By now, you have the following required values prepared:
A dataflow is responsible for scheduling and collecting data from a source. You can create a dataflow by performing a POST request while providing the previously mentioned values within the payload.
API format
POST /flows
Request
curl -X POST \
'https://platform.adobe.io/data/foundation/flowservice/flows' \
-H 'x-api-key: {API_KEY}' \
-H 'x-gw-ims-org-id: {ORG_ID}' \
-H 'x-sandbox-name: {SANDBOX_NAME}' \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d '{
"name": "Oracle NetSuite Entities connector Flow Generic Rest",
"description": "Oracle NetSuite Entities connector Description Flow Generic Rest",
"flowSpec": {
"id": "6499120c-0b15-42dc-936e-847ea3c24d72",
"version": "1.0"
},
"sourceConnectionIds": [
"d8827440-339f-428d-bf38-5e2ab1f0f7bb"
],
"targetConnectionIds": [
"e349a15e-c639-4047-8b2a-154aa7a857d7"
],
"transformations": [
{
"name": "Mapping",
"params": {
"mappingId": "10787532e0994eb686e76bdab69a9e88",
"mappingVersion": 0
}
}
],
"scheduleParams": {
"startTime": 1700202649,
"frequency": "once"
}
}'
name
description
flowSpec.id
6499120c-0b15-42dc-936e-847ea3c24d72
.flowSpec.version
1.0
.sourceConnectionIds
targetConnectionIds
transformations
transformations.name
transformations.params.mappingId
transformations.params.mappingVersion
0
.scheduleParams.startTime
scheduleParams.frequency
scheduleParams.interval
Response
A successful response returns the ID (id
) of the newly created dataflow. You can use this ID to monitor, update, or delete your dataflow.
{
"id": "84c64142-1741-4b0b-95a9-65644eba0cf6",
"etag": "\"3901770b-0000-0200-0000-655708970000\""
}
Appendix
The following section provides information on the steps you can to monitor, update, and delete your dataflow.
Monitor your dataflow
Once your dataflow has been created, you can monitor the data that is being ingested through it to see information on flow runs, completion status, and errors. For complete API examples, read the guide on monitoring your sources dataflows using the API.
Update your dataflow
Update the details of your dataflow, such as its name and description, as well as its run schedule and associated mapping sets by making a PATCH request to the /flows
endpoint of Flow Service API, while providing the ID of your dataflow. When making a PATCH request, you must provide your dataflow’s unique etag
in the If-Match
header. For complete API examples, read the guide on updating sources dataflows using the API.
Update your account
Update the name, description, and credentials of your source account by performing a PATCH request to the Flow Service API while providing your base connection ID as a query parameter. When making a PATCH request, you must provide your source account’s unique etag
in the If-Match
header. For complete API examples, read the guide on updating your source account using the API.
Delete your dataflow
Delete your dataflow by performing a DELETE request to the Flow Service API while providing the ID of the dataflow you want to delete as part of the query parameter. For complete API examples, read the guide on deleting your dataflows using the API.
Delete your account
Delete your account by performing a DELETE request to the Flow Service API while providing the base connection ID of the account you want to delete. For complete API examples, read the guide on deleting your source account using the API.