Python interface to the Salesforce.com Bulk API.
Project description
DataOps Salesforce Bulk
This library was forked from the salesforce-bulk. It adds a feature for dealing with pk chunking from Salesforce. Author credit is given to the author of the original salesforce-bulk library
Python client library for accessing the asynchronous Salesforce.com Bulk API.
Installation
pip install dataops-salesforce-bulk
Authentication
To access the Bulk API you need to authenticate a user into Salesforce.
The easiest way to do this is just to supply username
, password
and security_token
. This library will use the simple-salesforce
package to handle password based authentication.
::
from salesforce_bulk import SalesforceBulk
bulk = SalesforceBulk(username=username, password=password, security_token=security_token)
...
Alternatively if you run have access to a session ID and instance_url you can use those directly:
::
from urlparse import urlparse
from salesforce_bulk import SalesforceBulk
bulk = SalesforceBulk(sessionId=sessionId, host=urlparse(instance_url).hostname)
...
Operations
The basic sequence for driving the Bulk API is:
- Create a new job
- Add one or more batches to the job
- Close the job
- Wait for each batch to finish
Bulk Query
bulk.create_query_job(object_name, contentType='JSON')
Using API v39.0 or higher, you can also use the queryAll operation:
bulk.create_queryall_job(object_name, contentType='JSON')
Example
::
from salesforce_bulk.util import IteratorBytesIO
import json
job = bulk.create_query_job("Contact", contentType='JSON')
batch = bulk.query(job, "select Id,LastName from Contact")
bulk.close_job(job)
while not bulk.is_batch_done(batch):
sleep(10)
for result in bulk.get_all_results_for_query_batch(batch):
result = json.load(IteratorBytesIO(result))
for row in result:
print row # dictionary rows
Same example but for CSV:
::
import unicodecsv
job = bulk.create_query_job("Contact", contentType='CSV')
batch = bulk.query(job, "select Id,LastName from Contact")
bulk.close_job(job)
while not bulk.is_batch_done(batch):
sleep(10)
for result in bulk.get_all_results_for_query_batch(batch):
reader = unicodecsv.DictReader(result, encoding='utf-8')
for row in reader:
print row # dictionary rows
Note that while CSV is the default for historical reasons, JSON should be prefered since CSV has some drawbacks including its handling of NULL vs empty string.
PK Chunk Header ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
If you are querying a large number of records you probably want to turn on PK Chunking <https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.api_asynch.meta/api_asynch/async_api_headers_enable_pk_chunking.htm>
_:
bulk.create_query_job(object_name, contentType='CSV', pk_chunking=True)
That will use the default setting for chunk size. You can use a different chunk size by providing a number of records per chunk:
bulk.create_query_job(object_name, contentType='CSV', pk_chunking=100000)
Additionally if you want to do something more sophisticated you can provide a header value:
bulk.create_query_job(object_name, contentType='CSV', pk_chunking='chunkSize=50000; startRow=00130000000xEftMGH')
Bulk Insert, Update, Delete
All Bulk upload operations work the same. You set the operation when you create the job. Then you submit one or more documents that specify records with columns to insert/update/delete. When deleting you should only submit the Id for each record.
For efficiency you should use the post_batch
method to post each
batch of data. (Note that a batch can have a maximum 10,000 records and
be 1GB in size.) You pass a generator or iterator into this function and
it will stream data via POST to Salesforce. For help sending CSV
formatted data you can use the salesforce_bulk.CsvDictsAdapter class.
It takes an iterator returning dictionaries and returns an iterator
which produces CSV data.
Full example:
::
from salesforce_bulk import CsvDictsAdapter
job = bulk.create_insert_job("Account", contentType='CSV')
accounts = [dict(Name="Account%d" % idx) for idx in xrange(5)]
csv_iter = CsvDictsAdapter(iter(accounts))
batch = bulk.post_batch(job, csv_iter)
bulk.wait_for_batch(job, batch)
bulk.close_job(job)
print "Done. Accounts uploaded."
Concurrency mode ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
When creating the job, pass concurrency='Serial'
or
concurrency='Parallel'
to set the concurrency mode for the job.
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