Connecting to Jira

The Sisense Jira connector is a certified connector that allows you to import data from the Jira API into Sisense via the Sisense generic JDBC connector. The Jira connector offers the most natural way to connect to Jira data, and provides additional powerful features.

The support for the connector is provided by Sisense and will be assisted by the certification partner's support, if needed. For any support issues or additional functionality requests, contact your Sisense representative or open a request through the Sisense Help Center . For advanced inquiries specific to driver functionality, you can also contact the certification partner’s support directly via support@cdata.com .

After you have downloaded the driver, you can connect through a connection string in Sisense. The connection string is used to authenticate users who want to connect to Jira. Once you have connected to Jira, you can import a variety of tables from the Jira API.

This page describes how to download the Jira driver and deploy it, how to connect to Jira with a connection string, provides information about the Jira data model, and more.

Downloading the Jira JDBC Driver

You can download the Jira JDBC driver here .

For a short video of downloading the driver, see below (the video uses the Box driver as an example).

Note:

  • The driver is certified for Sisense v7.2 and above.
  • Sisense v7.4 and above: Click the above link to download a ready-to-use driver.
  • Sisense prior to v7.4: Click the above link to download a 30-days free-trial of the driver. Contact Sisense for the full license version.

Deploying the Driver

Prerequisite: The install file (setup.jar) is a Java Application that requires Java 6 (J2SE) or above to run.

To install the driver, double-click the setup.jar file and proceed with the instructions in the installation wizard.

Depending on the machine on which you are accessing the Sisense application, install the driver in one of the following locations:

  • When Sisense is installed on your local machine , deploy the driver locally.

  • For a non-local installation (when accessing Sisense on a remote Windows server, or accessing the Sisense hosted cloud environment), select one of the below methods:

    • Deploy the driver on the Sisense server machine, and then perform all the authentication on the server machine.
      OR
    • Deploy the driver on your local machine (or any other machine, as convenient), perform all the authentication on that machine, and then copy the JAR file to the remote server.

Note:
The default location of the JAR file: C:\Program Files\CData\CData JDBC Driver for <Driver Name> 2019\lib

For a short video of the process, see below (the video uses the Box driver as an example).

JAVA Troubleshooting

If you do not have Java 6 installed, you may download it from here.

If your system is not set up to run Java applications, execute the following command: java -jar setup.jar .

Connecting to Jira

After you have installed the Jira connector, you can import your data from Jira by connecting with a connection string. The connection string contains your Jira user credentials. Jira uses the connection string to authenticate your account and allow you to extract the relevant data for your account. You can establish a connection to any JIRA Cloud account or JIRA Server instance.

To create the connection string:

  1. Open the lib directory for the connector. This is the default path: C:\Program Files\CData\CData JDBC Driver for <Driver Name> 2019\lib.

  2. Double-click the jar file in the lib directory.

    Alternatively, to open the jar file from the command line, enter the following command in the command prompt (change the driver name to your driver): cd C:\Program Files\CData\CData JDBC Driver for <Driver Name> 2019\lib. Press Enter and then enter the following command (change the driver name to your driver): “C:\Program Files\Sisense\infra\jre\bin\java.exe" -jar cdata.jdbc.<Driver Name>.jar .

    Press Enter again.

    For example:

    The Connection String Builder opens.

  3. Enter the values for the following connection properties (click in the Value column to enter a value or to modify an existing value):

    • User : Your Jira user name.
    • APIToken : When connecting to a Cloud account, provide the API token. To generate the token, log in to your Atlassian account and navigate to API tokens > Create API token . The generated token will be displayed.
    • Password : When connecting to a Server instance, provide the password.
    • URL : Provide the URL to your JIRA endpoint.
  4. If the Connection String Builder has a InitiateOAuth property, set it to OFF to avoid entering the OAuth Authorization process.

    Note :

    This property may not appear for some connectors.

  5. Press Enter to add all the connection properties to the connection string.

    An example of the connection string:

    jdbc:jira:User=admin;APIToken=myApiToken;Url=https://yoursitename.atlassian.net;

  6. Click Test Connection . A new browser tab opens where you need to log in to your application in order to grant access.

    Close the Authorization Successful! message that opens.

  7. Go back to the Connection String Builder dialog, and click OK in the Test Connection Successful message to close it.

  8. Click Copy to Clipboard to obtain the connection string.

For a short video of the process, see below (the video uses the XML driver as an example):

You need to follow the above instructions only on first connect, and then when your credentials to the application change.

Adding Jira Tables to your ElastiCube

  1. Open Sisense.

    For a non-local installation, open Sisense on the hosted cloud environment.

  2. In the Data page, open an ElastiCube or create a new ElastiCube .

  3. In the Model Editor, click . The Add Data dialog box is displayed.

  4. Click Generic JDBC to open the JDBC settings.

  5. In Connection String , paste the string you obtained above.

  6. In JDBC JARs Folder , enter the name of the directory where the Jira JAR file is located.

  7. In Driver's Class Name , enter the following class name: cdata.jdbc.jira.JIRADriver.

  8. If you wish to secure the connection, enter your Jira credentials in User Name and Password and remove the relevant properties from the connection string. Otherwise, leave these fields blank.

  9. Click Next . A list of tables in the database are displayed. All tables and views associated with the database will appear in a new window.

  10. From the Tables list, select the relevant table or view you want to work with. You can click next to the relevant table or click Preview to see a preview of the data inside it.

  11. (Optional) Click + to customize the data you want to import with SQL. See Importing Data with Custom Queries for more information.

  12. After you have selected all the relevant tables, click Done . The tables are added to your data model.

For a short video of the process, see below (the video uses the XML driver as an example):

Additional Resources

For the full documentation set for the Jira connector, click here.

For connection string options, click here.

For data model options, click here.

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