diff --git a/docs/RabbitInAHat.html b/docs/RabbitInAHat.html index 4397a9fb..ffcc6eae 100644 --- a/docs/RabbitInAHat.html +++ b/docs/RabbitInAHat.html @@ -463,6 +463,7 @@

Field to Field Mappings

If you select the source table orange box, Rabbit-In-a-Hat will expose values the source data has for that table. This is meant to help in the process in understanding the source data and what logic may be required to handle the data in the ETL. In the example below ndcnum is selected and raw NDC codes are displayed starting with most frequent (note that in the WhiteRabbit scan a “Min cell count” could have been selected and values smaller than that count will not show).

Continue this process until all source columns necessary in all mapped tables have been mapped to the corresponding CDM column. Not all columns must be mapped into a CDM column and not all CDM columns require a mapping. One source column may supply information to multiple CDM columns and one CDM column can receive information from multiple columns.

+

Sidenote: fields with a * in front of their name are considered required fields. For source fields this means that this field was always populated when running the WhiteRabbit scans.

Output generation

diff --git a/docs/RabbitInAHat.md b/docs/RabbitInAHat.md index 5ed7925e..7b44a6b0 100644 --- a/docs/RabbitInAHat.md +++ b/docs/RabbitInAHat.md @@ -133,6 +133,9 @@ Continue this process until all source columns necessary in all mapped tables ha Not all columns must be mapped into a CDM column and not all CDM columns require a mapping. One source column may supply information to multiple CDM columns and one CDM column can receive information from multiple columns. +Sidenote: fields with a `*` in front of their name are considered required fields. +For source fields this means that this field was always populated when running the WhiteRabbit scans. + ## Output generation ### Generating an ETL Document diff --git a/docs/WhiteRabbit.html b/docs/WhiteRabbit.html index 56b6d696..4cef01b4 100644 --- a/docs/WhiteRabbit.html +++ b/docs/WhiteRabbit.html @@ -497,7 +497,7 @@

PostgreSQL

Google BigQuery

If you want to use a BigQuery instance as the source database, after installing WhiteRabbit, you will need to download a zip file with the BigQuery JDBC driver, and unzip it in de repo directory of the WhiteRabbit installation. The latest version tested with WhiteRabbit is 1.5.2.1005 .

-

The zip file can be downloaded here

+

The zip file can be downloaded here.

Google BigQuery (GBQ) supports two different connection/authentication methods: application default credentials and service account authentication. The former method is considered more secure because it writes auditing events to stackdriver. The specific method used is determined by the arguments provided to the configuration panel as described below.

Authentication via application default credentials:

When using application default credentials authentication, you must run the following gcloud command in the user account only once: gcloud auth application-default login (do not include the single quote characters). An application key is written to ~/.config/gcloud/application_default_credentails.json.

@@ -539,7 +539,7 @@

Snowflake

Teradata

If you want to use a Teradata instance as the source database, after installing WhiteRabbit, you will need to download a zip file with the Teradata JDBC driver, and unzip it in de repo directory of the WhiteRabbit installation. The latest version tested with WhiteRabbit is 20.00.00.16 .

-

The zip file can be downloaded here

+

The zip file can be downloaded here.