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Learning Pentaho Data Integration 8 CE

You're reading from   Learning Pentaho Data Integration 8 CE An end-to-end guide to exploring, transforming, and integrating your data across multiple sources

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788292436
Length 500 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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María Carina Roldán María Carina Roldán
Author Profile Icon María Carina Roldán
María Carina Roldán
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Pentaho Data Integration 2. Getting Started with Transformations FREE CHAPTER 3. Creating Basic Task Flows 4. Reading and Writing Files 5. Manipulating PDI Data and Metadata 6. Controlling the Flow of Data 7. Cleansing, Validating, and Fixing Data 8. Manipulating Data by Coding 9. Transforming the Dataset 10. Performing Basic Operations with Databases 11. Loading Data Marts with PDI 12. Creating Portable and Reusable Transformations 13. Implementing Metadata Injection 14. Creating Advanced Jobs 15. Launching Transformations and Jobs from the Command Line 16. Best Practices for Designing and Deploying a PDI Project

Automating the execution

As you just learned, running Pan and Kitchen not only involves providing the name of the ktr or kjb file, but also typing several options, for example, parameters or names of log files. You can type the full command manually when you are developing or testing, but when your work is ready for production, you want to keep things simple and automated. The following tutorial explains how to embedd the execution of Kitchen inside a script. Once you have the script, you can schedule its execution using a system utility, for example, cron in Unix or scheduler in Windows.

Suppose that you have a Job named process_sales.kjb located in the c:\project\etl folder (Windows) or /home/project/etl folder (Unix), and you want to run it every day. You want to keep a history of logs, so the log of the execution will be written in a folder named C:\project\logs (Windows...

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