Connect and Query Live Jira Data in Databricks with CData Connect Cloud



Use CData Connect Cloud to integrate live Jira data into Databricks and enable direct, live querying and analysis without replication.

Databricks is a leading AI cloud-native platform that unifies data engineering, machine learning, and analytics at scale. Its powerful data lakehouse architecture combines the performance of data warehouses with the flexibility of data lakes. Integrating Databricks with CData Connect Cloud gives organizations live, real-time access to Jira data without the need for complex ETL pipelines or data duplication—streamlining operations and reducing time-to-insights.

In this article, we'll walk through how to configure a secure, live connection from Databricks to Jira using CData Connect Cloud. Once configured, you'll be able to access Jira data directly from Databricks notebooks using standard SQL—enabling unified, real-time analytics across your data ecosystem.

About Jira Data Integration

CData simplifies access and integration of live Jira data. Our customers leverage CData connectivity to:

  • Gain bi-directional access to their Jira objects like issues, projects, and workflows.
  • Use SQL stored procedures to perform functional actions like changing issues status, creating custom fields, download or uploading an attachment, modifying or retrieving time tracking settings, and more.
  • Authenticate securely using a variety of methods, including username and password, OAuth, personal access token, API token, Crowd or OKTA SSO, LDAP, and more.

Most users leverage CData solutions to integrate Jira data with their database or data warehouse, whether that's using CData Sync directly or relying on CData's compatibility with platforms like SSIS or Azure Data Factory. Others are looking to get analytics and reporting on live Jira data from preferred analytics tools like Tableau and Power BI.

Learn more about how customers are seamlessly connecting to their Jira data to solve business problems from our blog: Drivers in Focus: Collaboration Tools.


Getting Started


Overview

Here is an overview of the simple steps:

  1. Step 1 — Connect and Configure: In CData Connect Cloud, create a connection to your Jira source, configure user permissions, and generate a Personal Access Token (PAT).
  2. Step 2 — Query from Databricks: Install the CData JDBC driver in Databricks, configure your notebook with the connection details, and run SQL queries to access live Jira data.

Prerequisites

Before you begin, make sure you have the following:

  1. An active Jira account.
  2. A CData Connect Cloud account. You can log in or sign up for a free trial here.
  3. A Databricks account. Sign up or log in here.

Step 1: Connect and Configure a Jira Connection in CData Connect Cloud

1.1 Add a Connection to Jira

CData Connect Cloud uses a straightforward, point-and-click interface to connect to available data sources.

  1. Log into Connect Cloud, click Sources on the left, and then click Add Connection in the top-right.
  2. Select "Jira" from the Add Connection panel.
  3. Enter the necessary authentication properties to connect to Jira.

    To connect to JIRA, provide the User and Password. Additionally, provide the Url; for example, https://yoursitename.atlassian.net.

  4. Click Save & Test in the top-right.
  5. Navigate to the Permissions tab on the Jira Connection page and update the user-based permissions based on your preferences.

1.2 Generate a Personal Access Token (PAT)

When connecting to Connect Cloud through the REST API, the OData API, or the Virtual SQL Server, a Personal Access Token (PAT) is used to authenticate the connection to Connect Cloud. PAT functions as an alternative to your login credentials for secure, token-based authentication. It is a best practice to create a separate PAT for each service to maintain granularity of access.

  1. Click on the Gear icon () at the top right of the Connect Cloud app to open the settings page.
  2. On the Settings page, go to the Access Tokens section and click Create PAT.
  3. Give the PAT a name and click Create.
  4. Note: The personal access token is only visible at creation, so be sure to copy it and store it securely for future use.

Step 2: Connect and Query Jira Data in Databricks

Follow these steps to establish a connection from Databricks to Jira. You'll install the CData JDBC Driver for Connect Cloud, add the JAR file to your cluster, configure your notebooks, and run SQL queries to access live Jira data data.

2.1 Install the CData JDBC Driver for Connect Cloud

  1. In CData Connect Cloud, click the Integrations page on the left. Search for JDBC or Databricks, click Download, and select the installer for your operating system.
  2. Once downloaded, run the installer and follow the instructions:
    • For Windows: Run the setup file and follow the installation wizard.
    • For Mac/Linux: Unpack the archive and move the folder to /opt or /Applications. Make sure you have execute permissions.
  3. After installation, locate the JAR file in the installation directory:
    • Windows:
      C:\Program Files\CData\CData JDBC Driver for Connect Cloud\lib\cdata.jdbc.connect.jar
    • Mac/Linux:
      /Applications/CData/CData JDBC Driver for Connect Cloud/lib/cdata.jdbc.connect.jar

2.2 Install the JAR File on Databricks

  1. Log in to Databricks. In the navigation pane, click Compute on the left. Start or create a compute cluster.
  2. Click on the running cluster, go to the Libraries tab, and click Install New at the top right.
  3. In the Install Library dialog, select DBFS, and drag and drop the cdata.jdbc.connect.jar file. Click Install.

2.3 Query Jira Data in a Databricks Notebook

Notebook Script 1 — Define JDBC Connection:

  1. Paste the following script into the notebook cell:
driver = "cdata.jdbc.connect.ConnectDriver"
url = "jdbc:connect:AuthScheme=Basic;User=your_username;Password=your_pat;URL=https://cloud.cdata.com/api/;DefaultCatalog=Your_Connection_Name;"
  1. Replace:
    • your_username - With your CData Connect Cloud username
    • your_pat - With your CData Connect Cloud Personal Access Token (PAT)
    • Your_Connection_Name - With the name of your Connect Cloud data source, from the Sources page
  2. Run the script.

Notebook Script 2 — Load DataFrame from Jira data:

  1. Add a new cell for this second script. From the menu on the right side of your notebook, click Add cell below.
  2. Paste the following script into the new cell:
remote_table = spark.read.format("jdbc") \
  .option("driver", "cdata.jdbc.connect.ConnectDriver") \
  .option("url", "jdbc:connect:AuthScheme=Basic;User=your_username;Password=your_pat;URL=https://cloud.cdata.com/api/;DefaultCatalog=Your_Connection_Name;") \
  .option("dbtable", "YOUR_SCHEMA.YOUR_TABLE") \
  .load()
  1. Replace:
    • your_username - With your CData Connect Cloud username
    • your_pat - With your CData Connect Cloud Personal Access Token (PAT)
    • Your_Connection_Name - With the name of your Connect Cloud data source, from the Sources page
    • YOUR_SCHEMA.YOUR_TABLE - With your schema and table, for example, JIRA.Issues
  2. Run the script.

Notebook Script 3 — Preview Columns:

  1. Similarly, add a new cell for this third script.
  2. Paste the following script into the new cell:
display(remote_table.select("ColumnName1", "ColumnName2"))
  1. Replace ColumnName1 and ColumnName2 with the actual columns from your Jira structure (e.g. Summary, TimeSpent, etc.).
  2. Run the script.

You can now explore, join, and analyze live Jira data directly within Databricks notebooks—without needing to know the complexities of the back-end API and without replicating Jira data.


Try CData Connect Cloud Free for 14 Days

Ready to simplify real-time access to Jira data? Start your free 14-day trial of CData Connect Cloud today and experience seamless, live connectivity from Databricks to Jira.

Low code, zero infrastructure, zero replication — just seamless, secure access to your most critical data and insights.

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