Salesforce PushTopic Source Connector for Confluent Cloud¶
The Salesforce PushTopic Source connector for Confluent Cloud provides the ability to subscribe to create, update, delete, and undelete events that occur with Salesforce Objects (SObjects). You can use the connector to capture these PushTopic events and write the events to an Apache Kafka® topic in order.
Important
If you are still on Confluent Cloud Enterprise, please contact your Confluent Account Executive for more information about using this connector.
Features¶
The Salesforce PushTopic Source connector provides the following features:
Uses the Salesforce streaming API: This connector uses the Salesforce Streaming API for PushTopics.
Creates PushTopic: The Salesforce PushTopic name (
salesforce.push.topic.name
) configuration property provides the name of the PushTopic. If the PushTopic does not exist, a PushTopic with this name is created when the connector launches, ifsalesforce.push.topic.create
is set to true.At least once delivery: The connector guarantees that records are delivered at least once to the Kafka topic. If the connector restarts, there could be duplicate records in the Kafka topic. The following note lists related limitations.
Note
- When the connector operates, it periodically records the replay ID of the last record written to Kafka. When the connector is stopped and then restarted within 24 hours, the connector continues consuming the PushTopic where it stopped, with no missed events. However, if the connector stops for more than 24 hours, some events are discarded in Salesforce before the connector can read them.
- If the connector stops unexpectedly due to a failure, it may not record the replay ID of the last record successfully written to Kafka. When the connector restarts, it resumes from the last recorded replay ID. This means that some events may be duplicated in Kafka.
Supported output data formats: The connector supports Avro, JSON Schema, Protobuf, or JSON (schemaless) output data. Schema Registry must be enabled to use a Schema Registry-based format (for example, Avro, JSON_SR (JSON Schema), or Protobuf).
Tasks: The connector supports running only one task.
See Configuration Properties for configuration property values and descriptions. See the Confluent Cloud connector limitations for additional information.
For more information and examples to use with the Confluent Cloud API for Connect, see the Confluent Cloud API for Connect section.
Quick Start¶
Use this quick start to get up and running with the Salesforce PushTopic Source connector. The quick start provides the basics of selecting the connector and configuring it to subscribe to a Salesforce PushTopic.
- Prerequisites
- Authorized access to a Confluent Cloud cluster on Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure (Azure), or Google Cloud Platform (GCP).
- The Confluent Cloud CLI installed and configured for the cluster. See Install the Confluent Cloud CLI.
- Schema Registry must be enabled to use a Schema Registry-based format (for example, Avro, JSON_SR (JSON Schema), or Protobuf).
- At least one topic must exist in your Confluent Cloud cluster before creating the connector.
- You must know the Salesforce account security token, key, and secret when setting up the connector.
- For networking considerations, see Internet access to resources. To use static egress IPs, see Static Egress IP Addresses.
- Kafka cluster credentials. You can use one of the following ways to get credentials:
- Create a Confluent Cloud API key and secret. To create a key and secret, you can use the Confluent Cloud CLI or you can autogenerate the API key and secret directly in the Cloud Console when setting up the connector.
- Create a Confluent Cloud service account for the connector. Make sure to review the ACL entries required in the service account documentation. Some connectors have specific ACL requirements.
Using the Confluent Cloud Console¶
Step 1: Launch your Confluent Cloud cluster.¶
See the Quick Start for Apache Kafka using Confluent Cloud for installation instructions.
Step 2: Add a connector.¶
Click Connectors. If you already have connectors in your cluster, click Add connector.
Step 3: Select your connector.¶
Click the Salesforce PushTopic Source connector icon.
Important
At least one topic must exist in your Confluent Cloud cluster before creating the connector.
Step 4: Set up the connection.¶
Complete the following steps and click Continue.
Note
- Make sure you have all your prerequisites completed.
- An asterisk ( * ) designates a required entry.
- Enter a connector name.
- Enter your Kafka Cluster credentials. The credentials are either the API key and secret or the service account API key and secret.
- Add your Salesforce connection details. Salesforce instance is not required. If not entered, this property defaults to
https://login.salesforce.com
. The connector uses the endpoint specified in the authentication response from Salesforce. - Add the Salesforce Object to create a topic for.
- Add the Salesforce PushTopic name. This is the name of the PushTopic to subscribe to. A PushTopic is created using this name, if no PushTopic exists with the name entered and Salesforce PushTopic create is set to
true
(the default). - All Salesforce PushTopic responds to…. When a Salesforce PushTopic is created using the connector, the PushTopic responds to all create, update, delete, and undelete events by default. You can set any of these events to
false
if you don’t want to capture the event type. - Specify the initial starting point for the connector to use when replaying events. Use
all
to replay all events from the last 24 hours. Uselatest
to replay only the events that arrive after the connector starts. This property defaults tolatest
. - Add a Connection timeout in milliseconds. This is the amount of time to wait to connect to the Salesforce endpoint. The value defaults to 30000 (30 seconds).
- Select an Output message format (data coming from the connector): AVRO, JSON (schemaless), JSON_SR (JSON Schema), or PROTOBUF. A valid schema must be available in Schema Registry to use a schema-based message format (for example, Avro, JSON_SR (JSON Schema), or Protobuf).
- Enter the number of tasks in use by the connector. Organizations can run multiple connectors with a limit of one task per connector (that is,
"tasks.max": "1"
).
See Configuration Properties for configuration property values and descriptions.
Step 5: Launch the connector.¶
Verify the connection details and click Launch.
Step 6: Check the connector status.¶
The status for the connector should go from Provisioning to Running. It may take a few minutes.
Step 7: Check the Kafka topic.¶
After the connector is running, verify that messages are populating your Kafka topic.
For more information and examples to use with the Confluent Cloud API for Connect, see the Confluent Cloud API for Connect section.
See also
For an example that shows fully-managed Confluent Cloud connectors in action with Confluent Cloud ksqlDB, see the Cloud ETL Demo. This example also shows how to use Confluent Cloud CLI to manage your resources in Confluent Cloud.
Using the Confluent Cloud CLI¶
Complete the following steps to set up and run the connector using the Confluent Cloud CLI.
Note
Make sure you have all your prerequisites completed.
Step 1: List the available connectors.¶
Enter the following command to list available connectors:
ccloud connector-catalog list
Step 2: Show the required connector configuration properties.¶
Enter the following command to show the required connector properties:
ccloud connector-catalog describe <connector-catalog-name>
For example:
ccloud connector-catalog describe SalesforcePushTopicSource
Example output:
Following are the required configs:
connector.class: SalesforcePushTopicSource
name
kafka.api.key
kafka.api.secret
kafka.topic
salesforce.username
salesforce.password
salesforce.password.token
salesforce.consumer.key
salesforce.consumer.secret
salesforce.object
salesforce.push.topic.name
output.data.format
tasks.max
Step 3: Create the connector configuration file.¶
Create a JSON file that contains the connector configuration properties. The following example shows the required connector properties.
{
"connector.class": "SalesforcePushTopicSource",
"name": "SalesforcePushTopicSource_0",
"kafka.api.key": "****************",
"kafka.api.secret": "**********************************************",
"kafka.topic": "TestPushTopicEvent",
"salesforce.username": "<my-username>",
"salesforce.password": "**************",
"salesforce.password.token": "************************",
"salesforce.consumer.key": "******************************************",
"salesforce.consumer.secret": "***************************************",
"salesforce.object": "<Sobject_name>",
"salesforce.push.topic.name: "<PushTopic_name>",
"output.data.format": "JSON",
"tasks.max": "1"
}
Note the following property definitions:
"connector.class"
: Identifies the connector plugin name."name"
: Sets a name for your new connector.""kafka.topic"
: Enter a Kafka topic name. A topic must exist before launching the connector."salesforce.<...>"
: Enter the Salesforce account authentication and authorization details."salesforce.object"
: Enter the SObject name to create a topic for."salesforce.push.topic.name
: Enter the name of the PushTopic to subscribe to. If no PushTopic exists with the name entered, a PushTopic is created if the propertysalesforce.push.topic.create
is set totrue
(the default)."output.data.format"
: Sets the output message format (data coming from the connector). Valid entries are AVRO, JSON_SR, PROTOBUF, or JSON. You must have Confluent Cloud Schema Registry configured if using a schema-based message format (for example, Avro, JSON_SR (JSON Schema), or Protobuf)."tasks.max"
: Enter the number of tasks in use by the connector. Organizations can run multiple connectors with a limit of one task per connector (that is,"tasks.max": "1"
).
See Configuration Properties for configuration property values and descriptions.
Step 4: Load the properties file and create the connector.¶
Enter the following command to load the configuration and start the connector:
ccloud connector create --config <file-name>.json
For example:
ccloud connector create --config salesforce-pushtopic-source.json
Example output:
Created connector SalesforcePushTopicSource_0 lcc-aj3qr
Step 5: Check the connector status.¶
Enter the following command to check the connector status:
ccloud connector list
Example output:
ID | Name | Status | Type
+-----------+----------------------------------+---------+-------+
lcc-aj3qr | SalesforcePushTopicSource_0 | RUNNING | source
Step 6: Check the Kafka topic.¶
After the connector is running, verify that messages are populating your Kafka topic.
For more information and examples to use with the Confluent Cloud API for Connect, see the Confluent Cloud API for Connect section.
Configuration Properties¶
The following lists connector configuration properties, values, and definitions.
salesforce.instance
The URL of the Salesforce endpoint to use. This directs the connector to use the endpoint specified in the authentication response. If left blank, the connector uses the endpoint
https://login.salesforce.com
.- Type: string
- Default:
https://login.salesforce.com
- Valid Values: Valid URL with a scheme of
https
orhttp
- Importance: high
salesforce.username
The Salesforce username the connector should use.
- Type: string
- Importance: high
salesforce.password
The Salesforce password the connector should use.
- Type: password
- Importance: high
salesforce.password.token
The Salesforce security token associated with the username.
- Type: password
- Importance: high
salesforce.consumer.key
The consumer key for the OAuth application.
- Type: password
- Importance: high
salesforce.consumer.secret
The consumer secret for the OAuth application.
- Type: password
- Importance: high
salesforce.object
The Salesforce object to create a topic for.
- Type: string
- Importance: high
salesforce.push.topic.name
The Salesforce topic to subscribe to. If
salesforce.push.topic.create
is set to true, a PushTopic with this name is created.- Type: string
- Importance: high
salesforce.initial.start
Specify the initial starting point for the connector for consuming events. Use
all
to consume all events from the last 24 hours. Uselatest
to consume only events that arrive after the connector has started.- Type: string
- Default: latest
- Valid Values:
all
orlatest
- Importance: high
salesforce.push.topic.create
Specifies whether a PushTopic should be created if it does not exist.
- Type: boolean
- Default: true
- Importance: low
salesforce.push.topic.notify.create
Specifies whether the PushTopic responds to create events.
- Type: boolean
- Default: true
- Importance: low
salesforce.push.topic.notify.delete
Specifies whether the PushTopic responds to delete events.
- Type: boolean
- Default: true
- Importance: low
salesforce.push.topic.notify.undelete
Specifies whether the PushTopic responds to undelete events.
- Type: boolean
- Default: true
- Importance: low
salesforce.push.topic.notify.update
Specifies whether the PushTopic responds to update events.
- Type: boolean
- Default: true
- Importance: low
connection.timeout
The amount of time to wait while connecting to the Salesforce streaming endpoint.
- Type: long
- Default: 30000 (30 seconds)
- Valid Values: [5000,…,600000]
- Importance: low
Next Steps¶
See also
For an example that shows fully-managed Confluent Cloud connectors in action with Confluent Cloud ksqlDB, see the Cloud ETL Demo. This example also shows how to use Confluent Cloud CLI to manage your resources in Confluent Cloud.