Connect to Snowflake
In this section, we’ll create a Cube Cloud deployment and connect it to Snowflake. A deployment represents a data model, configuration, and managed infrastructure. To continue with this guide, you’ll need to have a Cube Cloud account. If you don’t have one yet, click here to sign up for free. First, sign in to your Cube Cloud account. Then, click Create Deployment: Give the deployment a name, select the cloud provider and region of your choice, and click Next:Microsoft Azure is available on Enterprise and above plans.
Contact us for details.
Set up a Cube project
Next, click Create to create a new project from scratch:Connect to your Snowflake
The last step is to connect Cube Cloud to Snowflake. First, select it from the grid:- Username: Your Snowflake username. Please note, it is usually not your email address.
- Password: Your Snowflake password.
- Database:
CUBE_DEMO, that is the database we’ve created in the previous step. - Account: Your snowflake account identifier. You can find it in your
Snowflake URL as the
account_locatorpart. - Region: Your Snowflake account region. You can find it in your Snowflake
URL. If your URL includes a
cloudpart, use both thecloud_region_idandcloudtogether e.g.us-east-2.aws, otherwise just usecloud_region_id - Warehouse:
CUBE_DEMO_WH, that is the warehouse we’ve created in the previous step. - Role: You can leave it blank.
Generate data model from your Snowflake schema
Cube can now generate a basic data model from your data warehouse schema, which helps getting started with data modeling faster. Select all four tables in ourECOM schema and click through the data model generation wizard. We’ll inspect
these generated files in the next section and start making changes to them.