Python
The examples below show how to retrieve the password from an environment variable and use it to connect.
You can access data using pyodbc or SQLAlchemy.
# pyodbc lets you make direct SQL queries. !wget https://pyodbc.googlecode.com/files/pyodbc-3.0.7.zip !unzip pyodbc-3.0.7.zip !cd pyodbc-3.0.7;python setup.py install --prefix /home/cdsw import os # See http://www.connectionstrings.com/ for information on how to construct ODBC connection strings. db = pyodbc.connect("DRIVER={PostgreSQL Unicode};SERVER=localhost;PORT=5432;DATABASE=test_db;USER=cdswuser;OPTION=3;PASSWORD=%s" % os.environ["POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD"]) cursor = cnxn.cursor() cursor.execute("select user_id, user_name from users") # sqlalchemy is an object relational database client that lets you make database queries in a more Pythonic way. !pip install sqlalchemy import os import sqlalchemy from sqlalchemy.orm import sessionmaker from sqlalchemy import create_engine db = create_engine("postgresql://cdswuser:%s@localhost:5432/test_db" % os.environ["POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD"]) session = sessionmaker(bind=db) user = session.query(User).filter_by(name='ed').first() # python-oracledb can be used to connect directly to Oracle databases without need to install oracle drivers # See https://python-oracledb.readthedocs.io/en/latest/user_guide/installation.html#quickstart !pip install oracledb import oracledb import os un = os.environ.get('PYTHON_USERNAME') pw = os.environ.get('PYTHON_PASSWORD') cs = os.environ.get('PYTHON_CONNECTSTRING') with oracledb.connect(user=un, password=pw, dsn=cs) as connection: with connection.cursor() as cursor: sql = """select sysdate from dual""" for r in cursor.execute(sql): print(r)