Apatar is an open source ETL (Extract-Transform-Load) and data integration software application.
Video Apatar
History
Apatar open source project was founded in 2005. The first version of the tool was released under the GPLv2 license at www.sourceforge.net in February 2007. In April 2007, Apatar alpha version was demonstrated to its strategic partners, including MySQL and BlackDuck. Apatar, Inc., a commercial company that provides support for the Apatar open source software, was founded in 2007 as a branch of Altoros.
Maps Apatar
Products
The company's main product is Apatar, a cross-platform open source desktop data integration tool that provides connectivity to a variety of databases, applications, protocols, files, and many more. The tool allows developers, database administrators, and business users to integrate information between a variety of data sources and formats and provides intuitive user interface that requires no coding to set up a data integration job.
Other tools designed by the Apatar team:
Apatar Merge - an MS Word plug-in that allows for building MS documents and templates using data from Salesforce CRM.
Apatar On-Demand - a Web-based application that can integrate Salesforce CRM and desktop editions of the QuickBooks accounting system.
Technology
Programming language: J2EE
Development platform: Eclipse
Query languages: SQL, SOAP/XML
Supported Operating Systems: Windows, Linux, MacOS
Apatar data integration software is adopted for the Amazon Web Services platform.
Typical use
- Database migration
- Application integration
- Database creation/update scripts
- Cross-database operations, import/export
- Data aggregation
Users and customers
Apatar's user and customer base ranges from small companies and individuals to large organizations such as the World Bank Group, Thomson Reuters, John Wiley & Sons, R.R. Donnelley, Autodesk,. and more.
References
External links
- Apatar Web site
- Apatar project page on SourceForge.Net
- Apatar Community Web site
- Apatar Overview Demo
Source of the article : Wikipedia