% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/jdbc.r \docType{methods} \name{dbConnect,AthenaDriver-method} \alias{dbConnect,AthenaDriver-method} \title{AthenaJDBC} \usage{ \S4method{dbConnect}{AthenaDriver}(drv, provider = "com.simba.athena.amazonaws.auth.DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain", region = "us-east-1", s3_staging_dir = Sys.getenv("AWS_S3_STAGING_DIR"), schema_name = "default", max_error_retries = 10, connection_timeout = 10000, socket_timeout = 10000, log_path = "", log_level = 0, ...) } \arguments{ \item{provider}{JDBC auth provider (ideally leave default)} \item{region}{AWS region the Athena tables are in} \item{s3_staging_dir}{A write-able bucket on S3 that you have permissions for} \item{schema_name}{LOL if only this actually worked with Amazon's hacked Presto driver} \item{max_error_retries, connection_timeout, socket_timeout}{technical connection info that you should only muck with if you know what you're doing.} \item{log_path, log_level}{The Athena JDBC driver can (shockingly) provide a decent bit of data in logs. Set this to a temporary directory or something log4j can use. For `log_level` use the names ("INFO", "DEBUG", "WARN", "ERROR", "ALL", "OFF", "FATAL", "TRACE") or their corresponding integer values 0-6.} \item{...}{unused} } \description{ AthenaJDBC } \references{ }