You can publish your Community Connector in the Data Studio Connector Gallery.Publishing will let all Data Studio users easily find your connector and providevisibility to your connector based on connector name, description, and listeddata sources.
Easily access a wide variety of data. Data Studio’s built-in and partner connectors makes it possible to connect to virtually any kind of data. See what data you can access. Turn your data into compelling stories of data visualization art. Quickly build interactive reports and dashboards with Data Studio’s web based reporting tools. To publish, select Publish in the summary page. The Output window shows deployment progress and results. If you need help troubleshooting ASP.NET Core on IIS, see Troubleshoot ASP.NET Core on Azure App Service and IIS. In this quickstart, you learned how to use Visual Studio to create a publishing profile. Once comparison is complete, we will see the table change as new column being added to the Products table in Visual Studio. Publish Data-Tier Project changes to Database. There are three different ways to apply SQL Server Database project changes back to the database. Publish the project from Visual Studio and select target database.
Note: Even if you do not publish, you can stillshare your connector with others by providing a direct link.Users will be able to add and use your connector from the direct link.Criteria | Partner Connector |
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Description | Partner Connectors are developed, deployed, maintained and supported by the connector developers. |
Requirements | |
Support | You will need to actively support your connector, address user issues, and update code as needed. |
Deployment | You will manage and update your own deployment. |
Advantages |
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Submission |
Remove your published connector from the gallery
To remove your Community Connector from the gallery, send a removal request todata-studio-developer-feedback@google.com.
By: Nai Biao Zhou | Updated: 2018-05-11 | Comments (2) | Related: More >Database Administration
Problem
With a Microsoft Visual Studio Database Project, we can use version control softwareto manage changes to databases and we may face these problems:
- The database project deployment failed, and the error message said“The schema update is terminating because data loss might occur”.
- A database object, for example a table, was removed in the project,but the object was still in the target database after a successful deployment.
Solution
When publishing a database project to the target database server using MicrosoftVisual Studio, we can solve these problems through the “Advanced Publish Setting”window. When deploying the dacpac file by using command “SqlPackage.exe”,we can solve these two problems with adding specific parameters.
The solution was tested with Microsoft Visual Studio Community 2017 on Windows10 Home 10.0 <X64>. The DBMS is Microsoft SQL Server 2017 Enterprise EvaluationEdition (64-bit). The sample data was retrieved from theAdventureWorks sample databases.
Add NOT NULL Columns to a Table
We have a staging table “[dbo].[Stage_Special_Offer]” in the databaseproject “DWH_ETL_STORE”. The following screenshot presented the tablestructure. The table has some data.
We added a new column “Offer_Description” with data type “NCARCHAR (50) NOTNULL”. Then we published the project by using the database project publishingwizard. We received this error message:
We found this comment in the “DWH_ETL_Store.publish.sql”:
Some developers may add a default value to the column. I do not think this isa preferable solution for a table in a data warehouse. A not NULL column usuallywas needed on the basis of business requirements. Adding a default value seems tobypass the requirement unless a business requirement asks to do this. In addition,ETL developers could not find a data integrity error immediately if some bugs inthe ETL process added a NULL value to the not NULL column.
Publish Table Changes by Enabling Smart Defaults with GUI
A preferable solution for a data warehouse table is to enable the generationof smart defaults as a deployment option, and then the ETL process ensures the dataintegrity and validation.
Here is the process to publish a database project with the generation of smartdefaults as a deployment option enabled.
Step 1
Right click the project name in the “Solution Explorer” window andselect “Publish” from the pop-up menu. Configure the “Target Database Settings”as follows, then click on the Advanced button.
Step 2
On the Advanced Publish Settings window, check the “Generate smart defaults,when applicable” checkbox. Then click the “OK” button. This gets us back to the above screen where we can use the Save Profile Asif we want to save these settings for next time.
Step 3
Then click the “Publish” button.
The following screenshot shows the data in the table after the database projectwas published successfully. The new column “Offer_Description” was addedwith empty values.
Publish Table Changes by Enabling Smart Defaults using Command Line
If we want to do this from the command line, we can use this command line syntaxto deploy the project with the command “SqlPackage.exe”.
This shows the project was deployed successfully with these confirmation messages.
Alter Not NULL Columns in a Table
Linkopenbve Data Publishing Studio App
Sometimes we might receive the same “data loss” error when we changea name of a not NULL column. This might not always happen, it depends on how wechange the column name. If we change the name in the “T-SQL” panel, the error occurs.
To publish the project successfully, we need to change the not NULL column namein the “Design” panel. Note that other versions of Microsoft Visual Studio may providea “Rename” menu item in the “Refactor”context menu.
When we changed the column name in the “Design” panel, a “refactorlog”file “DWH_ETL_STORE.refactorlog”, was generated with these XML elements:
With this “DWH_ETL_STORE.refactorlog”, the publish scripts used “sp_rename”to rename the column, thus no data loss occurred.
A system table “[dbo].[__RefactorLog]”was created in the target database to trace the database refactoring.
Drop Objects In Target But Not In Source
We might find tables deleted from the database project are still in the targetdatabase. The database deployment could add new tables, but the deployment did notremove unused tables. We can solve this through the “Advanced Publish Settings”.
Check the checkbox “Drop objects in target but not in source”in the “Advanced Publish Settings” window as shown in the screenshot.This will remove objects that were deleted from the database project.
Here is the command line syntax to deploy the project with the command “SqlPackage.exe”.
References
[1] AdventureWorks sample databases.Retrieved March 2, 2018https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms124825(v=sql.100).aspx/.
[2] Walkthrough: Apply DatabaseRefactoring Techniques. Retrieved April 7, 2018https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd193272(v=vs.100).aspx/.
Next Steps
- In practice, we usually use scripts to deploy a database project to targetservers automatically. This document aboutSqlPackage.exe is very helpful to construct the automation scripts. MicrosoftVisual Studio also provides a function to compare the schema between the databaseproject and the target database. We can use this function to ensure all of thenot NULL column name changes were captured in the “refactorlog”file. This file should be stored under the version control system.
- Check out these related tips:
Last Updated: 2018-05-11
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