Book Image

Getting Started with SQL Server 2012 Cube Development

Book Image

Getting Started with SQL Server 2012 Cube Development

Overview of this book

Analysis Services have been the number one OLAP engine for years. With the increased focus on business intelligence solutions, there is a shortage of professionals in this area. Start your journey into becoming a BI developer using the popular tools included in every SQL Server installation. Getting Started with SQL Server 2012 Cube Development teaches you through clear step-by-step exercises to create business intelligence solutions using Analysis Services. The knowledge gained through these practical examples can immediately be applied to your real-world problems. Getting Started with SQL Server 2012 Cube Development begins with an introduction to business intelligence and Analysis Services, the world's most-used cube engine. Guiding you through easy-to-understand examples to become a cube developer. Learn how to create a cube including all the advanced features such as KPIs, calculated measures, and time intelligence. Security and performance tuning will also be explored. You will learn how to perform and automate core tasks like deployment and processing. The main focus is on multidimensional cubes, but the creation of in-memory models will also be covered. You will learn everything you need to get started with cube development using SQL Server 2012.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Getting Started with SQL Server 2012 Cube Development
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Deploying objects to Analysis Services


Everything that you have so far written and configured using the graphical interface has generated code. This code is in the Analysis Services Scripting Language (ASSL) code that is part of the XML for Analysis (XMLA) language used by Analysis Services and is right now stored as part of your project in SQL Server Data Tools. Deployment is the process where these commands get sent to the Analysis Services server, and where the objects you have configured get created.

Tip

For more information about XMLA and ASSL, refer to the following links:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms186604.aspx

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms128525.aspx

If you want to view the code that is generated, you can always right-click on any object in the Solution Explorer window and choose the View Code option.

A common way of doing deployment is through the Deploy menu that you find in the Build menu in SQL Server Data Tools window. This will send the deployment script...