Book Image

Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Integration Services: An Expert Cookbook

Book Image

Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Integration Services: An Expert Cookbook

Overview of this book

SQL Server Integration Services (SSIS) is a leading tool in the data warehouse industry - used for performing extraction, transformation, and load operations. This book is aligned with the most common methodology associated with SSIS known as Extract Transform and Load (ETL); ETL is responsible for the extraction of data from several sources, their cleansing, customization, and loading into a central repository normally called Data Warehouse or Data Mart.Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Integration Services: An Expert Cookbook covers all the aspects of SSIS 2012 with lots of real-world scenarios to help readers understand usages of SSIS in every environment. Written by two SQL Server MVPs who have in-depth knowledge of SSIS having worked with it for many years.This book starts by creating simple data transfer packages with wizards and illustrates how to create more complex data transfer packages, troubleshoot packages, make robust SSIS packages, and how to boost the performance of data consolidation with SSIS. It then covers data flow transformations and advanced transformations for data cleansing, fuzzy and term extraction in detail. The book then dives deep into making a dynamic package with the help of expressions and variables, and performance tuning and consideration.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Microsoft SQL Server 2012 Integration Services: An Expert Cookbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Introduction


There are many components that made SSIS a powerful tool for data integration. The objects in SSIS known as Tasks can be found under the Control Flow tab in the SSIS Toolbox and they are usually referred to as Tasks or Control Flow Tasks. The Control Flow Tasks consist of a wide variety of operations, from a simple File System Task that moves files, to XML Tasks such as XSLT or XPath that work with XML data in different ways.

Control Flow Tasks are categorized into sections; re-organizing them is simple (refer to Getting started with SSDT recipe in Chapter 1, Getting Started with SQL Server Integration Services). Each task has an editor; which is a graphical user interface that is useful for SSIS Developers. Some of the most important properties of a Task can be configured in its editor.

A good SSIS Developer should be familiar with the use of all Control Flow Tasks and use them in appropriate situations. In this chapter you will see an example of each Control Flow Task with...