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Microsoft Purview scanning best practices

Microsoft Purview governance solutions support automated scanning of on-premises, multicloud, and software as a service (SaaS) data sources.

Running a scan invokes the process to ingest metadata from the registered data sources. The metadata curated at the end of the scan and curation process includes technical metadata. This metadata can include data asset names such as table names or file names, file size, columns, and data lineage. Schema details are also captured for structured data sources. A relational database management system is an example of this type of source.

The curation process applies automated classification labels on the schema attributes based on the scan rule set configured. Sensitivity labels are applied if your Microsoft Purview account is connected to the Microsoft Purview compliance portal.

Important

If you have any Azure Policies preventing updates to Storage accounts, this will cause errors for Microsoft Purview's scanning process. Follow the Microsoft Purview exception tag guide to create an exception for Microsoft Purview accounts.

Why do you need best practices to manage data sources?

Best practices enable you to:

  • Optimize cost.
  • Build operational excellence.
  • Improve security compliance.
  • Gain performance efficiency.

Register a source and establish a connection

The following design considerations and recommendations help you register a source and establish a connection.

Design considerations

  • Use collections to create the hierarchy that aligns with the organization's strategy, like geographical, business function, or source of data. The hierarchy defines the data sources to be registered and scanned.
  • By design, you can't register data sources multiple times in the same Microsoft Purview account. This architecture helps to avoid the risk of assigning different access control to the same data source.

Design recommendations

  • If the metadata of the same data source is consumed by multiple teams, you can register and manage the data source at a parent collection. Then you can create corresponding scans under each subcollection. In this way, relevant assets appear under each child collection. Sources without parents are grouped in a dotted box in the map view. No arrows link them to parents.

    Screenshot that shows Microsoft Purview with data source registered at parent collection.

  • Use the Azure Multiple option if you need to register multiple sources, such as Azure subscriptions or resource groups, in the cloud. For more information, see the following documentation:

  • After a data source is registered, you might scan the same source multiple times, in case the same source is being used differently by various teams or business units.

For more information on how to define a hierarchy for registering data sources, see Best practices on collections architecture.

Scanning

The following design considerations and recommendations are organized based on the key steps involved in the scanning process.

Design considerations

  • After the data source is registered, set up a scan to manage automated and secure metadata scanning and curation.
  • Scan setup includes configuring the name of the scan, scope of scan, integration runtime, scan trigger frequency, scan rule set, and resource set uniquely for each data source per scan frequency.
  • Before you create any credentials, consider your data source types and networking requirements. This information helps you decide which authentication method and integration runtime you need for your scenario.

Design recommendations

After you register your source in the relevant collection, plan and follow the order shown here when you set up the scan. This process order helps you to avoid unexpected costs and rework.

Screenshot that shows the order to be followed while preparing a scan.

  1. Identify your classification requirements from the system in-built classification rules. Or you can create specific custom classification rules, as necessary. Base them on specific industry, business, or regional requirements, which aren't available out of the box:

  2. Create scan rule sets before you configure the scan.

    Screenshot that shows the Scan rule sets under Data map.

    When you create the scan rule set, ensure the following points:

    • Verify if the system default scan rule set is sufficient for the data source being scanned. Otherwise, define your custom scan rule set.

    • The custom scan rule set can include both system default and custom, so clear those options not relevant for the data assets being scanned.

    • Where necessary, create a custom rule set to exclude unwanted classification labels. For example, the system rule set contains generic government code patterns for the planet, not just the United States. Your data might match the pattern of some other type, such as "Belgium Driver's License Number."

    • Limit custom classification rules to most important and relevant labels to avoid clutter. You don't want to have too many labels tagged to the asset.

    • If you modify the custom classification or scan rule set, a full scan is triggered. Configure the classification and scan rule set appropriately to avoid rework and costly full scans.

      Screenshot that shows the option to select relevant classification rules when you create the custom scan rule set.

      Note

      When you scan a storage account, Microsoft Purview uses a set of defined patterns to determine if a group of assets forms a resource set. You can use resource set pattern rules to customize or override how Microsoft Purview detects which assets are grouped as resource sets. The rules also determine how the assets are displayed within the catalog. For more information, see Create resource set pattern rules. This feature has cost considerations. For information, see the pricing page.

  3. Set up a scan for the registered data sources.

    • Scan name: By default, Microsoft Purview uses the naming convention SCAN-[A-Z][a-z][a-z], which isn't helpful when you're trying to identify a scan that you've run. Be sure to use a meaningful naming convention. For instance, you could name the scan environment-source-frequency-time as DEVODS-Daily-0200. This name represents a daily scan at 0200 hours.

    • Authentication: Microsoft Purview offers various authentication methods for scanning data sources, depending on the type of source. It could be Azure cloud or on-premises or third-party sources. Follow the least-privilege principle for the authentication method in this order of preference:

      • Microsoft Purview MSI - Managed Service Identity (for example, for Azure Data Lake Storage Gen2 sources)
      • User-assigned managed identity
      • Service principal
      • SQL authentication (for example, for on-premises or Azure SQL sources)
      • Account key or basic authentication (for example, for SAP S/4HANA sources)

      For more information, see the how-to guide to manage credentials.

      Note

      If you have a firewall enabled for the storage account, you must use the managed identity authentication method when you set up a scan. When you set up a new credential, the credential name can only contain letters, numbers, underscores, and hyphens.

    • Integration runtime

      • For more information, see Network architecture best practices.
      • If self-hosted integration runtime (SHIR) is deleted, any ongoing scans that rely on it will fail.
      • When you use SHIR, make sure that the memory is sufficient for the data source being scanned. For example, when you use SHIR for scanning an SAP source, if you see "out of memory error":
        • Ensure the SHIR machine has enough memory. The recommended amount is 128 GB.
        • In the scan setting, set the maximum memory available as some appropriate value, for example, 100.
        • For more information, see the prerequisites in Scan to and manage SAP ECC Microsoft Purview.
    • Scope scan

      • When you set up the scope for the scan, select only the assets that are relevant at a granular level or parent level. This practice ensures that the scan cost is optimal and performance is efficient. All future assets under a certain parent will be automatically selected if the parent is fully or partially checked.

      • Some examples for some data sources:

        • For Azure SQL Database or Data Lake Storage Gen2, you can scope your scan to specific parts of the data source. Select the appropriate items in the list, such as folders, subfolders, collections, or schemas.
        • For Oracle, Hive Metastore Database, and Teradata sources, a specific list of schemas to be exported can be specified through semicolon-separated values or schema name patterns.
        • For Google Big query, a specific list of datasets to be exported can be specified through semicolon-separated values.
        • When you create a scan for an entire AWS account, you can select specific buckets to scan. When you create a scan for a specific AWS S3 bucket, you can select specific folders to scan.
        • For Erwin, you can scope your scan by providing a semicolon-separated list of Erwin model locator strings.
        • For Cassandra, a specific list of key spaces to be exported can be specified through semicolon-separated values or through key spaces name patterns.
        • For Looker, you can scope your scan by providing a semicolon-separated list of Looker projects.
        • For Power BI tenant, you might only specify whether to include or exclude personal workspace.

        Screenshot that shows the option to scope a scan while configuring the scan.

      • In general, use "ignore patterns," where they're supported, based on wild cards (for example, for data lakes) to exclude temp, config files, RDBMS system tables, or backup or STG tables.

      • When you scan documents or unstructured data, avoid scanning a huge number of such documents. The scan processes the first 20 MB of such documents and might result in longer scan duration.

    • Scan rule set

      • When you select the scan rule set, make sure to configure the relevant system or custom scan rule set that was created earlier.
      • You can create custom filetypes and fill in the details accordingly. Currently, Microsoft Purview supports only one character in Custom Delimiter. If you use custom delimiters, such as ~, in your actual data, you need to create a new scan rule set.

      Screenshot that shows the scan rule set selection while configuring the scan.

    • Scan type and schedule

      • The scan process can be configured to run full or incremental scans.
      • Run the scans during non-business or off-peak hours to avoid any processing overload on the source.
      • Initial scan is a full scan, and every subsequent scan is incremental. Subsequent scans can be scheduled as periodic incremental scans. Learn more about the supported schedule options.
      • The frequency of scans should align with the change management schedule of the data source or business requirements. For example:
        • If the source structure could potentially change weekly, the scan frequency should be in sync. Changes include new assets or fields within an asset that are added, modified, or deleted.
        • If the classification or sensitivity labels are expected to be up to date on a weekly basis, perhaps for regulatory reasons, the scan frequency should be weekly. For example, if partitions files are added every week in a source data lake, you might schedule monthly scans. You don't need to schedule weekly scans because there's no change in metadata. This suggestion assumes there are no new classification scenarios.
        • The maximum duration that the scan can run is seven days, possibly because of memory issues. This time period excludes the ingestion process. If progress hasn't been updated after seven days, the scan is marked as failed. The ingestion (into catalog) process currently doesn't have any such limitation.
    • Canceling scans

      • Currently, scans can only be canceled or paused if the status of the scan has transitioned into an "In Progress" state from "Queued" after you trigger the scan.
      • Canceling an individual child scan isn't supported.

Points to note

  • If a field or column, table, or a file is removed from the source system after the scan was executed, it will only be reflected (removed) in Microsoft Purview after the next scheduled full or incremental scan.
  • An asset can be deleted from a Microsoft Purview catalog by using the Delete icon under the name of the asset. This action won't remove the object in the source. If you run a full scan on the same source, it would get reingested in the catalog. If you run incremental scan instead, the deleted asset won't be picked unless the object is modified at the source. An example is if a column is added or removed from the table.
  • To understand the behavior of subsequent scans after manually editing a data asset or an underlying schema through the Microsoft Purview governance portal, see Catalog asset details.
  • For more information, see the tutorial on how to view, edit, and delete assets.

Next steps

Manage data sources