What's New in Integration Services in SQL Server 2017
Applies to: SQL Server SSIS Integration Runtime in Azure Data Factory
This topic describes the features that have been added or updated in SQL Server 2017 (14.x) Integration Services.
Note
SQL Server 2017 also includes the features of SQL Server 2016 and the features added in SQL Server 2016 updates. For info about the new SSIS features in SQL Server 2016, see What's New in Integration Services in SQL Server 2016.
Highlights of this release
Here are the most important new features of Integration Services in SQL Server 2017.
Scale Out. Distribute SSIS package execution more easily across multiple worker computers, and manage executions and workers from a single master computer. For more info, see Integration Services Scale Out.
Integration Services on Linux. Run SSIS packages on Linux computers. For more info, see Extract, transform, and load data on Linux with SSIS.
Connectivity improvements. Connect to the OData feeds of Microsoft Dynamics AX Online and Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online with the updated OData components.
New in Azure Data Factory
With the public preview of Azure Data Factory version 2 in September 2017, you can now do the following things:
- Deploy packages to the SSIS Catalog database (SSISDB) on Azure SQL Database.
- Run packages deployed to Azure on the Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime, a component of Azure Data Factory version 2.
For more info, see Lift and shift SQL Server Integration Services workloads to the cloud.
These new capabilities require SQL Server Data Tools (SSDT) version 17.2 or later, but do not require SQL Server 2017 or SQL Server 2016. When you deploy packages to Azure, the Package Deployment Wizard always upgrades the packages to the latest package format.
New in the Azure Feature Pack
In addition to the connectivity improvements in SQL Server, the Integration Services Feature Pack for Azure has added support for Azure Data Lake Store. For more info, see the blog post New Azure Feature Pack Release Strengthening ADLS Connectivity. Also see Azure Feature Pack for Integration Services (SSIS).
New in SQL Server Data Tools (SSDT)
You can now develop SSIS projects and packages that target SQL Server versions 2012 through 2017 in Visual Studio 2017 or in Visual Studio 2015. For more info, see Download SQL Server Data Tools (SSDT).
New in SSIS in SQL Server 2017 RC1
New and changed features in Scale Out for SSIS
- Scale Out Master now supports high availability. You can enable Always On for SSISDB and set up Windows Server failover clustering for the server that hosts the Scale Out Master service. By applying this change to Scale Out Master, you avoid a single point of failure and provide high availability for the entire Scale Out deployment.
- The failover handling of the execution logs from Scale Out Workers is improved. The execution logs are persisted to local disk in case the Scale Out Worker stops unexpectedly. Later, when the worker restarts, it reloads the persisted logs and continues saving them to SSISDB.
- The parameter runincluster of the stored procedure [catalog].[create_execution] is renamed to runinscaleout for consistency and readability. This change of parameter name has the following impact:
- If you have existing scripts to run packages in Scale Out, you have to change the parameter name from runincluster to runinscaleout to make the scripts work in RC1.
- SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) 17.1 and earlier versions can't trigger package execution in Scale Out in RC1. The error message is: "@runincluster is not a parameter for procedure create_execution." This issue is fixed in the next release of SSMS, version 17.2. Version 17.2 and later of SSMS support the new parameter name and package execution in Scale Out. Until SSMS version 17.2 is available, as a workaround, you can use your existing version of SSMS to generate the package execution script, then change the name of the runincluster parameter to runinscaleout in the script, and run the script.
- The SSIS Catalog has a new global property to specify the default mode for executing SSIS packages. This new property applies when you call the [catalog].[create_execution] stored procedure with the runinscaleout parameter set to null. This mode also applies to SSIS SQL Agent jobs. You can set the new global property in the Properties dialog box for the SSISDB node in SSMS, or with the following command:
EXEC [catalog].[configure_catalog] @property_name=N'DEFAULT_EXECUTION_MODE', @property_value=1
New in SSIS in SQL Server 2017 CTP 2.1
New and changed features in Scale Out for SSIS
- You can now use the Use32BitRuntime parameter when you trigger execution in Scale Out.
- The performance of logging to SSISDB for package executions in Scale Out has been improved. The Event Message and Message Context logs are now written to SSISDB in batch mode instead of one by one. Here are some additional notes about this improvement:
- Some reports in the current version of SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) don't currently display these logs for executions in Scale Out. We anticipate that they will be supported in the next release of SSMS. The affected reports include the All Connections report, the Error Context report, and the Connection Information section in the Integration Service Dashboard.
- A new column event_message_guid has been added. Use this column to join the [catalog].[event_message_context] view and the [catalog].[event_messages] view instead of using event_message_id when you query these logs of executions in Scale Out.
- To get the management application for SSIS Scale Out, download SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) 17.1 or later.
New in SSIS in SQL Server 2017 CTP 2.0
There are no new SSIS features in SQL Server 2017 CTP 2.0.
New in SSIS in SQL Server 2017 CTP 1.4
There are no new SSIS features in SQL Server 2017 CTP 1.4.
New in SSIS in SQL Server 2017 CTP 1.3
There are no new SSIS features in SQL Server 2017 CTP 1.3.
New in SSIS in SQL Server 2017 CTP 1.2
There are no new SSIS features in SQL Server 2017 CTP 1.2.
New in SSIS in SQL Server 2017 CTP 1.1
There are no new SSIS features in SQL Server 2017 CTP 1.1.
New in SSIS in SQL Server 2017 CTP 1.0
Scale Out for SSIS
The Scale Out feature makes it much easier to run SSIS on multiple machines.
After installing the Scale Out Master and Workers, the package can be distributed to execute on different Workers automatically. If the execution is terminated unexpectedly, the execution is retried automatically. Also, all the executions and Workers can be centrally managed using the Master.
For more information, see Integration Services Scale Out.
Support for Microsoft Dynamics Online Resources
The OData Source and OData Connection Manager now support connecting to the OData feeds of Microsoft Dynamics AX Online and Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online.