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Data Import (Master Data Services)

Once you've created a model for your data in Master Data Services, you can start adding data and make changes to data in the Master Data Services database. You use Master Data Services staging tables, stored procedures and Master Data Manager .

You can also use the SQL ServerMaster Data ServicesAdd-in for Excel, to add data to the MDS repository (Master Data Services database). For more information, see Publishing Data (MDS Add-in for Excel).

When you add and update data, you can do the following.

  • Load and update members, and update attribute values

  • Deactivate and delete members

  • Move explicit hierarchy members

Adding and updating data includes the following main tasks.

  1. Load data into the staging tables in the Master Data Services database.

  2. Load the data from the staging tables into the appropriate Master Data Services tables.

    You use staging stored procedures or Master Data Manager to load the data.

Note

In SQL Server 2014, support for the SQL Server 2008 R2 staging processes is deprecated.

Deactivating and Deleting Members

Deactivating means the member can be reactivated. If you reactivate a member, its attributes and its membership in hierarchies and collections are restored. All previous transactions are intact. Deactivation transactions are visible to administrators in the Version Management functional area of the Master Data Manager.

Deleting means purging the member from the system permanently. All transactions for the member, all relationships, and all attributes are permanently deleted.

Note

You cannot use staging to reactivate members. You must do it manually in the Master Data Manager. For more information, see Reactivate a Member or Collection (Master Data Services).

You cannot use staging to delete or deactivate collections. For more information on manually deactivating collections, see Delete a Member or Collection (Master Data Services).

Moving explicit hierarchy members

When you move the location of members in explicit hierarchies in bulk, you can designate the following.

  • A consolidated member as a parent of a consolidated member.

  • A consolidated member as a parent of a leaf member.

  • A leaf member as a sibling of a leaf or consolidated member.

  • A consolidated member as a sibling of a leaf or consolidated member.

Staging Tables and Stored Procedures

The Master Data Services database includes the following types of staging tables that you can populate with your data.

For each entity in the model, there is a staging table. The table name indicates the corresponding entity, and the entity type such as leaf member. The following image shows the staging tables for the currency, customer, and product entities.

Staging Tables in MDS database

The name of the table is specified when an entity is created and cannot be changed. If the staging table name contains a _1 or other number, another table of that name already existed when the entity was created.

The Master Data Services includes the following types of staging stored procedures.

  • stg.udp_<name>_Leaf

  • stg.udp_<name>_Consolidated

  • stg.udp_<name>_Relationship

For each entity in the model, there are three stored procedures that correspond to the leaf member, consolidated member, and relationship staging tables. The following image shows the staging stored procedures for the currency, customer, and product entities.

Staging Stored Procedures in MDS database

For more information on the stored procedures, see Staging Stored Procedure (Master Data Services).

Logging Transactions

All transactions that occur when data or relationships are imported or updated can be logged. An option in the stored procedure allows this logging. If you initiate the staging process using Master Data Manager, no logging occurs.

In Master Data Services Configuration Manager, the Log staging transactions setting does not apply to this method of staging data.