SQL Server assets package¶
The SQL Server assets package crawls Microsoft SQL Server assets and publishes them to Atlan for discovery.
Will create a new connection
This should only be used to create the workflow the first time. Each time you run this method it will create a new connection and new assets within that connection — which could lead to duplicate assets if you run the workflow this way multiple times with the same settings.
Instead, when you want to re-crawl assets, re-run the existing workflow (see Re-run existing workflow below).
To crawl assets directly from Microsoft SQL Server:
Direct extraction from SQL Server | |
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- The
SQLServerCrawler
package will create a workflow to crawl assets from SQL Server. - You must provide Atlan client.
- You must provide a name for the connection that the SQL Server assets will exist within.
-
You must specify at least one connection admin, either:
- everyone in a role (in this example, all
$admin
users). - a list of groups (names) that will be connection admins.
- a list of users (names) that will be connection admins.
- everyone in a role (in this example, all
-
When crawling assets directly from SQL Server, you are required to provide the following information:
- hostname of the SQL Server host
- name of the database to extract
-
When using basic authentication, you are required to provide the following information:
- username for accessing SQL Server.
- password for accessing SQL Server.
-
You can also optionally specify the set of assets to include in crawling. For SQL Server assets, this should be specified as a map keyed by database name with values as a list of schemas within that database to crawl. (If set to null, all databases and schemas will be crawled.)
- You can also optionally specify the set of assets to exclude from crawling. For SQL Server assets, this should be specified as a map keyed by database name with values as a list of schemas within the database to exclude. (If set to null, no assets will be excluded.)
- Build the minimal package object.
- Now, you can convert the package into a
Workflow
object. -
You can then run the workflow using the
run()
method on the object you've created.Workflows run asynchronously
Remember that workflows run asynchronously. See the packages and workflows introduction for details on how you can check the status and wait until the workflow has been completed.
Direct extraction from SQL Server | |
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- Base configuration for a new SQL Server crawler.
- You must provide a name for the connection that the SQL Server assets will exist within.
-
You must specify at least one connection admin, either:
- everyone in a role (in this example, all
$admin
users). - a list of groups (names) that will be connection admins.
- a list of users (names) that will be connection admins.
- everyone in a role (in this example, all
-
When crawling assets directly from SQL Server, you are required to provide the following information:
- hostname of the SQL Server host
- name of the database to extract
-
When using basic authentication, you are required to provide the following information:
- username for accessing SQL Server.
- password for accessing SQL Server.
-
You can also optionally specify the set of assets to include in crawling. For SQL Server assets, this should be specified as a dict keyed by database name with values as a list of schemas within that database to crawl. (If set to None, all databases and schemas will be crawled.)
- You can also optionally specify the set of assets to exclude from crawling. For SQL Server assets, this should be specified as a dict keyed by database name with values as a list of schemas within the database to exclude. (If set to None, no assets will be excluded.)
- Now, you can convert the package into a
Workflow
object. -
Run the workflow by invoking the
run()
method on the workflow client, passing the created object.Workflows run asynchronously
Remember that workflows run asynchronously. See the packages and workflows introduction for details on how you can check the status and wait until the workflow has been completed.
Direct extraction from SQL Server | |
---|---|
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 |
|
- The
SQLServerCrawler
package will create a workflow to crawl assets from SQL Server. - You must provide Atlan client.
- You must provide a name for the connection that the SQL Server assets will exist within.
-
You must specify at least one connection admin, either:
- everyone in a role (in this example, all
$admin
users). - a list of groups (names) that will be connection admins.
- a list of users (names) that will be connection admins.
- everyone in a role (in this example, all
-
When crawling assets directly from SQL Server, you are required to provide the following information:
- hostname of the SQL Server host
- name of the database to extract
-
When using basic authentication, you are required to provide the following information:
- username for accessing SQL Server.
- password for accessing SQL Server.
-
You can also optionally specify the set of assets to include in crawling. For SQL Server assets, this should be specified as a map keyed by database name with values as a list of schemas within that database to crawl. (If set to null, all databases and schemas will be crawled.)
- You can also optionally specify the set of assets to exclude from crawling. For SQL Server assets, this should be specified as a map keyed by database name with values as a list of schemas within the database to exclude. (If set to null, no assets will be excluded.)
- Build the minimal package object.
- Now, you can convert the package into a
Workflow
object. -
You can then run the workflow using the
run()
method on the object you've created.Workflows run asynchronously
Remember that workflows run asynchronously. See the packages and workflows introduction for details on how you can check the status and wait until the workflow has been completed.
Create the workflow via UI only
We recommend creating the workflow only via the UI. To rerun an existing workflow, see the steps below.
Re-run existing workflow¶
To re-run an existing workflow for SQL Server assets:
Re-run existing SQL Server workflow | |
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- You can search for existing workflows through the
WorkflowSearchRequest
class. - You can find workflows by their type using the
findByType()
helper method and providing the prefix for one of the packages. In this example, we do so for theSQLServerCrawler
. (You can also specify the maximum number of resulting workflows you want to retrieve as results.) -
Once you've found the workflow you want to re-run, you can simply call the
rerun()
helper method on the workflow search result. TheWorkflowRunResponse
is just a subtype ofWorkflowResponse
so has the same helper method to monitor progress of the workflow run.- Optionally, you can use the
rerun(true)
method with idempotency to avoid re-running a workflow that is already in running or in a pending state. This will return details of the already running workflow if found, and by default, it is set tofalse
Workflows run asynchronously
Remember that workflows run asynchronously. See the packages and workflows introduction for details on how you can check the status and wait until the workflow has been completed.
- Optionally, you can use the
Re-run existing SQL Server workflow | |
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- You can find workflows by their type using the workflow client
find_by_type()
method and providing the prefix for one of the packages. In this example, we do so for theSQLServerCrawler
. (You can also specify the maximum number of resulting workflows you want to retrieve as results.) -
Once you've found the workflow you want to re-run, you can simply call the workflow client
rerun()
method.- Optionally, you can use
rerun(idempotent=True)
to avoid re-running a workflow that is already in running or in a pending state. This will return details of the already running workflow if found, and by default, it is set toFalse
.
Workflows run asynchronously
Remember that workflows run asynchronously. See the packages and workflows introduction for details on how you can check the status and wait until the workflow has been completed.
- Optionally, you can use
Re-run existing SQL Server workflow | |
---|---|
1 2 3 4 5 6 |
|
- You can search for existing workflows through the
WorkflowSearchRequest
class. - You can find workflows by their type using the
findByType()
helper method and providing the prefix for one of the packages. In this example, we do so for theSQLServerCrawler
. (You can also specify the maximum number of resulting workflows you want to retrieve as results.) -
Once you've found the workflow you want to re-run, you can simply call the
rerun()
helper method on the workflow search result. TheWorkflowRunResponse
is just a subtype ofWorkflowResponse
so has the same helper method to monitor progress of the workflow run.- Optionally, you can use the
rerun(true)
method with idempotency to avoid re-running a workflow that is already in running or in a pending state. This will return details of the already running workflow if found, and by default, it is set tofalse
Workflows run asynchronously
Remember that workflows run asynchronously. See the packages and workflows introduction for details on how you can check the status and wait until the workflow has been completed.
- Optionally, you can use the
Requires multiple steps through the raw REST API
- Find the existing workflow.
- Send through the resulting re-run request.
POST /api/service/workflows/indexsearch | |
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-
Searching by the
atlan-mssql
prefix will ensure you only find existing SQL Server assets workflows.Name of the workflow
The name of the workflow will be nested within the
_source.metadata.name
property of the response object. (Remember since this is a search, there could be multiple results, so you may want to use the other details in each result to determine which workflow you really want.)
POST /api/service/workflows/submit | |
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- Send the name of the workflow as the
resourceName
to rerun it.