Applies to:SQL Server
SSIS Integration Runtime in Azure Data Factory
The ODBC source extracts data from ODBC-supported database by using a database table, a view, or a SQL statement.
The ODBC source has the following data access modes for extracting data:
A table or view.
The results of a SQL statement.
The source uses an ODBC connection manager, which specifies the provider to use.
An ODBC source includes the source data output columns. When output columns are mapped in the ODBC destination to the destination columns, errors may occur if no output columns are mapped to the destination columns. Columns of different types can be mapped, however if the output data is not compatible for the destination then an error occurs at runtime. Depending on the error behavior, setting the error will be ignored, cause a failure, or the row is sent to the error output.
The ODBC source has one regular output and one error output.
Error Handling
The ODBC source has an error output. The component error output includes the following output columns:
Error Code: The number that corresponds to the current error. See the documentation for the ODBC-supported database you are using for a list of errors. For a list of SSIS error codes, see the SSIS Error Code and Message Reference.
Error Column: The source column causing the error (for conversion errors).
The standard output data columns.
Depending on the error behavior setting, the ODBC source supports returning errors (data conversion, truncation) that occur during the extraction process in the error output. For more information, see ODBC Destination Editor (Connection Manager Page).
Data Type Support
For information about the data types supported by the ODBC source, see Connector for Open Database Connectivity (ODBC).
Extract Options
The ODBC source operates in either Batch or Row-by-Row mode. The mode used is determined by the FetchMethod property. The following list describes the modes.
Batch: The component attempts to use the most efficient fetch method based on the perceived ODBC provider capabilities. For most modern ODBC providers, this is SQLFetchScroll with array binding (where the array size is determined by the BatchSize property). If you select Batch and the provider does not support this method, the ODBC destination automatically switches to the Row-by-row mode.
Row-by Row: The component uses SQLFetch to retrieve the rows one at a time.
There is no limitation on the number of ODBC source components that can run in parallel against the same table or different tables, on the same machine or on different machines (other than normal global session limits).
However, limitations of the ODBC provider being used may restrict the number of concurrent connections through the provider. These limitations limit the number of supported parallel instances possible for the ODBC source. The SSIS developer must be aware of the limitations of any ODBC provider being used and take them into consideration when building SSIS packages.
Troubleshooting the ODBC Source
You can log the calls that the ODBC source makes to external data providers. You can use this logging capability to troubleshoot the loading of data from external data sources that the ODBC source performs. To log the calls that the ODBC source makes to external data providers, enable the ODBC driver manager trace. For more information, see the Microsoft documentation on How To Generate an ODBC Trace with ODBC the Data Source Administrator.
Configuring the ODBC Source
You can configure the ODBC source programmatically or through the SSIS Designer.
The Advanced Editor dialog box contains the properties that can be set programmatically.
To open the Advanced Editor dialog box:
In the Data Flow screen of your SQL Server 2019 Integration Services (SSIS) project, right-click the ODBC source and select Show Advanced Editor.
For more information about the properties that you can set in the Advanced Editor dialog box, see ODBC Source Custom Properties.
Use the Connection Manager page of the ODBC Source Editor dialog box to select the ODBC connection manager for the source. This page also lets you select a table or view from the database.
Task List
To open the ODBC Source Editor Connection Manager Page
In SQL Server Data Tools, open the SQL Server 2019 Integration Services (SSIS) package that has the ODBC source.
On the Data Flow tab, double-click the ODBC source.
Options
Connection manager
Select an existing ODBC connection manager from the list, or click New to create a new connection. The connection can be to any ODBC-supported database.
New
Click New. The Configure ODBC Connection Manager Editor dialog box opens where you can create a new ODBC connection manager.
Data Access Mode
Select the method for selecting data from the source. The options are shown in the following table:
Option
Description
Table Name
Retrieve data from a table or view in the ODBC data source. When you select this option, select a value from the list for the following:
Name of the table or the view: Select an available table or view from the list or type a regular expression to identify the table.
This list contains the first 1000 tables only. If your database contains more than 1000 tables, you can type the beginning of a table name or use the (*) wild card to enter any part of the name to display the table or tables you want to use.
SQL command
Retrieve data from the ODBC data source by using a SQL query. You should write the query in the syntax of the source database you are working with. When you select this option, enter a query in one of the following ways:
Enter the text of the SQL query in the SQL command text field.
Click Browse to load the SQL query from a text file.
Click Parse query to verify the syntax of the query text.
Preview
Click Preview to view up to the first 200 rows of the data extracted from the table or view you selected.
ODBC Source Editor (Columns Page)
Use the Columns page of the ODBC Source Editor dialog box to map an output column to each external (source) column.
Task List
To open the ODBC Source Editor Columns Page
In SQL Server Data Tools, open the SQL Server 2019 Integration Services (SSIS) package that has the ODBC source.
On the Data Flow tab, double-click the ODBC source.
In the ODBC Source Editor, click Columns.
Options
Available External Columns
A list of available external columns in the data source. You cannot use this table to add or delete columns. Select the columns to use from the source. The selected columns are added to the External Column list in the order they are selected.
Select the Select All check box to select all of the columns.
External Column
A view of the external (source) columns in the order that you see them when configuring components that consume data from the ODBC source.
Output Column
Enter a unique name for each output column. The default is the name of the selected external (source) column; however, you can choose any unique, descriptive name. The name entered is displayed in the SSIS Designer.
ODBC Source Editor (Error Output Page)
Use the Error Output page of the ODBC Source Editor dialog box to select error handling options.
Task List
To open the ODBC Source Editor Error Output Page
In SQL Server Data Tools, open the SQL Server 2019 Integration Services (SSIS) package that has the ODBC source.
On the Data Flow tab, double-click the ODBC source.
In the ODBC Source Editor, click Error Output.
Options
Input/Output
View the name of the data source.
Column
Not used.
Error
Select how the ODBC source should handle errors in a flow: ignore the failure, redirect the row, or fail the component.
Truncation
Select how the ODBC source should handle truncation in a flow: ignore the failure, redirect the row, or fail the component.
Description
Not used.
Set this value to selected cells
Select how the ODBC source handles all selected cells when an error or truncation occurs: ignore the failure, redirect the row, or fail the component.
Apply
Apply the error handling options to the selected cells.
Error Handling Options
You use the following options to configure how the ODBC source handles errors and truncations.
Fail Component
The Data Flow task fails when an error or a truncation occurs. This is the default behavior.
Ignore Failure
The error or the truncation is ignored.
Redirect Flow
The row that is causing the error or the truncation is directed to the error output of the ODBC source.
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