Set up an Azure-SSIS IR in Azure Data Factory by using PowerShell
APPLIES TO: Azure Data Factory Azure Synapse Analytics
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This tutorial provides steps for using PowerShell to provision an Azure-SQL Server Integration Services (SSIS) Integration Runtime (IR) in Azure Data Factory (ADF). An Azure-SSIS IR supports:
- Running packages deployed into SSIS catalog (SSISDB) hosted by Azure SQL Database server/Managed Instance (Project Deployment Model)
- Running packages deployed into file system, Azure Files, or SQL Server database (MSDB) hosted by Azure SQL Managed Instance (Package Deployment Model)
After an Azure-SSIS IR is provisioned, you can use familiar tools to deploy and run your packages in Azure. These tools are already Azure-enabled and include SQL Server Data Tools (SSDT), SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS), and command-line utilities like dtutil and AzureDTExec.
For conceptual information on Azure-SSIS IRs, see Azure-SSIS integration runtime overview.
Note
This article demonstrates using Azure PowerShell to set up an Azure-SSIS IR. To use the Azure portal or an Azure Data Factory app to set up the Azure-SSIS IR, see Tutorial: Set up an Azure-SSIS IR.
In this tutorial, you will:
- Create a data factory.
- Create an Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime.
- Start the Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime.
- Review the complete script.
- Deploy SSIS packages.
Prerequisites
Note
We recommend that you use the Azure Az PowerShell module to interact with Azure. To get started, see Install Azure PowerShell. To learn how to migrate to the Az PowerShell module, see Migrate Azure PowerShell from AzureRM to Az.
Azure subscription. If you don't have an Azure subscription, create a free account before you begin.
Azure SQL Database server or managed instance (optional). If you don't already have a database server, create one in the Azure portal before you get started. Data Factory will in turn create an SSISDB instance on this database server.
We recommend that you create the database server in the same Azure region as the integration runtime. This configuration lets the integration runtime write execution logs into SSISDB without crossing Azure regions.
Keep these points in mind:
Based on the selected database server, the SSISDB instance can be created on your behalf as a single database, as part of an elastic pool, or in a managed instance. It can be accessible in a public network or by joining a virtual network. For guidance in choosing the type of database server to host SSISDB, see Compare SQL Database and SQL Managed Instance.
If you use an Azure SQL Database server with IP firewall rules/virtual network service endpoints or a managed instance with private endpoint to host SSISDB, or if you require access to on-premises data without configuring a self-hosted IR, you need to join your Azure-SSIS IR to a virtual network. For more information, see Create an Azure-SSIS IR in a virtual network.
Confirm that the Allow access to Azure services setting is enabled for the database server. This setting is not applicable when you use an Azure SQL Database server with IP firewall rules/virtual network service endpoints or a managed instance with private endpoint to host SSISDB. For more information, see Secure Azure SQL Database. To enable this setting by using PowerShell, see New-AzSqlServerFirewallRule.
Add the IP address of the client machine, or a range of IP addresses that includes the IP address of the client machine, to the client IP address list in the firewall settings for the database server. For more information, see Azure SQL Database server-level and database-level firewall rules.
You can connect to the database server by using SQL authentication with your server admin credentials, or by using Microsoft Entra authentication with the specified system/user-assigned managed identity for your data factory. For the latter, you need to add the specified system/user-assigned managed identity for your data factory into a Microsoft Entra group with access permissions to the database server. For more information, see Create an Azure-SSIS IR with Microsoft Entra authentication.
Confirm that your database server does not have an SSISDB instance already. The provisioning of an Azure-SSIS IR does not support using an existing SSISDB instance.
Azure PowerShell. To run a PowerShell script to set up your Azure-SSIS IR, follow the instructions in Install and configure Azure PowerShell.
Note
For a list of Azure regions in which Azure Data Factory and Azure-SSIS IR are currently available, see Azure Data Factory and Azure-SSIS IR availability by region.
Open the Windows PowerShell ISE
Open the Windows PowerShell Integrated Scripting Environment (ISE) with administrator permissions.
Create variables
Copy the following script to the ISE. Specify values for the variables.
### Azure Data Factory info
# If your input contains a PSH special character (for example, "$"), precede it with the escape character "`" (for example, "`$")
$SubscriptionName = "[your Azure subscription name]"
$ResourceGroupName = "[your Azure resource group name]"
# Data factory name - Must be globally unique
$DataFactoryName = "[your data factory name]"
# For supported regions, see https://azure.microsoft.com/global-infrastructure/services/?products=data-factory®ions=all
$DataFactoryLocation = "EastUS"
### Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime info; this is a Data Factory compute resource for running SSIS packages
$AzureSSISName = "[your Azure-SSIS IR name]"
$AzureSSISDescription = "[your Azure-SSIS IR description]"
# For supported regions, see https://azure.microsoft.com/global-infrastructure/services/?products=data-factory®ions=all
$AzureSSISLocation = "EastUS"
# For supported node sizes, see https://azure.microsoft.com/pricing/details/data-factory/ssis/
$AzureSSISNodeSize = "Standard_D8_v3"
# 1-10 nodes are currently supported
$AzureSSISNodeNumber = 2
# Azure-SSIS IR edition/license info: Standard or Enterprise
$AzureSSISEdition = "Standard" # Standard by default, although Enterprise lets you use advanced/premium features on your Azure-SSIS IR
# Azure-SSIS IR hybrid usage info: LicenseIncluded or BasePrice
$AzureSSISLicenseType = "LicenseIncluded" # LicenseIncluded by default, while BasePrice lets you bring your existing SQL Server license with Software Assurance to earn cost savings from Azure Hybrid Benefit (AHB) option
# For a Standard_D1_v2 node, up to 4 parallel executions per node are supported, but for other nodes, up to (2 x number of cores) are currently supported
$AzureSSISMaxParallelExecutionsPerNode = 8
# Custom setup info: Standard/express custom setups
$SetupScriptContainerSasUri = "" # OPTIONAL to provide a SAS URI of blob container for standard custom setup where your script and its associated files are stored
$ExpressCustomSetup = "[RunCmdkey|SetEnvironmentVariable|InstallAzurePowerShell|SentryOne.TaskFactory|oh22is.SQLPhonetics.NET|oh22is.HEDDA.IO|KingswaySoft.IntegrationToolkit|KingswaySoft.ProductivityPack|Theobald.XtractIS|AecorSoft.IntegrationService|CData.Standard|CData.Extended or leave it empty]" # OPTIONAL to configure an express custom setup without script
### SSISDB info
$SSISDBServerEndpoint = "[your server name.database.windows.net or managed instance name.public.DNS prefix.database.windows.net,3342 or leave it empty if you're not using SSISDB]" # WARNING: If you use SSISDB, please ensure that there is no existing SSISDB on your database server, so we can prepare and manage one on your behalf
$SSISDBServerAdminUserName = "[your server admin username for SQL authentication]"
$SSISDBServerAdminPassword = "[your server admin password for SQL authentication]"
# For the basic pricing tier, specify "Basic", not "B" - For standard/premium/elastic pool tiers, specify "S0", "S1", "S2", "S3", etc., see https://video2.skills-academy.com/azure/sql-database/sql-database-resource-limits-database-server
$SSISDBPricingTier = "[Basic|S0|S1|S2|S3|S4|S6|S7|S9|S12|P1|P2|P4|P6|P11|P15|…|ELASTIC_POOL(name = <elastic_pool_name>) for SQL Database or leave it empty for SQL Managed Instance]"
### Self-hosted integration runtime info - This can be configured as a proxy for on-premises data access
$DataProxyIntegrationRuntimeName = "" # OPTIONAL to configure a proxy for on-premises data access
$DataProxyStagingLinkedServiceName = "" # OPTIONAL to configure a proxy for on-premises data access
$DataProxyStagingPath = "" # OPTIONAL to configure a proxy for on-premises data access
Sign in and select your subscription
To sign in and select your Azure subscription, add the following code to the script:
Connect-AzAccount
Select-AzSubscription -SubscriptionName $SubscriptionName
Validate the connection to your database server
To validate the connection, add the following script:
# Validate only if you're using SSISDB
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($SSISDBServerEndpoint))
{
$SSISDBConnectionString = "Data Source=" + $SSISDBServerEndpoint + ";User ID=" + $SSISDBServerAdminUserName + ";Password=" + $SSISDBServerAdminPassword
$sqlConnection = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection $SSISDBConnectionString;
Try
{
$sqlConnection.Open();
}
Catch [System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException]
{
Write-Warning "Cannot connect, exception: $_";
Write-Warning "Please make sure the server you specified has already been created. Do you want to proceed? [Y/N]"
$yn = Read-Host
if(!($yn -ieq "Y"))
{
Return;
}
}
}
To create an Azure SQL Database instance as part of the script, see the following example. Set values for the variables that haven't been defined already (for example, SSISDBServerName, FirewallIPAddress).
New-AzSqlServer -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-ServerName $SSISDBServerName `
-Location $DataFactoryLocation `
-SqlAdministratorCredentials $(New-Object -TypeName System.Management.Automation.PSCredential -ArgumentList $SSISDBServerAdminUserName, $(ConvertTo-SecureString -String $SSISDBServerAdminPassword -AsPlainText -Force))
New-AzSqlServerFirewallRule -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-ServerName $SSISDBServerName `
-FirewallRuleName "ClientIPAddress_$today" -StartIpAddress $FirewallIPAddress -EndIpAddress $FirewallIPAddress
New-AzSqlServerFirewallRule -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName -ServerName $SSISDBServerName -AllowAllAzureIPs
Create a resource group
Create an Azure resource group by using the New-AzResourceGroup command. A resource group is a logical container to which Azure resources are deployed and managed as a group.
If your resource group already exists, don't copy this code to your script.
New-AzResourceGroup -Location $DataFactoryLocation -Name $ResourceGroupName
Create a data factory
Run the following command to create a data factory:
Set-AzDataFactoryV2 -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-Location $DataFactoryLocation `
-Name $DataFactoryName
Create an Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime
To create an Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime that runs SSIS packages in Azure, run the following commands. If you're not using SSISDB, you can omit the CatalogServerEndpoint, CatalogPricingTier, and CatalogAdminCredential parameters.
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-Description $AzureSSISDescription `
-Type Managed `
-Location $AzureSSISLocation `
-NodeSize $AzureSSISNodeSize `
-NodeCount $AzureSSISNodeNumber `
-Edition $AzureSSISEdition `
-LicenseType $AzureSSISLicenseType `
-MaxParallelExecutionsPerNode $AzureSSISMaxParallelExecutionsPerNode
# Add CatalogServerEndpoint, CatalogPricingTier, and CatalogAdminCredential parameters if you're using SSISDB
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($SSISDBServerEndpoint))
{
$secpasswd = ConvertTo-SecureString $SSISDBServerAdminPassword -AsPlainText -Force
$serverCreds = New-Object System.Management.Automation.PSCredential($SSISDBServerAdminUserName, $secpasswd)
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-CatalogServerEndpoint $SSISDBServerEndpoint `
-CatalogPricingTier $SSISDBPricingTier `
-CatalogAdminCredential $serverCreds
}
# Add custom setup parameters if you use standard/express custom setups
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($SetupScriptContainerSasUri))
{
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-SetupScriptContainerSasUri $SetupScriptContainerSasUri
}
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($ExpressCustomSetup))
{
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "RunCmdkey")
{
$addCmdkeyArgument = "YourFileShareServerName or YourAzureStorageAccountName.file.core.windows.net"
$userCmdkeyArgument = "YourDomainName\YourUsername or azure\YourAzureStorageAccountName"
$passCmdkeyArgument = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourPassword or YourAccessKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.CmdkeySetup($addCmdkeyArgument, $userCmdkeyArgument, $passCmdkeyArgument)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "SetEnvironmentVariable")
{
$variableName = "YourVariableName"
$variableValue = "YourVariableValue"
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.EnvironmentVariableSetup($variableName, $variableValue)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "InstallAzurePowerShell")
{
$moduleVersion = "YourAzModuleVersion"
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.AzPowerShellSetup($moduleVersion)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "SentryOne.TaskFactory")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "oh22is.SQLPhonetics.NET")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "oh22is.HEDDA.IO")
{
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "KingswaySoft.IntegrationToolkit")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "KingswaySoft.ProductivityPack")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "Theobald.XtractIS")
{
$jsonData = Get-Content -Raw -Path YourLicenseFile.json
$jsonData = $jsonData -replace '\s',''
$jsonData = $jsonData.replace('"','\"')
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString($jsonData)
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "AecorSoft.IntegrationService")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "CData.Standard")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "CData.Extended")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
# Create an array of one or more express custom setups
$setups = New-Object System.Collections.ArrayList
$setups.Add($setup)
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-ExpressCustomSetup $setups
}
# Add self-hosted integration runtime parameters if you configure a proxy for on-premises data access
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($DataProxyIntegrationRuntimeName) -and ![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($DataProxyStagingLinkedServiceName))
{
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-DataProxyIntegrationRuntimeName $DataProxyIntegrationRuntimeName `
-DataProxyStagingLinkedServiceName $DataProxyStagingLinkedServiceName
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($DataProxyStagingPath))
{
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-DataProxyStagingPath $DataProxyStagingPath
}
}
Start the Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime
To start the Azure-SSIS IR, run the following commands:
write-host("##### Starting #####")
Start-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-Force
write-host("##### Completed #####")
write-host("If any cmdlet is unsuccessful, please consider using -Debug option for diagnostics.")
Note
Excluding any custom setup time, this process should finish within 5 minutes.
If you use SSISDB, the Data Factory service will connect to your database server to prepare SSISDB.
When you provision an Azure-SSIS IR, Access Redistributable and Azure Feature Pack for SSIS are also installed. These components provide connectivity to Excel files, Access files, and various Azure data sources, in addition to the data sources that built-in components already support. For more information about built-in/preinstalled components, see Built-in/preinstalled components on Azure-SSIS IR. For more information about additional components that you can install, see Custom setups for Azure-SSIS IR.
Full script
The PowerShell script in this section configures an instance of Azure-SSIS IR that runs SSIS packages. After you run this script successfully, you can deploy and run SSIS packages in Azure.
Open the ISE.
At the ISE command prompt, run the following command:
Set-ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted -Scope CurrentUser
Copy the PowerShell script in this section to the ISE.
Provide appropriate values for all parameters at the beginning of the script.
Run the script.
### Azure Data Factory info
# If your input contains a PSH special character, e.g. "$", precede it with the escape character "`" like "`$"
$SubscriptionName = "[your Azure subscription name]"
$ResourceGroupName = "[your Azure resource group name]"
# Data factory name - Must be globally unique
$DataFactoryName = "[your data factory name]"
# For supported regions, see https://azure.microsoft.com/global-infrastructure/services/?products=data-factory®ions=all
$DataFactoryLocation = "EastUS"
### Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime info - This is a Data Factory compute resource for running SSIS packages
$AzureSSISName = "[your Azure-SSIS IR name]"
$AzureSSISDescription = "[your Azure-SSIS IR description]"
# For supported regions, see https://azure.microsoft.com/global-infrastructure/services/?products=data-factory®ions=all
$AzureSSISLocation = "EastUS"
# For supported node sizes, see https://azure.microsoft.com/pricing/details/data-factory/ssis/
$AzureSSISNodeSize = "Standard_D8_v3"
# 1-10 nodes are currently supported
$AzureSSISNodeNumber = 2
# Azure-SSIS IR edition/license info: Standard or Enterprise
$AzureSSISEdition = "Standard" # Standard by default, while Enterprise lets you use advanced/premium features on your Azure-SSIS IR
# Azure-SSIS IR hybrid usage info: LicenseIncluded or BasePrice
$AzureSSISLicenseType = "LicenseIncluded" # LicenseIncluded by default, while BasePrice lets you bring your existing SQL Server license with Software Assurance to earn cost savings from Azure Hybrid Benefit (AHB) option
# For a Standard_D1_v2 node, up to 4 parallel executions per node are supported, but for other nodes, up to (2 x the number of cores) are currently supported
$AzureSSISMaxParallelExecutionsPerNode = 8
# Custom setup info: Standard/express custom setups
$SetupScriptContainerSasUri = "" # OPTIONAL to provide a SAS URI of blob container for standard custom setup where your script and its associated files are stored
$ExpressCustomSetup = "[RunCmdkey|SetEnvironmentVariable|InstallAzurePowerShell|SentryOne.TaskFactory|oh22is.SQLPhonetics.NET|oh22is.HEDDA.IO|KingswaySoft.IntegrationToolkit|KingswaySoft.ProductivityPack|Theobald.XtractIS|AecorSoft.IntegrationService|CData.Standard|CData.Extended or leave it empty]" # OPTIONAL to configure an express custom setup without script
### SSISDB info
$SSISDBServerEndpoint = "[your server name.database.windows.net or managed instance name.public.DNS prefix.database.windows.net,3342 or leave it empty if you're not using SSISDB]" # WARNING: If you want to use SSISDB, ensure that there is no existing SSISDB on your database server, so we can prepare and manage one on your behalf
$SSISDBServerAdminUserName = "[your server admin username for SQL authentication]"
$SSISDBServerAdminPassword = "[your server admin password for SQL authentication]"
# For the basic pricing tier, specify "Basic", not "B" - For standard/premium/elastic pool tiers, specify "S0", "S1", "S2", "S3", etc., see https://video2.skills-academy.com/azure/sql-database/sql-database-resource-limits-database-server
$SSISDBPricingTier = "[Basic|S0|S1|S2|S3|S4|S6|S7|S9|S12|P1|P2|P4|P6|P11|P15|…|ELASTIC_POOL(name = <elastic_pool_name>) for SQL Database or leave it empty for SQL Managed Instance]"
### Self-hosted integration runtime info - This can be configured as a proxy for on-premises data access
$DataProxyIntegrationRuntimeName = "" # OPTIONAL to configure a proxy for on-premises data access
$DataProxyStagingLinkedServiceName = "" # OPTIONAL to configure a proxy for on-premises data access
$DataProxyStagingPath = "" # OPTIONAL to configure a proxy for on-premises data access
### Sign in and select subscription
Connect-AzAccount
Select-AzSubscription -SubscriptionName $SubscriptionName
### Validate the connection to database server
# Validate only if you're using SSISDB
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($SSISDBServerEndpoint))
{
$SSISDBConnectionString = "Data Source=" + $SSISDBServerEndpoint + ";User ID=" + $SSISDBServerAdminUserName + ";Password=" + $SSISDBServerAdminPassword
$sqlConnection = New-Object System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection $SSISDBConnectionString;
Try
{
$sqlConnection.Open();
}
Catch [System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException]
{
Write-Warning "Cannot connect, exception: $_";
Write-Warning "Please make sure the server you specified has already been created. Do you want to proceed? [Y/N]"
$yn = Read-Host
if(!($yn -ieq "Y"))
{
Return;
}
}
}
### Create a data factory
Set-AzDataFactoryV2 -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-Location $DataFactoryLocation `
-Name $DataFactoryName
### Create an integration runtime
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-Description $AzureSSISDescription `
-Type Managed `
-Location $AzureSSISLocation `
-NodeSize $AzureSSISNodeSize `
-NodeCount $AzureSSISNodeNumber `
-Edition $AzureSSISEdition `
-LicenseType $AzureSSISLicenseType `
-MaxParallelExecutionsPerNode $AzureSSISMaxParallelExecutionsPerNode
# Add CatalogServerEndpoint, CatalogPricingTier, and CatalogAdminCredential parameters if you're using SSISDB
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($SSISDBServerEndpoint))
{
$secpasswd = ConvertTo-SecureString $SSISDBServerAdminPassword -AsPlainText -Force
$serverCreds = New-Object System.Management.Automation.PSCredential($SSISDBServerAdminUserName, $secpasswd)
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-CatalogServerEndpoint $SSISDBServerEndpoint `
-CatalogPricingTier $SSISDBPricingTier `
-CatalogAdminCredential $serverCreds
}
# Add custom setup parameters if you use standard/express custom setups
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($SetupScriptContainerSasUri))
{
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-SetupScriptContainerSasUri $SetupScriptContainerSasUri
}
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($ExpressCustomSetup))
{
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "RunCmdkey")
{
$addCmdkeyArgument = "YourFileShareServerName or YourAzureStorageAccountName.file.core.windows.net"
$userCmdkeyArgument = "YourDomainName\YourUsername or azure\YourAzureStorageAccountName"
$passCmdkeyArgument = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourPassword or YourAccessKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.CmdkeySetup($addCmdkeyArgument, $userCmdkeyArgument, $passCmdkeyArgument)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "SetEnvironmentVariable")
{
$variableName = "YourVariableName"
$variableValue = "YourVariableValue"
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.EnvironmentVariableSetup($variableName, $variableValue)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "InstallAzurePowerShell")
{
$moduleVersion = "YourAzModuleVersion"
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.AzPowerShellSetup($moduleVersion)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "SentryOne.TaskFactory")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "oh22is.SQLPhonetics.NET")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "oh22is.HEDDA.IO")
{
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "KingswaySoft.IntegrationToolkit")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "KingswaySoft.ProductivityPack")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "Theobald.XtractIS")
{
$jsonData = Get-Content -Raw -Path YourLicenseFile.json
$jsonData = $jsonData -replace '\s',''
$jsonData = $jsonData.replace('"','\"')
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString($jsonData)
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "AecorSoft.IntegrationService")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "CData.Standard")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
if($ExpressCustomSetup -eq "CData.Extended")
{
$licenseKey = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.SecureString("YourLicenseKey")
$setup = New-Object Microsoft.Azure.Management.DataFactory.Models.ComponentSetup($ExpressCustomSetup, $licenseKey)
}
# Create an array of one or more express custom setups
$setups = New-Object System.Collections.ArrayList
$setups.Add($setup)
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-ExpressCustomSetup $setups
}
# Add self-hosted integration runtime parameters if you configure a proxy for on-premises data access
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($DataProxyIntegrationRuntimeName) -and ![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($DataProxyStagingLinkedServiceName))
{
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-DataProxyIntegrationRuntimeName $DataProxyIntegrationRuntimeName `
-DataProxyStagingLinkedServiceName $DataProxyStagingLinkedServiceName
if(![string]::IsNullOrEmpty($DataProxyStagingPath))
{
Set-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-DataProxyStagingPath $DataProxyStagingPath
}
}
### Start integration runtime
write-host("##### Starting #####")
Start-AzDataFactoryV2IntegrationRuntime -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroupName `
-DataFactoryName $DataFactoryName `
-Name $AzureSSISName `
-Force
write-host("##### Completed #####")
write-host("If any cmdlet is unsuccessful, please consider using -Debug option for diagnostics.")
Monitor and manage your Azure-SSIS IR
For information about monitoring and managing the Azure-SSIS IR, see:
Deploy SSIS packages
If you use SSISDB, you can deploy your packages into it and run them on your Azure-SSIS IR by using the Azure-enabled SSDT or SSMS tools. These tools connect to your database server via its server endpoint:
- For an Azure SQL Database server, the server endpoint format is
<server name>.database.windows.net
. - For a managed instance with private endpoint, the server endpoint format is
<server name>.<dns prefix>.database.windows.net
. - For a managed instance with public endpoint, the server endpoint format is
<server name>.public.<dns prefix>.database.windows.net,3342
.
If you don't use SSISDB, you can deploy your packages into file system, Azure Files, or MSDB hosted by your Azure SQL Managed Instance and run them on your Azure-SSIS IR by using dtutil and AzureDTExec command-line utilities.
For more information, see Deploy SSIS projects/packages.
In both cases, you can also run your deployed packages on Azure-SSIS IR by using the Execute SSIS Package activity in Data Factory pipelines. For more information, see Invoke SSIS package execution as a first-class Data Factory activity.
For more SSIS documentation, see:
- Deploy, run, and monitor SSIS packages in Azure
- Connect to SSISDB in Azure
- Connect to on-premises data sources with Windows authentication
- Schedule package executions in Azure
Related content
In this tutorial, you learned how to:
- Create a data factory.
- Create an Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime.
- Start the Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime.
- Review the complete script.
- Deploy SSIS packages.
To learn about customizing your Azure-SSIS Integration Runtime, see the following article: