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You're reading from  Hands-On Data Warehousing with Azure Data Factory

Product typeBook
Published inMay 2018
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781789137620
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (3):
Christian Cote
Christian Cote
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Christian Cote

Christian Cote is an IT professional with more than 15 years of experience working in a data warehouse, Big Data, and business intelligence projects. Christian developed expertise in data warehousing and data lakes over the years and designed many ETL/BI processes using a range of tools on multiple platforms. He's been presenting at several conferences and code camps. He currently co-leads the SQL Server PASS chapter. He is also a Microsoft Data Platform Most Valuable Professional (MVP).
Read more about Christian Cote

Michelle Gutzait
Michelle Gutzait
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Michelle Gutzait

Michelle Gutzait has been in IT for 30 years as a developer, business analyst, and database
Read more about Michelle Gutzait

Giuseppe Ciaburro
Giuseppe Ciaburro
author image
Giuseppe Ciaburro

Giuseppe Ciaburro holds a PhD and two master's degrees. He works at the Built Environment Control Laboratory - Università degli Studi della Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli". He has over 25 years of work experience in programming, first in the field of combustion and then in acoustics and noise control. His core programming knowledge is in MATLAB, Python and R. As an expert in AI applications to acoustics and noise control problems, Giuseppe has wide experience in researching and teaching. He has several publications to his credit: monographs, scientific journals, and thematic conferences. He was recently included in the world's top 2% scientists list by Stanford University (2022).
Read more about Giuseppe Ciaburro

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Incorporating Spark data


Now that we have created a report on the on-premise data warehouse, we'll add some data from the cloud to it. We'll add the table we created using Databricks. To extract data from there, the cluster must be an interactive one and must also be running. To connect to Spark from Power BI, we need to use a connector that is in preview but works quite well for now.

To connect to SQL Server on-premise, we used the direct query mode. Direct query is very convenient because it does not require importing the data into the model, but it has some limitations. The one that affects us the most is that we cannot use it when the model is connected to more than one database. We're going to connect the model to the Spark cluster, so we'll lose the direct query capability of SQL Server, but our Power BI model will contain data from multiple sources.

To connect to the Spark cluster, we'll use the JDBC connection available with the premium version of our Databricks cluster. As shown in...

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Hands-On Data Warehousing with Azure Data Factory
Published in: May 2018Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781789137620

Authors (3)

author image
Christian Cote

Christian Cote is an IT professional with more than 15 years of experience working in a data warehouse, Big Data, and business intelligence projects. Christian developed expertise in data warehousing and data lakes over the years and designed many ETL/BI processes using a range of tools on multiple platforms. He's been presenting at several conferences and code camps. He currently co-leads the SQL Server PASS chapter. He is also a Microsoft Data Platform Most Valuable Professional (MVP).
Read more about Christian Cote

author image
Michelle Gutzait

Michelle Gutzait has been in IT for 30 years as a developer, business analyst, and database
Read more about Michelle Gutzait

author image
Giuseppe Ciaburro

Giuseppe Ciaburro holds a PhD and two master's degrees. He works at the Built Environment Control Laboratory - Università degli Studi della Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli". He has over 25 years of work experience in programming, first in the field of combustion and then in acoustics and noise control. His core programming knowledge is in MATLAB, Python and R. As an expert in AI applications to acoustics and noise control problems, Giuseppe has wide experience in researching and teaching. He has several publications to his credit: monographs, scientific journals, and thematic conferences. He was recently included in the world's top 2% scientists list by Stanford University (2022).
Read more about Giuseppe Ciaburro