Also, SSDT when installed as a shell was free. The direct consequence is that SSDT, formerly known as SSDT-BI, formerly known as BIDS, will not be available for Visual Studio 2019. The extensions are also easier to update than SSDT. However, to be able to install SSDT, you had to uninstall the SSAS/SSRS extensions. Why is this important? In VS 2017, SSAS and SSRS were already available as extensions, but when you wanted to use SSIS you had to install the full-blown SQL Server Data Tools (which you can install as a shell or into an existing Visual Studio installation). The SSIS team caught up with the rest of the BI tools: SSIS projects are now available from the Visual Studio market place. SQL Server 2019 hasn’t been released yet? But there’s already an SSIS 2019? Didn’t we have to wait months after the release of SQL Server 2017 before we had an SSIS version for Visual Studio 2017? Yes, we did, you can read all about there here.īut times have changed apparently. It is not a joke: SSIS is available for Visual Studio 2019 as a preview.
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