All Products
Search
Document Center

Data Transmission Service:Migrate data from a self-managed SQL Server database to an AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance

Last Updated:Sep 11, 2024

This topic describes how to migrate data from a self-managed SQL Server database to an AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance by using Data Transmission Service (DTS). The data migration feature allows you to transfer data with ease and analyze data in real time.

Prerequisites

  • The new DTS console is used. You can configure a data migration task for this scenario only in the new DTS console.
  • The version of the self-managed SQL Server database is supported by DTS. For more information, see Overview of data migration scenarios.

  • The destination AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance is created. For more information, see Create an instance.
  • The available storage space of the destination AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance is larger than the total size of the data in the self-managed SQL Server database.
  • If the source ApsaraDB RDS for SQL Server instance meets one of the following conditions, we recommend that you split the migration task into multiple subtasks:

    • The source instance contains more than 10 databases.

    • A single database of the source instance backs up its logs at an interval of less than 1 hour.

    • A single database of the source instance executes more than 100 DDL statements each hour.

    • Logs are written at a rate of 20 MB/s for a single database of the source instance.

    • The change data capture (CDC) feature needs to be enabled for more than 1,000 tables in the source ApsaraDB RDS for SQL Server instance.

Limits

Note
  • During schema migration, DTS migrates foreign keys from the source database to the destination database.

  • During full data migration and incremental data migration, DTS temporarily disables the constraint check and cascade operations on foreign keys at the session level. If you perform the cascade update and delete operations on the source database during data migration, data inconsistency may occur.

Limit type

Description

Limits on the source database

  • The server on which the source database is deployed must have sufficient outbound bandwidth. Otherwise, the data migration speed decreases.

  • The tables to be migrated must have PRIMARY KEY or UNIQUE constraints and all fields must be unique. Otherwise, the destination database may contain duplicate data records.

  • If you select tables as the objects to be migrated and you need to edit the tables in the destination database, such as renaming tables or columns, you can migrate up to 1,000 tables in a single data migration task. If you run a task to migrate more than 1,000 tables, a request error occurs. In this case, we recommend that you configure multiple tasks to migrate the tables or configure a task to migrate the entire database.

  • You can run a single data migration task to migrate up to 10 databases. If you want to migrate more than 10 databases, we recommend that you configure multiple tasks to migrate the databases. Otherwise, the performance and stability of your data migration task may be compromised.

  • If you want to migrate incremental data, make sure that the following requirements are met:

    • The data logging feature must be enabled. The backup mode must be set to Full and full physical backup must be performed.

    • If you perform only incremental data migration, the data logs of the source database must be retained for more than 24 hours. If you perform both full data migration and incremental data migration, the data logs of the source database must be retained for at least seven days. Otherwise, Data Transmission Service (DTS) may fail to obtain the data logs and the task may fail. In some cases, data inconsistency or loss may even occur. After full data migration is complete, you can set the retention period to more than 24 hours. Make sure that you set the retention period of data logs based on the preceding requirements. Otherwise, the Service Level Agreement (SLA) of DTS does not guarantee service reliability or performance.

  • If the change data capture (CDC) feature needs to be enabled for the tables that you want to migrate from the source database, the following conditions must be met. Otherwise, the precheck fails.

    • The value of the srvname field in the sys.sysservers view is the same as the return value of the SERVERPROPERTY function.

    • If the source database is a self-managed SQL Server database, the database owner must be the sa user. If the source database is an ApsaraDB RDS for SQL Server database, the database owner must be the sqlsa user.

    • If the source database is of the Enterprise edition, you must use SQL Server 2008 or later.

    • If the source database is of the Standard edition, you must use SQL Server 2016 SP1 or later.

    • If the source database is of the Standard or Enterprise edition and its version is SQL Server 2017, we recommend that you update the version.

  • DTS uses the fn_log function to obtain the logs of the source database. However, this function has performance bottlenecks. We recommend that you do not clear the logs of the source database before the task is complete. Otherwise, the task may fail.

  • Limits on operations on the source database:

    • During schema migration and full data migration, do not execute DDL statements to change the schemas of databases or tables. Otherwise, the data migration task fails.

    • If you perform only full data migration, do not write data to the source database during data migration. Otherwise, data will be inconsistent between the source and destination databases. To ensure data consistency, we recommend that you select Schema Migration, Full Data Migration, and Incremental Data Migration as the migration types.

  • If the source database is a read-only instance, you cannot migrate DDL operations.

  • In hybrid log-based parsing mode, you cannot perform multiple operations to add columns to or remove columns from the source database within 10 minutes. For example, if you execute the following SQL statements within 10 minutes, an error is reported for the task.

    ALTER TABLE test_table DROP COLUMN Flag;
    ALTER TABLE test_table ADD Remark nvarchar(50) not null default('');
  • If the source database is an ApsaraDB RDS for SQL Server instance that runs SQL Server Web edition, you must set the SQL Server Incremental Synchronization Mode parameter to Incremental Synchronization Based on Logs of Source Database (Heap tables are not supported) when you configure the task.

Other limits

  • DTS does not migrate the following types of data: CURSOR, ROWVERSION, SQL_VARIANT, HIERARCHYID, POLYGON, GEOMETRY, and GEOGRAPHY.

  • If you select tables as the objects to be migrated, you can modify the mapping relation between columns. If column mapping is used for non-full table migration or if the schemas of the source and destination tables are inconsistent, the data in the columns of the source database that are not contained in the destination database is lost.

  • The destination table cannot be an append-optimized (AO) table.

  • If you set the SQL Server Incremental Synchronization Mode parameter to Incremental Synchronization Based on Logs of Source Database (Heap tables are not supported) in the Select Objects step, the tables to be migrated must have clustered indexes that contain primary key columns. The tables to be migrated cannot be heap tables, tables without primary keys, compressed tables, or tables with computed columns. Ignore the preceding limits if the hybrid log-based parsing mode is used.

  • If you set the SQL Server Incremental Synchronization Mode parameter to Log-based Parsing for Non-heap Tables and CDC-based Incremental Synchronization for Heap Tables (Hybrid Log-based Parsing) in the Select Objects step, DTS uses the CDC component to migrate incremental data. Make sure that the CDC job in the source database runs as expected. Otherwise, the DTS task fails.

  • If you set the SQL Server Incremental Synchronization Mode parameter to Polling and querying CDC instances for incremental synchronization in the Select Objects step, the following limits apply:

    • The source database account used by the DTS instance must have the permissions to enable the CDC feature. To enable database-level CDC, you must use an account that is assigned the sysadmin role. To enable table-level CDC, you must use a privileged account.

      Note
      • A server administrator account in Microsoft Azure SQL Database has the required permissions. CDC can be enabled for all databases that are purchased in Azure SQL Database based on the vCore model. CDC can be enabled for databases that are purchased in Azure SQL Database based on the database transaction unit (DTU) model only if the databases have a service tier of S3 or greater.

      • A privileged account of an Amazon RDS for SQL Server instance has the required permissions. CDC can be enabled for stored procedures at the database level.

    • DTS obtains incremental data by performing round-robin queries on the CDC instance of each table in the source database. Therefore, the number of tables to be migrated from the source database cannot exceed 1,000. Otherwise, the data migration task may be delayed or unstable.

    • You cannot execute a DDL statement to add or remove columns more than twice within a minute. Otherwise, the data migration task may fail.

    • During data migration, you cannot modify the CDC instances of the source database. Otherwise, the data migration task may fail or data loss may occur.

  • In Incremental Synchronization Based on Logs of Source Database mode, DTS creates a trigger named dts_cdc_sync_ddl, a heartbeat table named dts_sync_progress, and a DDL history table named dts_cdc_ddl_history in the source database to ensure that the latency of data migration is accurate. In hybrid log-based parsing incremental synchronization mode, DTS creates a trigger named dts_cdc_sync_ddl, a heartbeat table named dts_sync_progress, and a DDL history table named dts_cdc_ddl_history and enables CDC for the source database and specific tables. We recommend that you set the maximum number of records per second to 1,000 for the tables for which CDC is enabled in the source database.

  • Before you migrate data, evaluate the impact of data migration on the performance of the source and destination databases. We recommend that you migrate data during off-peak hours. During full data migration, DTS uses the read and write resources of the source database and destination cluster. This may increase the loads on the database servers.

  • During full data migration, concurrent INSERT operations cause fragmentation in the tables of the destination database. After full data migration is complete, the size of used tablespace of the destination database is larger than that of the source database.

  • You must make sure that the precision settings for columns of the FLOAT or DOUBLE data type meet your business requirements. DTS uses the ROUND(COLUMN,PRECISION) function to retrieve values from columns of the FLOAT or DOUBLE data type. If you do not specify a precision, DTS sets the precision for columns of the FLOAT data type to 38 digits and the precision for columns of the DOUBLE data type to 308 digits.

  • DTS attempts to resume data migration tasks that failed within the last seven days. Before you switch workloads to the destination database, you must stop or release the failed tasks. You can also execute the REVOKE statement to revoke the write permissions from the accounts that are used by DTS to access the destination database. Otherwise, the data in the source database overwrites the data in the destination database after the failed task is resumed.

  • If the data migration task involves incremental data migration, DTS does not allow you to perform the reindexing operation. If you perform the reindexing operation, the data migration task may fail and data loss may occur.

    Note

    DTS cannot migrate DDL operations related to the primary key of a table for which CDC is enabled.

  • If the number of CDC-enabled tables to be migrated in a single migration task exceeds 1,000, the precheck fails.

Special cases

If the source instance is an ApsaraDB RDS for SQL Server instance, DTS automatically creates an account named rdsdt_dtsacct on the ApsaraDB RDS for SQL Server instance. This account is used for data migration. Do not delete this account or change the password of this account when your data migration task is running. Otherwise, the task may fail. For more information, see System accounts.

Billing

Migration typeInstance configuration feeInternet traffic fee
Schema migration and full data migrationFree of charge. Charged only when data is migrated from Alibaba Cloud over the Internet. For more information, see Billing overview.
Incremental data migrationCharged. For more information, see Billing overview.

Migration types

  • Schema migration

    DTS migrates the schemas of the selected objects from the source database to the destination database.

    • DTS supports schema migration for the following types of objects: schema, table, view, function, and procedure.
    • DTS does not migrate the schemas of assemblies, service brokers, full-text indexes, full-text catalogs, distributed schemas, distributed functions, Common Language Runtime (CLR) stored procedures, CLR scalar-valued functions, CLR table-valued functions, internal tables, systems, or aggregate functions.
    Warning SQL Server and AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL are heterogeneous databases. The data types that they support do not have one-to-one correspondence. We recommend that you evaluate the impact of data type mappings on your business. For more information, see Data type mappings between heterogeneous databases.
  • Full data migration

    DTS migrates the historical data of required objects from the source database to the destination database.

  • Incremental data migration

    After full data migration is completed, DTS migrates incremental data from the source database to the destination database. Incremental data migration allows data to be migrated smoothly without interrupting the services of self-managed applications during data migration.

SQL operations that can be incrementally migrated

Operation typeSQL statement
DMLINSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE
DDL
  • CREATE TABLE
    Note If a CREATE TABLE operation creates a partitioned table or a table that contains functions, DTS does not migrate the operation.
  • ALTER TABLE

    ADD COLUMN and DROP COLUMN

  • DROP TABLE
  • CREATE INDEX and DROP INDEX
Note
  • DTS does not migrate DDL operations that contain user-defined types.
  • DTS does not migrate transactional DDL operations.

Permissions required for database accounts

DatabaseSchema migrationFull data migrationIncremental data migration
Self-managed SQL Server databaseSELECT permissionSELECT permissionsysadmin
AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance
  • LOGIN permission
  • SELECT, CREATE, INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE permissions on the destination tables
  • CONNECT and CREATE permissions on the destination database
  • CREATE permission on the destination schemas
  • COPY permission (the permission to perform memory-based batch copy operations)
Note You can use the initial account of the AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance.
For more information about how to create a database account and grant permissions to the database account, see the following topics:

Preparations

Note

Before you configure a task to migrate incremental data, you must configure log settings on the self-managed SQL Server database and create clustered indexes.

Important

If you want to migrate incremental data from multiple databases, repeat Steps 1 to 3 for each database. Otherwise, data inconsistency may occur.

  1. Execute the following statements on the self-managed SQL Server database to change the recovery model to full.

    use master;
    GO
    ALTER DATABASE <database_name> SET RECOVERY FULL WITH ROLLBACK IMMEDIATE;
    GO

    Parameter:

    <database_name>: the name of the source database.

    Example:

    use master;
    GO
    ALTER DATABASE mytestdata SET RECOVERY FULL WITH ROLLBACK IMMEDIATE;
    GO
  2. Execute the following statement to create a logical backup for the source database. Skip this step if you have already created a logical backup.

    BACKUP DATABASE <database_name> TO DISK='<physical_backup_device_name>';
    GO

    Parameter:

    • <database_name>: the name of the source database.

    • <physical_backup_device_name>: the storage path and file name of the backup file.

    Example:

    BACKUP DATABASE mytestdata TO DISK='D:\backup\dbdata.bak';
    GO
  3. Execute the following statement to back up the log entries of the source database:

    BACKUP LOG <database_name> to DISK='<physical_backup_device_name>' WITH init;
    GO

    Parameter:

    • <database_name>: the name of the source database.

    • <physical_backup_device_name>: the storage path and file name of the backup file.

    Example:

    BACKUP LOG mytestdata TO DISK='D:\backup\dblog.bak' WITH init;
    GO

Procedure

  1. Go to the Data Migration Tasks page.

    1. Log on to the Data Management (DMS) console.

    2. In the top navigation bar, move the pointer over DTS.

    3. Choose DTS (DTS) > Data Migration.

    Note
  2. From the drop-down list on the right side of Data Migration Tasks, select the region in which your data migration instance resides.

    Note

    If you use the new DTS console, you must select the region in which the data migration instance resides in the upper-left corner.

  3. Click Create Task. In the Create Task wizard, configure the source and destination databases. The following table describes the parameters.
    Warning

    After you configure the source and destination databases, we recommend that you read the Limits that are displayed in the upper part of the page. Otherwise, the task may fail or data inconsistency may occur.

    SectionParameterDescription
    N/ATask Name

    The name of the task. DTS automatically generates a task name. We recommend that you specify an informative name to identify the task. You do not need to specify a unique task name.

    Source DatabaseDatabase TypeThe type of the source database. Select SQL Server.
    Access Method The access method of the source database. Select Self-managed Database on ECS.
    Note If your source database is a self-managed database, you must deploy the network environment for the database. For more information, see Preparation overview.
    Instance RegionThe region in which the self-managed SQL Server database resides.
    Instance IDThe ID of the Elastic Compute Service (ECS) instance that hosts the self-managed SQL Server database.
    Port NumberThe service port number of the self-managed SQL Server database. The default port number is 1433.
    Database AccountThe account that is used to log on to the self-managed SQL Server database. For more information about the permissions that are required for the account, see the Permissions required for database accounts section of this topic.
    Database Password

    The password that is used to access the database instance.

    Destination DatabaseDatabase TypeThe type of the destination database. Select AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL.
    Access MethodThe access method of the destination database. Select Alibaba Cloud Instance.
    Instance RegionThe region in which the destination AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance resides.
    Instance IDThe ID of the destination AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance.
    Database NameThe name of the destination database in the destination AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance.
    Database AccountThe database account of the destination AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance. For information about the permissions that are required for the account, see Permissions required for database accounts.
    Database Password

    The password that is used to access the database instance.

  4. If an IP address whitelist is configured for your self-managed database, add the CIDR blocks of DTS servers to the IP address whitelist. Then, click Test Connectivity.

    Warning

    If the public CIDR blocks of DTS servers are automatically or manually added to the whitelist of a database instance or to the security group rules of an ECS instance, security risks may arise. Therefore, before you use DTS to migrate data, you must understand and acknowledge the potential risks and take preventive measures, including but not limited to the following measures: enhancing the security of your username and password, limiting the ports that are exposed, authenticating API calls, regularly checking the whitelist or security group rules and forbidding unauthorized CIDR blocks, or connecting the database instance to DTS by using Express Connect, VPN Gateway, or Smart Access Gateway.

  5. Configure the objects to be migrated and advanced settings.
    ParameterDescription
    Migration Types

    • To perform only full data migration, select Schema Migration and Full Data Migration.

    • To ensure service continuity during data migration, select Schema Migration, Full Data Migration, and Incremental Data Migration.

    Note

    If you do not select Incremental Data Migration, we recommend that you do not write data to the source database during data migration. This ensures data consistency between the source and destination databases.

    Processing Mode of Conflicting Tables
    • Precheck and Report Errors: checks whether the destination database contains tables that use the same names as tables in the source database. If the source and destination databases do not contain tables that have identical table names, the precheck is passed. Otherwise, an error is returned during the precheck and the data migration task cannot be started.

      Note

      If the source and destination databases contain tables with identical names and the tables in the destination database cannot be deleted or renamed, you can use the object name mapping feature to rename the tables that are migrated to the destination database. For more information, see Map object names.

    • Ignore Errors and Proceed: skips the precheck for identical table names in the source and destination databases.

      Warning

      If you select Ignore Errors and Proceed, data inconsistency may occur and your business may be exposed to the following potential risks:

      • If the source and destination databases have the same schema, and a data record has the same primary key as an existing data record in the destination database, the following scenarios may occur:

        • During full data migration, DTS does not migrate the data record to the destination database. The existing data record in the destination database is retained.

        • During incremental data migration, DTS migrates the data record to the destination database. The existing data record in the destination database is overwritten.

      • If the source and destination databases have different schemas, only specific columns are migrated or the data migration task fails. Proceed with caution.

    SQL Server Incremental Synchronization Mode
    • Log-based Parsing for Non-heap Tables and CDC-based Incremental Synchronization for Heap Tables (Hybrid Log-based Parsing):

      • Advantages:

        • This mode supports heap tables, tables without primary keys, compressed tables, and tables with computed columns.

        • This mode provides higher stability and a variety of complete DDL statements.

      • Disadvantages:

        • DTS creates the trigger dts_cdc_sync_ddl, the heartbeat table dts_sync_progress, and the DDL storage table dts_cdc_ddl_history in the source database and enables change data capture (CDC) for the source database and specific tables.

        • You cannot execute the SELECT INTO or TRUNCATE statement on tables with CDC enabled in the source database. Triggers created by DTS in the source database cannot be manually deleted.

    • Incremental Synchronization Based on Logs of Source Database (Heap tables are not supported):

      • Advantages:

        This mode does not modify the settings of the source database.

      • Disadvantages:

        This mode does not support heap tables, tables without primary keys, compressed tables, or tables with computed columns.

    • Select Polling and querying CDC instances for incremental synchronization.

      • Advantages:

        • Full or incremental migration is supported when the source database is Amazon RDS SQL Server, Azure SQL Database, or Google Cloud SQL for SQL Server.

        • If you use the native CDC component of SQL Server to obtain incremental data, incremental migration is more stable and occupies less network bandwidth.

      • Disadvantages:

        • The source database account that is used by the DTS instance must have the permission to enable CDC. Incremental data migration takes about 10 seconds.

        • If you configure a task to migrate multiple tables in multiple databases, stability and performance issues may occur.

    DDL and DML Operations to Be SynchronizedThe SQL operations to be migrated at the instance level. For more information, see the SQL operations that can be incrementally migrated section of this topic.
    Note

    To select the SQL operations performed on a specific database or table, right-click an object in the Selected Objects section. In the dialog box that appears, select the SQL operations that you want to incrementally migrate.

    Source Objects

    Select one or more objects from the Source Objects section. Click the 向右小箭头 icon to add the objects to the Selected Objects section.

    Note

    In this scenario, data migration is performed between heterogeneous databases. Therefore, only tables can be migrated. Other objects such as views, triggers, or stored procedures are not migrated to the destination database.

    Selected Objects
    • To rename an object that you want to migrate to the destination instance, right-click the object in the Selected Objects section. For more information, see Map the name of a single object.
    • To rename multiple objects at a time, click Batch Edit in the upper-right corner of the Selected Objects section. For more information, see Map multiple object names at a time.
    Note
    • If you use the object name mapping feature to rename an object, other objects that are dependent on the object may fail to be migrated.
    • To specify WHERE conditions to filter data, right-click an object in the Selected Objects section. In the dialog box that appears, specify the conditions. For more information about how to specify the conditions, see Specify filter conditions.
    • To select the SQL operations performed on a specific database or table, right-click an object in the Selected Objects section. In the dialog box that appears, select the SQL operations that you want to migrate. For more information, see the SQL operations that can be incrementally migrated section of this topic.
  6. Click Next: Advanced Settings to configure advanced settings.
    ParameterDescription
    Monitoring and Alerting

    Specifies whether to configure alerting for the data migration task. If the task fails or the migration latency exceeds the specified threshold, the alert contacts receive notifications. Valid values:

    Retry Time for Failed Connections
    The retry time range for failed connections. If the source or destination database fails to be connected after the data migration task is started, DTS immediately retries a connection within the time range. Valid values: 10 to 1440. Unit: minutes. Default value: 720. We recommend that you set the parameter to a value greater than 30. If DTS reconnects to the source and destination databases within the specified time range, DTS resumes the data migration task. Otherwise, the data migration task fails.
    Note
    • If you set different retry time ranges for multiple data migration tasks that have the same source or destination database, the shortest retry time range that is set takes precedence.
    • When DTS retries a connection, you are charged for the DTS instance. We recommend that you specify the retry time range based on your business requirements. You can also release the DTS instance at your earliest opportunity after the source and destination instances are released.
    Retry Time for Other Issues

    The retry time range for other issues. For example, if DDL or DML operations fail to be performed after the data migration task is started, DTS immediately retries the operations within the retry time range. Valid values: 1 to 1440. Unit: minutes. Default value: 10. We recommend that you set the parameter to a value greater than 10. If the failed operations are successfully performed within the specified retry time range, DTS resumes the data migration task. Otherwise, the change tracking task fails.

    Important

    The value of the Retry Time for Other Issues parameter must be smaller than the value of the Retry Time for Failed Connections parameter.

    Configure ETL

    Specifies whether to enable the extract, transform, and load (ETL) feature. For more information, see What is ETL? Valid values:

  7. Specify the primary key columns and distribution key columns of the tables that you want to migrate to the destination AnalyticDB for PostgreSQL instance.

  8. In the lower part of the page, click Next: Save Task Settings and Precheck.

    You can move the pointer over Next: Save Task Settings and Precheck and click Preview OpenAPI parameters to view the parameters to be specified when you call the relevant API operation to configure the DTS task.

    Note
    • Before you can start the data migration task, DTS performs a precheck. You can start the data migration task only after the task passes the precheck.

    • If the task fails to pass the precheck, click View Details next to each failed item. After you analyze the causes based on the check results, troubleshoot the issues. Then, run a precheck again.

    • If an alert is triggered for an item during the precheck:

      • If an alert item cannot be ignored, click View Details next to the failed item and troubleshoot the issues. Then, run a precheck again.

      • If the alert item can be ignored, click Confirm Alert Details. In the View Details dialog box, click Ignore. In the message that appears, click OK. Then, click Precheck Again to run a precheck again. If you ignore the alert item, data inconsistency may occur, and your business may be exposed to potential risks.

  9. Wait until Success Rate becomes 100%. Then, click Next: Purchase Instance.

  10. On the Purchase Instance page, configure the Instance Class parameter for the data migration instance. The following table describes the parameters.

    Section

    Parameter

    Description

    New Instance Class

    Resource Group Settings

    The resource group to which the data migration instance belongs. Default value: default resource group. For more information, see What is Resource Management?

    Instance Class

    DTS provides instance classes that vary in the migration speed. You can select an instance class based on your business scenario. For more information, see Specifications of data migration instances.

  11. Read and agree to Data Transmission Service (Pay-as-you-go) Service Terms by selecting the check box.

  12. Click Buy and Start. In the dialog box that appears, click OK.

    You can view the progress of the task in the task list.