Integrate Azure Data Explorer with Azure Data Factory
Azure Data Factory (ADF) is a cloud-based data integration service that allows you to integrate different data stores and perform activities on the data. ADF allows you to create data-driven workflows for orchestrating and automating data movement and data transformation. Azure Data Explorer is one of the supported data stores in Azure Data Factory.
Azure Data Factory activities for Azure Data Explorer
Various integrations with Azure Data Factory are available for Azure Data Explorer users:
Copy activity
Azure Data Factory Copy activity is used to transfer data between data stores. Azure Data Explorer is supported as a source, where data is copied from Azure Data Explorer to any supported data store, and a sink, where data is copied from any supported data store to Azure Data Explorer. For more information, see copy data to or from Azure Data Explorer using Azure Data Factory. For a detailed walk-through see load data from Azure Data Factory into Azure Data Explorer. Azure Data Explorer is supported by Azure IR (Integration Runtime), used when data is copied within Azure, and self-hosted IR, used when copying data from/to data stores located on-premises or in a network with access control, such as an Azure Virtual Network. For more information, see which IR to use.
Tip
When using the copy activity and creating a Linked Service or a Dataset, select the data store Azure Data Explorer (Kusto) and not the old data store Kusto.
Lookup activity
The Lookup activity is used for executing queries on Azure Data Explorer. The result of the query will be returned as the output of the Lookup activity, and can be used in the next activity in the pipeline as described in the ADF Lookup documentation.
In addition to the response size limit of 5,000 rows and 2 MB, the activity also has a query timeout limit of 1 hour.
Command activity
The Command activity allows the execution of Azure Data Explorer management commands. Unlike queries, the management commands can potentially modify data or metadata. Some of the management commands are targeted to ingest data into Azure Data Explorer, using commands such as .ingest
or .set-or-append
) or copy data from Azure Data Explorer to external data stores using commands such as .export
.
For a detailed walk-through of the command activity, see use Azure Data Factory command activity to run Azure Data Explorer management commands. Using a management command to copy data can, at times, be a faster and cheaper option than the Copy activity. To determine when to use the Command activity versus the Copy activity, see select between Copy and Command activities when copying data.
Copy in bulk from a database template
The Copy in bulk from a database to Azure Data Explorer by using the Azure Data Factory template is a predefined Azure Data Factory pipeline. The template is used to create many pipelines per database or per table for faster data copying.
Mapping data flows
Azure Data Factory mapping data flows are visually designed data transformations that allow data engineers to develop graphical data transformation logic without writing code. To create a data flow and ingest data into Azure Data Explorer, use the following method:
- Create the mapping data flow.
- Export the data into Azure Blob.
- Define Event Grid or ADF copy activity to ingest the data to Azure Data Explorer.
Select between Copy and Azure Data Explorer Command activities when copy data
This section assists you in selecting the correct activity for your data copying needs.
When copying data from or to Azure Data Explorer, there are two available options in Azure Data Factory:
- Copy activity.
- Azure Data Explorer Command activity, which executes one of the management commands that transfer data in Azure Data Explorer.
Copy data from Azure Data Explorer
You can copy data from Azure Data Explorer using the copy activity or the .export
command. The .export
command executes a query, and then exports the results of the query.
See the following table for a comparison of the Copy activity and .export
command for copying data from Azure Data Explorer.
Copy activity | .export command | |
---|---|---|
Flow description | ADF executes a query on Kusto, processes the result, and sends it to the target data store. (Azure Data Explorer > ADF > sink data store) |
ADF sends an .export management command to Azure Data Explorer, which executes the command, and sends the data directly to the target data store. (** Azure Data Explorer > sink data store**) |
Supported target data stores | A wide variety of supported data stores | ADLSv2, Azure Blob, SQL Database |
Performance | Centralized |
|
Server limits | Query limits can be extended/disabled. By default, ADF queries contain:
|
By default, extends or disables the query limits:
|
Tip
If your copy destination is one of the data stores supported by the .export
command, and if none of the Copy activity features is crucial to your needs, select the .export
command.
Copying data to Azure Data Explorer
You can copy data to Azure Data Explorer using the copy activity or ingestion commands such as ingest from query (.set-or-append
, .set-or-replace
, .set
, .replace)
, and ingest from storage (.ingest
).
See the following table for a comparison of the Copy activity, and ingestion commands for copying data to Azure Data Explorer.
Copy activity | Ingest from query.set-or-append / .set-or-replace / .set / .replace |
Ingest from storage .ingest |
|
---|---|---|---|
Flow description | ADF gets the data from the source data store, converts it into a tabular format, and does the required schema-mapping changes. ADF then uploads the data to Azure blobs, splits it into chunks, then downloads the blobs to ingest them into the Azure Data Explorer table. (Source data store > ADF > Azure blobs > Azure Data Explorer) |
These commands can execute a query or a .show command, and ingest the results of the query into a table (Azure Data Explorer > Azure Data Explorer). |
This command ingests data into a table by "pulling" the data from one or more cloud storage artifacts. |
Supported source data stores | variety of options | ADLS Gen 2, Azure Blob, SQL (using the sql_request() plugin), Azure Cosmos DB (using the cosmosdb_sql_request plugin), and any other data store that provides HTTP or Python APIs. | Filesystem, Azure Blob Storage, ADLS Gen 1, ADLS Gen 2 |
Performance | Ingestions are queued and managed, which ensures small-size ingestions and assures high availability by providing load balancing, retries and error handling. |
|
|
Server Limits |
|
|
|
Tip
- When copying data from ADF to Azure Data Explorer use the
ingest from query
commands. - For large datasets (>1GB), use the Copy activity.
Required permissions
The following table lists the required permissions for various steps in the integration with Azure Data Factory.
Step | Operation | Minimum level of permissions | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Create a Linked Service | Database navigation | database viewer The logged-in user using ADF should be authorized to read database metadata. |
User can provide the database name manually. |
Test Connection | database monitor or table ingestor Service principal should be authorized to execute database level .show commands or table level ingestion. |
|
|
Creating a Dataset | Table navigation | database monitor The logged in user using ADF, must be authorized to execute database level .show commands. |
User can provide table name manually. |
Creating a Dataset or Copy Activity | Preview data | database viewer Service principal must be authorized to read database metadata. |
|
Import schema | database viewer Service principal must be authorized to read database metadata. |
When Azure Data Explorer is the source of a tabular-to-tabular copy, ADF imports schema automatically, even if the user didn't import schema explicitly. | |
Azure Data Explorer as Sink | Create a by-name column mapping | database monitor Service principal must be authorized to execute database level .show commands. |
|
|
table ingestor or database admin Service principal must be authorized to make changes to a table. |
||
Ingest data | table ingestor or database admin Service principal must be authorized to make changes to a table. |
||
Azure Data Explorer as source | Execute query | database viewer Service principal must be authorized to read database metadata. |
|
Kusto command | According to the permissions level of each command. |
Performance
If Azure Data Explorer is the source and you use the Lookup, copy, or command activity that contains a query where, refer to query best practices for performance information and ADF documentation for copy activity.
This section addresses the use of copy activity where Azure Data Explorer is the sink. The estimated throughput for Azure Data Explorer sink is 11-13 MBps. The following table details the parameters influencing the performance of the Azure Data Explorer sink.
Parameter | Notes |
---|---|
Components geographical proximity | Place all components in the same region:
|
Number of DIUs | One VM for every four DIUs used by ADF. Increasing the DIUs helps only if your source is a file-based store with multiple files. Each VM will then process a different file in parallel. Therefore, copying a single large file has a higher latency than copying multiple smaller files. |
Amount and SKU of your Azure Data Explorer cluster | High number of Azure Data Explorer nodes boosts ingestion processing time. Use of dev SKUs will severely limit performance |
Parallelism | To copy a large amount of data from a database, partition your data and then use a ForEach loop that copies each partition in parallel or use the Bulk Copy from Database to Azure Data Explorer Template. Note: Settings > Degree of Parallelism in the Copy activity isn't relevant to Azure Data Explorer. |
Data processing complexity | Latency varies according to source file format, column mapping, and compression. |
The VM running your integration runtime |
|
Tips and common pitfalls
Monitor activity progress
When monitoring the activity progress, the Data written property may be larger than the Data read property because Data read is calculated according to the binary file size, while Data written is calculated according to the in-memory size, after data is deserialized and decompressed.
When monitoring the activity progress, you can see that data is written to the Azure Data Explorer sink. When querying the Azure Data Explorer table, you see that data hasn't arrived. This is because there are two stages when copying to Azure Data Explorer.
- First stage reads the source data, splits it to 900-MB chunks, and uploads each chunk to an Azure Blob. The first stage is seen by the ADF activity progress view.
- The second stage begins once all the data is uploaded to Azure Blobs. The nodes of your cluster download the blobs and ingest the data into the sink table. The data is then seen in your Azure Data Explorer table.
Failure to ingest CSV files due to improper escaping
Azure Data Explorer expects CSV files to align with RFC 4180. It expects:
- Fields that contain characters that require escaping (such as " and new lines) should start and end with a " character, without whitespace. All " characters inside the field are escaped by using a double " character (""). For example, "Hello, ""World""" is a valid CSV file with a single record having a single column or field with the content Hello, "World".
- All records in the file must have the same number of columns and fields.
Azure Data Factory allows the backslash (escape) character. If you generate a CSV file with a backslash character using Azure Data Factory, ingestion of the file to Azure Data Explorer will fail.
Example
The following text values:
Hello, "World"
ABC DEF
"ABC\D"EF
"ABC DEF
Should appear in a proper CSV file as follows:
"Hello, ""World"""
"ABC DEF"
"""ABC\D""EF"
"""ABC DEF"
By using the default escape character (backslash), the following CSV won't work with Azure Data Explorer:
"Hello, "World""
"ABC DEF"
""ABC\D"EF"
""ABC DEF"
Nested JSON objects
When copying a JSON file to Azure Data Explorer, note that:
- Arrays aren't supported.
- If your JSON structure contains object data types, Azure Data Factory will flatten the object's child items, and try to map each child item to a different column in your Azure Data Explorer table. If you want the entire object item to be mapped to a single column in Azure Data Explorer:
- Ingest the entire JSON row into a single dynamic column in Azure Data Explorer.
- Manually edit the pipeline definition by using Azure Data Factory's JSON editor. In Mappings
- Remove the multiple mappings that were created for each child item, and add a single mapping that maps your object type to your table column.
- After the closing square bracket, add a comma followed by:
"mapComplexValuesToString": true
.
Specify Additional Properties when copying to Azure Data Explorer
You can add additional ingestion properties by specifying them in the copy activity in the pipeline.
To add properties
In Azure Data Factory, select the Author pencil tool.
Under Pipeline, select the pipeline where you want to add additional ingestion properties.
In the Activities canvas, select the Copy data activity.
In the activity details, select Sink, and then expand Additional properties.
Select New, select either Add node or Add array as required, and then specify the ingestion property name and value. Repeat this step to add more properties.
Once complete save and publish your pipeline.
Next step
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