Edit a SQL Server connection

To edit a SQL Server connection:

  1. Click the app switcher menu Spotter app switcher and then click Spotter.

  2. On the left side of the screen, select Manage data > Manage data sources.

  3. On the Data workspace page, click Connections.

  4. Select the name of the connection you want to edit.

  5. Select Edit connection at the upper-right side of the page.

    By default, the Select tables page appears. You have the option, though, to change the connection name and update the connection details, by selecting the appropriate option at the top of the screen, making any changes needed and selecting Continue to go to the next page.

    Edit connection name or details as necessary
  6. Expand the database table dropdown menu, and select the tables and columns you want to add.

    Select tables and columns
  7. Click Update, and then select Confirm to save the updated connection details.

Validate metadata

You can now validate connections to discover any changes in metadata after the connection was created. When you validate a connection, ThoughtSpot provides a JSON file containing details on any metadata changes. Once alerted to a metadata change, you can use TML to update the connection.

To validate your connection:

  1. Click the app switcher menu Spotter app switcher and then click Spotter.

  2. On the left side of the screen, select Manage data > Manage data sources.

  3. On the Data workspace page, click Connections.

  4. Select the name of the connection you want to validate.

  5. Select the more options menu icon ellipsis icon and click Validate.

  6. If ThoughtSpot detects any changes to the connection’s metadata, the following message appears: "Your connection is not valid and requires metadata changes. You can download the list of changes affecting this connection by clicking on the button below."

    To download the change log, click Download metadata change log. The change log automatically downloads to your browser’s Downloads folder in JSON format.

To remove a table from a connection, delete it from the connection details page. For more information, see: Delete a SQL Server connection.

See the Connection reference for details of connection parameters.



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