Welcome to SQL Server Migration Assistant Team's Official Blog site
Greetings!
[Updated 2/7/2012 Selina Jia - Microsoft SQL Server Migration Assistant (SSMA) for MySQL, Sybase, Oracle and Access v5.2 ]
Welcome to the official blog site of Microsoft SQL Server Migration Assistant (SSMA) Team. In this blog site we wish to share information about SSMA product family as well as general information about migration to SQL Server from competitive platforms.
SSMA is a family of products to migrate from Oracle, Sybase, MySQL and Access to SQL Server. You can migrate to [Add: SQL Server 2012], SQL Server 2008 R2, SQL Server 2008 or SQL Server 2005. SMA for Access ,SSMA for MySQL and [ Add: SSMA for Sybase] also support migration to SQL Azure.
Welcome to the SQL Server platform!
SSMA Team
Comments
Anonymous
August 19, 2010
I have been using both the Sybase and Oracle SSMA tools and I love them! I did find an issue with the 4.2 Sybase SSMA. How do I report the bug to Microsoft?Anonymous
August 20, 2010
Hello Jason, We are glad SSMA tools have been helpful to you and you like them. Please send information related to the issue you are having with the tools to ssmahelp@microsoft.com. Thanks! SSMA TeamAnonymous
January 07, 2011
Hi i am a student.. I installed ssma for oracle..can u pls tell me how to run the tool..Anonymous
January 10, 2011
@Ram: Have a look at the videos in blogs.msdn.com/.../mysql-to-sql-server-2008-migration-workshop-video.aspx. Though they are for MySQL, SSMA product for Oracle is similar. If you have any questions feel free to email us at ssmahelp at microsoft.com.Anonymous
November 21, 2011
I am migrating Data base from Oracle DB to SQL by using SSMA (SQL Server Migration assistance for Oracle) tool but after completion convert schema I getting errors on Indexes . can you please help me any one error :o2ss0041,o2ss0050,o2ss0083Anonymous
November 27, 2011
hi Faith4ax, I think this is because some udts or user define functions or producres have no conversion. SSMA didn't recognize some user define identifier. If you can support detail errors,I think I can better understand your errors.Anonymous
December 04, 2013
Hi, We are migrating Oracle to SQL. We manage to migrate some tables but others don't work. We beleive the problem came from when Column date in Oracle is Number(,). We tried to change the type mapping with almost every combination but it's always the same error: ORA-00905: missing keyword. What should we do ? Thanks,