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Troubleshooting Package Development

Integration Services includes features and tools that you can use to troubleshoot packages while you are developing them in Business Intelligence Development Studio.

Troubleshooting Design-time Validation Issues

While you are developing packages in BI Development Studio, there may be times when you cannot connect to your data sources, or when portions of your package cannot be validated until prior tasks in the package have executed at run time. Integration Services includes the following features to help you avoid the validation errors that would otherwise result from these conditions:

  • Work Offline when data sources are not available. Normally, SSIS Designer tries to connect to each data source that is used by your package to validate the metadata associated with sources and destinations. This causes validation errors when the data sources are not available. To prevent these connection attempts, you can enable Work Offline from the SSIS menu. Unlike the DelayValidation property, the Work Offline option is available even before you open a package. You can also enable Work Offline to speed up operations in the designer, and disable it only when you want your package to be validated.
  • Configure the DelayValidation property on package elements that are not valid until run time. You can set DelayValidation to True on package elements whose configuration is not valid at design time to prevent validation errors. For example, you may have a Data Flow task that uses a destination table that does not exist until an Execute SQL task creates the table at run time. The DelayValidation property can be enabled at the package level, or at the level of the individual tasks and containers that the package includes. Normally you must leave this property set to True on the same package elements when you deploy the package, to prevent the same validation errors at run time.
    The DelayValidation property can be set on a Data Flow task, but not on individual data flow components. You can achieve a similar effect by setting the ValidateExternalMetadata property of individual data flow components to false. However, when the value of this property is false, the component is not aware of changes to the metadata of external data sources.

Troubleshooting Control Flow

Integration Services includes the following features and tools that you can use to troubleshoot the control flow in packages during package development:

  • Set breakpoints on tasks, containers, and the package. You can set breakpoints by using the graphical tools that SSIS Designer provides. Breakpoints can be enabled at the package level, or at the level of the individual tasks and containers that the package includes. Some tasks and containers provide additional break conditions for setting breakpoints. For example, you can enable a break condition on the For Loop container that suspends execution at the start of each iteration of the loop.
  • Use the debugging windows. When you run a package that has breakpoints, the debug windows in Business Intelligence Development Studio provide access to variable values and status messages.
  • Review the information on the Progress tab. SSIS Designer provides additional information about control flow when you run a package in Business Intelligence Development Studio. The Progress tab lists tasks and containers in order of execution and includes start and finish times, warnings, and error messages for each task and container, including the package itself.

For more information on these features, see Debugging Control Flow.

Troubleshooting Data Flow

Integration Services includes the following features and tools that you can use to troubleshoot the data flows in packages during package development:

  • Test with only a subset of your data. If you want to troubleshoot the data flow in a package by using only a sample of the dataset, you can include a Percentage Sampling or Row Sampling transformation to create an in-line data sample at run time. For more information, see Percentage Sampling Transformation and Row Sampling Transformation.
  • Use data viewers to monitor data as it moves through the data flow. Data viewers display data values as the data moves between sources, transformations, and destinations. A data viewer can display data in a grid, histogram, scatter plot, or column chart. You can copy the data from a data viewer to the Clipboard, and then paste the data into a file or Excel spreadsheet. For more information, see How to: Add a Data Viewer to a Data Flow.
  • Configure error outputs on data flow components that support them. Many data flow sources, transformations, and destinations also support error outputs. By configuring the error output of a data flow component, you can direct data that contains errors to a different destination. For example, you can capture the data that failed or was truncated in a separate text file. You can also attach data viewers to error outputs and examine only the erroneous data. At design time, error outputs capture troublesome data values to help you develop packages that deal effectively with real-world data. However, while other troubleshooting tools and features are useful only at design time, error outputs retain their usefulness in the production environment. For more information, see Handling Errors in Data.
  • Capture the count of rows processed. When you run a package in SSIS Designer, the number of rows that have passed through a path is displayed in the data flow designer. This number is updated periodically while the data moves through the path. You can also add a Row Count transformation to the data flow to capture the final row count in a variable. For more information, see Row Count Transformation.
  • Review the information on the Progress tab. SSIS Designer provides additional information about data flows when you run a package in Business Intelligence Development Studio. The Progress tab lists data flow components in order of execution and includes information about progress for each phase of the package, displayed as percentage complete, and the number of rows written to the destination.

For more information on these features, see Debugging Data Flow.

Troubleshooting Scripts

The Microsoft Visual Studio for Applications (VSA) environment, in which you write the scripts that are used by the Script task and Script component, provides the following features and tools that you can use to troubleshoot scripts during package development:

  • Set breakpoints in script in Script tasks. The VSA environment provides debugging support for scripts in the Script task only. The breakpoints that you set in Script tasks are integrated with the breakpoints that you set on packages and the tasks and containers in the package, enabling seamless debugging of all package elements.

For more information, see Debugging Script. For suggestions about how to debug the Script component, see Coding and Debugging the Script Component.

Troubleshooting Errors without a Description

If you encounter an Integration Services error number without an accompanying description during package development, you can locate the description in Integration Services Error and Message Reference. The list does not include troubleshooting information at this time.

Change History

Release History

17 July 2006

Changed content
  • Added information about design-time validation issues and errors that have no description.
  • Expanded the explanation of most tools and techniques.

See Also

Concepts

Troubleshooting Package Execution
Troubleshooting Package Performance
Troubleshooting the Integration Services Service

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance