How do I copy SQL Azure database to my local development server?
There are multiple ways to do this:
-
Using SSIS (SQL Server Integration Services). It only imports
data
in your table. Column properties, constraints, keys, indices, stored procedures, triggers, security settings, users, logons, etc. are not transferred. However it is very simple process and can be done simply by going through wizard in SQL Server Management Studio. - Using combination of SSIS and DB creation scripts. This will get you data and all missing metadata that is not transferred by SSIS. This is also very simple. First transfer data using SSIS (see instructions below), then create DB Create script from SQL Azure database, and re-play it on your local database.
- Finally, you can use Import/Export service in SQL Azure. This transfers data (with a schema objects) to Azure Blob Storage as a BACPAC. You will need an Azure Storage account and do this in Azure web portal. It is as simple as pressing an "Export" button in the Azure web portal when you select the database you want to export. The downside is that it is only manual procedure, I don't know a way to automate this through tools or scripts -- at least the first part that requires a click on the web page.
Manual procedure for method #1 (using SSIS) is the following:
- In Sql Server Management Studio (SSMS) create new empty database on your local SQL instance.
- Choose Import Data from context menu (right click the database -> Tasks -> Import data...)
- Type in connection parameters for the source (SQL Azure). Select ".Net Framework Data Provider for SqlServer" as a provider.
- Choose existing empty local database as destination.
- Follow the wizard -- you will be able to select tables data you want to copy. You can choose to skip any of the tables you don't need. E.g. if you keep application logs in database, you probably don't need it in your backup.
You can automate it by creating SSIS package and re-executing it any time you like to re-import the data. Note that you can only import using SSIS to a clean DB, you cannot do incremental updates to your local database once you already done it once.
Method #2 (SSID data plus schema objects) is very simple. First go though a steps described above, then create DB Creation script (righ click on database in SSMS, choose Generate Scripts -> Database Create). Then re-play this script on your local database.
Method #3 is described in the Blog here: http://dacguy.wordpress.com/2012/01/24/sql-azure-importexport-service-has-hit-production/. There is a video clip with the process of transferring DB contents to Azure Blob storage as BACPAC. After that you can copy the file locally and import it to your SQL instance. Process of importing BACPAC to Data-Tier application is described here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh710052.aspx.
Copy Azure database data to local database: Now you can use the SQL Server Management Studio to do this as below:
- Connect to the SQL Azure database.
- Right click the database in Object Explorer.
- Choose the option "Tasks" / "Deploy Database to SQL Azure".
- In the step named "Deployment Settings", connect local SQL Server and create New database.
"Next" / "Next" / "Finish"
In SQL Server 2016 Management Studio, the process for getting an azure database to your local machine has been streamlined.
Right click on the database you want to import, click Tasks > Export data-tier application, and export your database to a local .dacpac file.
In your local target SQL server instance, you can right click Databases > Import data-tier application, and once it's local, you can do things like backup and restore the database.