Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCordelia Lynch Modified over 9 years ago
1
Aggregating Knowledge in a Data Warehouse and Multidimensional Analysis Rafal Lukawiecki Strategic Consultant, Project Botticelli Ltd rafal@projectbotticelli.com
2
2 Objectives Explain the basics of: 1.Data Warehousing 2.ETL 3.OLAP/Multidimensional Data Relate the theory to SQL Server 2008 SSAS and SSIS This seminar is based on a number of sources including a few dozen of Microsoft-owned presentations, used with permission. Thank you to Marin Bezic, Kathy Sabourin, Aydin Gencler, Bryan Bredehoeft, and Chris Dial for all the support. Thank you to Maciej Pilecki for assistance with demos. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the opinions and views of Project Botticelli and/or Rafal Lukawiecki. The material presented is not certain and may vary based on several factors. Microsoft makes no warranties, express, implied or statutory, as to the information in this presentation. Portions © 2009 Project Botticelli Ltd & entire material © 2009 Microsoft Corp. Some slides contain quotations from copyrighted materials by other authors, as individually attributed or as already covered by Microsoft Copyright ownerships. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Project Botticelli Ltd as of the date of this presentation. Because Project Botticelli & Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft and Project Botticelli cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. Project Botticelli makes no warranties, express, implied or statutory, as to the information in this presentation. E&OE.
3
3 1. Data Warehouse
4
4 OLE DB ODBC DB2 Oracle XML SQL Server Analysis Services SQL Server Report Server Models SQL Server Data Mining Models SQL Server Integration Services MySAP Hyperion Essbase SAP NetWeaver BI SQL Server Teradata Rich Connectivity Data Providers
5
5 Let’s Store the Intelligence: DW SQL Server Analysis Services server is a logical endpoint for data being aggregated with SSIS But do not store actual data in it Data physically rests in another relational database called a Data Warehouse You can manipulate it directly, or build in parallel with OLTP processing Modelling of data stored in DW and analysed using SSAS is at the heart of good Data Warehouse design
6
6 Star Schema
7
7 Star Schema Benefits Transforms normalized data into a simpler model Delivers high-performance queries Delivers higher performing queries using Star Join Query Optimization Uses mature modeling techniques that are widely supported by many BI tools Requires low maintenance as the data warehouse design evolves
8
8 Snowflake Dimension Tables Define hierarchies using multiple dimension tables Support fact tables with varying granularity Simplify consolidation of data from multiple sources Potential for slower query performance in relational reporting No difference in performance in Analysis Services database Potential for slower query performance in relational reporting No difference in performance in Analysis Services database
9
9 Hierarchies Benefits View of data at different levels of summarization Path to drill down or drill up Implementation Denormalized star schema dimension Normalized snowflake dimension Self-referencing relationship
10
10 Fact Table Fundamentals Collection of measurements associated with a specific business process Specific column types Foreign keys to dimensions Measures – numeric and additive Metadata and lineage Consistent granularity – the most atomic level by which the facts can be defined
11
11 Fact Table Examples Day Grain Quarter Grain Reseller sales data by: Product Order Date Reseller Employee Sales Territory Sales quota data by: Employee Time
12
12 Date Dimension Table Most common dimension used in analysis (aka Time dimension) Used consistently with all facts for efficient and flexible analysis Useful common attributes – Year, Quarter, Month, Day Time series analysis support Navigation and summarization enabled with hierarchies, such as calendar or fiscal Single table design (typically not snowflake design) Tip: Format the key of the dimension as yyyymmdd (e.g. 20060925) to make it readily understandable
13
13 Parent-Child Hierarchy A dimension that contains a parent attribute A parent attribute describes a self-referencing relationship, or a self-join, within a dimension table Common examples Organizational charts General Ledger structures Bill of Materials
14
14 Parent-Child Hierarchy Example
15
15 Slowly Changing Dimensions Support primary role of data warehouse to describe the past accurately Maintain historical context as new or changed data is loaded into dimension tables Implement changes by Slowly Changing Dimension (SCD) type Type 1: Overwrite the existing dimension record Type 2: Insert a new ‘versioned’ dimension record Type 3: Track limited history with attributes
16
16 SCD Type 1 Existing record is updated History is not preserved
17
17 SCD Type 2 Existing record is ‘expired’ and new record inserted History is preserved Most common form of SCD
18
18 SCD Type 3 Existing record is updated Limited history is preserved Implementation is rare SalesTerritoryKey update to 10
19
19 Let’s Get the Data We would like to populate facts and dimensions in our Data Warehouse from OLTP data...
20
20 2. Integration and ETL
21
21 Let’s do ETL with SSIS SQL Server Integration Services (SSIS) service SSIS object model Two distinct runtime engines: Control flow Data flow 32-bit and 64-bit editions
22
22 The Package The basic unit of work, deployment, and execution An organized collection of: Connection managers Control flow components Data flow components Variables Event handlers Configurations Can be designed graphically or built programmatically Saved in XML format to the file system or SQL Server
23
23 Control Flow Control flow is a process-oriented workflow engine A package contains a single control flow Control flow elements Containers Tasks Precedence constraints Variables
24
24 Data Flow The Data Flow Task Performs traditional ETL and more Fast and scalable Data Flow Components Extract data from Sources Load data into Destinations Modify data with Transformations Service Paths Connect data flow components Create the pipeline
25
25 Data Flow Sources Sources extract data from Relational tables and views Files Analysis Services databases
26
26 Data Flow Destinations Destinations load data to Relational tables and views Files Analysis Services databases and objects DataReaders and Recordsets Enterprise Edition only
27
27 Populating Fact Tables Y Insert new record Insert new dimension record Lookup dimension key N Lookup failed? Repeat for each dimension key Transform Fact source
28
28 Populating Dimension Tables Y Insert new record Update changed column(s) Expire existing record Transform Correlate records N N Y Type 2 change? Y Type 1 change? New record? Dimension source
29
29 Row Transformations Update column values or create new columns Transform each row in the pipeline input
30
30 Rowset Transformations Create new rowsets that can include Aggregated values Sorted values Sample rowsets Pivoted or unpivoted rowsets This is a heavy-weight performer of SSIS Are also called asynchronous components
31
31 Split and Join Transformations Distribute rows to different outputs Create copies of the transformation inputs Join multiple inputs into one output Perform lookup operations
32
32 Using SQL Server Integration Services for Aggregating and Deriving Data
33
33 3. OLAP/Multidimensional Data
34
34 SQL Server 2008 Analysis Services OLAP component Aggregates and organizes data from business data sources Performs calculations difficult to perform using relational queries Supports advanced business intelligence, such as Key Performance Indicators Data mining component Discovers patterns in both relational and OLAP data Enhances the OLAP component with discovered results
35
35 Cube = Unified Dimensional Model Multidimensional data Combination of measures and dimensions as one conceptual model Measures are sourced from fact tables Dimensions are sourced from dimension tables
36
36 Dimensions Members from tables/views in a data source view (based on a Data Warehouse) Contain attributes matching dimension columns Organize attributes as hierarchies One All level and one leaf level User hierarchies are multi-level combinations of attributes Can be placed in display folders Used for slicing and dicing by attribute
37
37 Hierarchy Defined in Analysis Services Ordered collection of attributes into levels Navigation path through dimensional space Very important to get right! Customers by Geography Country State City Customer Customers by Demographics Marital Gender Customer
38
38 Measure Group Group of measures with same dimensionality Analogous to a fact table Cube can contain more than one measure group E.g. Sales, Inventory, Finance Defined by dimension relationships
39
39 Measure Group Dimension
40
40 Dimension Relationships Define interaction between dimensions and measure groups Relationship types Regular Reference Fact (Degenerate) Many-to-many Data mining
41
41 Customer City State Country GenderMarital Country State City Customer Gender Customer Marital Gender Customer City State Country Gender Marital AttributesHierarchies Age Dimension Model
42
42 Calculations Expressions evaluated at query time for values that cannot be stored in fact table Types of calculations Calculated members Named sets Scoped assignments Calculations are defined using MDX MDX = M ulti D imensional E X pressions
43
43 1. Using BIDS to Review Dimension Design 2. Cube Design and Functionality
44
44 Summary As a platform for enterprise Business Intelligence you should consider three things: A Data Warehouse Process of Data Integration (incl. ETL) Multidimensional Analysis (OLAP) = SQL Server 2008 Engine, SSIS, and SSAS Now you can support decision making and performance management through: Reports, dashboards, Excel integration, data mining, and better business software
45
45 © 2009 Microsoft Corporation & Project Botticelli Ltd. All rights reserved. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the opinions and views of Project Botticelli and/or Rafal Lukawiecki. The material presented is not certain and may vary based on several factors. Microsoft makes no warranties, express, implied or statutory, as to the information in this presentation. Portions © 2009 Project Botticelli Ltd & entire material © 2009 Microsoft Corp. Some slides contain quotations from copyrighted materials by other authors, as individually attributed or as already covered by Microsoft Copyright ownerships. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Project Botticelli Ltd as of the date of this presentation. Because Project Botticelli & Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft and Project Botticelli cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. Project Botticelli makes no warranties, express, implied or statutory, as to the information in this presentation. E&OE.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.