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Creating Connection Managers

SQL Server 2005 Integration Services (SSIS) includes a variety of connection managers to suit the needs of tasks that connect to different types of servers and data sources. Connection managers are used by the data flow components that extract and load data in different types of data stores, and by the log providers that write logs to a server, SQL Server table, or file. For example, a package with a Send Mail task uses an SMTP connection manager type to connect to a Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) server. A package with an Execute SQL task can use an OLE DB connection manager to connect to a SQL Server database. For more information, see Integration Services Connections.

You create a new connection manager and add it to a package by using the Connection Managers area that appears on the Control Flow, Data Flow, and Event Handlers tabs of SSIS Designer. From the Connection Manager area, you choose the type of connection manager to create, and then set the properties of the connection manager by using a dialog box that SSIS Designer provides.

After the connection manager is added to a package, you can use it in tasks, Foreach Loop containers, sources, transformations, and destinations. For more information, see Integration Services Tasks, Foreach Loop Container, and Data Flow Elements

Using the Connection Managers Area

You can create connection managers while the Control Flow, Data Flow, or Event Handlers tab of SSIS Designer is active.

The following diagram shows the Connection Managers area on the Control Flow tab of SSIS Designer.

Control Flow tab of SSIS Designer

To add, configure, or delete a connection manager

32-Bit and 64-Bit Providers for Connection Managers

Many of the providers that connection managers use are available in 32-bit and 64-bit versions. The Integration Services design environment is a 32-bit environment and you see only 32-bit providers while you are designing a package. Therefore, you can only configure a connection manager to use a specific 64-bit provider if the 32-bit version of the same provider is also installed.

At run time, the correct version is used, and it does not matter that you specified the 32-bit version of the provider at design time. The 64-bit version of the provider can be run even if the package is run in Business Intelligence Development Studio.

Both versions of the provider have the same ID. To specify whether the Integration Services runtime uses an available 64-bit version of the provider, you set the Run64BitRuntime property of the Integration Services project. If the Run64BitRuntime property is set to true, the runtime finds and uses the 64-bit provider; if Run64BitRuntime is false, the runtime finds and uses the 32-bit provider. For more information about properties you can set on Integration Services projects, see Integration Services Considerations on 64-bit Computers and Integration Services in Business Intelligence Development Studio.

See Also

Tasks

Referencing Data Sources
Creating Package Event Handlers

Concepts

Creating Package Control Flow
Creating Package Data Flow

Other Resources

Creating Packages in SSIS Designer

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance

Change History

Release History

5 December 2005

New content:
  • Added section about 32-bit and 64-bit providers.