Application.SaveToSqlServer Method (Package, IDTSEvents, String, String, String)
Applies To: SQL Server 2016 Preview
Saves a package to an instance of SQL Server.
Namespace: Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime
Assembly: Microsoft.SqlServer.ManagedDTS (in Microsoft.SqlServer.ManagedDTS.dll)
Syntax
public void SaveToSqlServer(
Package package,
IDTSEvents events,
string serverName,
string serverUserName,
string serverPassword
)
public:
void SaveToSqlServer(
Package^ package,
IDTSEvents^ events,
String^ serverName,
String^ serverUserName,
String^ serverPassword
)
member SaveToSqlServer :
package:Package *
events:IDTSEvents *
serverName:string *
serverUserName:string *
serverPassword:string -> unit
Public Sub SaveToSqlServer (
package As Package,
events As IDTSEvents,
serverName As String,
serverUserName As String,
serverPassword As String
)
Parameters
package
Type: Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime.PackageThe package to save.
events
Type: Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime.IDTSEventsThe IDTSEvents object.
serverName
Type: System.StringThe name of the instance of SQL Server to save the package to.
serverUserName
Type: System.StringThe user name used to log on to the server.
serverPassword
Type: System.StringThe password for the user account.
Examples
Legacy Code Example
The following code example saves the sample package to SQL Server. To verify that the package was saved, run the following Transact-SQL query against the msdb database. The query returns all packages stored in the msdb system table.
select * from sysssispackages
Or, connect to the Integration Services service, expand Stored Packages, and then expand MSDB. The package with the name UsingExecuteProcess will be listed.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime;
namespace LoadFromSQLServerTest
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// The variable, pkg, points to the location
// of the UsingExecuteProcess sample installed with
// the SSIS package samples.
string pkg = @"C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\100\Samples\Integration Services\Package Samples\ExecuteProcess Sample\ExecuteProcess\UsingExecuteProcess.dtsx";
Application app = new Application();
Package loadedPkg = app.LoadPackage(pkg, null);
// Save the package to SQL Server.
app.SaveToSqlServer(loadedPkg, null, "yourserver", null, null);
// The package can now be viewed in the
// Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio, in the
// Integration Services / Stored Packages / MSDB folder,
// with the name UsingExecuteProcess.
Package pkgIn = new Package();
pkgIn = app.LoadFromSqlServer("\\UsingExecuteProcess", "yourserver", null, null, null);
DateTime pkgCreation = pkgIn.CreationDate;
Console.WriteLine("Creation Date = {0}", pkgCreation);
}
}
}
Imports System
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Imports System.Text
Imports Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime
Namespace LoadFromSQLServerTest
Class Program
Shared Sub Main(ByVal args() As String)
' The variable, pkg, points to the location
' of the UsingExecuteProcess sample installed with
' the SSIS package samples.
Dim pkg As String = "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\100\Samples\Integration Services\Package Samples\ExecuteProcess Sample\ExecuteProcess\UsingExecuteProcess.dtsx"
Dim app As Application = New Application()
Dim loadedPkg As Package = app.LoadPackage(pkg,Nothing)
' Save the package to SQL Server.
app.SaveToSqlServer(loadedPkg, Nothing, "yourserver", Nothing, Nothing)
' The package can now be viewed in the
' Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio, in the
' Integration Services / Stored Packages / MSDB folder,
' with the name UsingExecuteProcess.
Dim pkgIn As Package = New Package()
pkgIn = app.LoadFromSqlServer("\\UsingExecuteProcess", "yourserver", Nothing, Nothing, Nothing)
Dim pkgCreation As DateTime = pkgIn.CreationDate
Console.WriteLine("Creation Date = {0}", pkgCreation)
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace
Sample Output:
Creation Date = 5/5/2003 5:46:00 PM
See Also
Application Class
Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime Namespace
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