PowerShell for dedicated SQL pool (formerly SQL DW) in Azure Synapse Analytics
Many dedicated SQL pool administrative tasks can be managed using either Azure PowerShell cmdlets or REST APIs. Below are some examples of how to use PowerShell commands to automate common tasks in your dedicated SQL pool (formerly SQL DW). For some good REST examples, see the article Manage scalability with REST.
Note
We recommend that you use the Azure Az PowerShell module to interact with Azure. To get started, see Install Azure PowerShell. To learn how to migrate to the Az PowerShell module, see Migrate Azure PowerShell from AzureRM to Az.
Note
This article applies for standalone dedicated SQL pools (formerly SQL DW) and are not applicable to a dedicated SQL pool created in an Azure Synapse Analytics workspace. There are different PowerShell cmdlets to use for each, for example, use Suspend-AzSqlDatabase for a dedicated SQL pool (formerly SQL DW), but Suspend-AzSynapseSqlPool for a dedicated SQL pool in an Azure Synapse Workspace. For instructions to pause and resume a dedicated SQL pool created in an Azure Synapse Analytics workspace, see Quickstart: Pause and resume compute in dedicated SQL pool in a Synapse Workspace with Azure PowerShell. For more on the differences between dedicated SQL pool (formerly SQL DW) and dedicated SQL pools in Azure Synapse Workspaces, read What's the difference between Azure Synapse (formerly SQL DW) and Azure Synapse Analytics Workspace.
Get started with Azure PowerShell cmdlets
Open Windows PowerShell.
At the PowerShell prompt, run these commands to sign in to the Azure Resource Manager and select your subscription.
Connect-AzAccount Get-AzSubscription Select-AzSubscription -SubscriptionName "MySubscription"
Pause data warehouse example
Pause a database named "Database02" hosted on a server named "Server01." The server is in an Azure resource group named "ResourceGroup1."
Suspend-AzSqlDatabase –ResourceGroupName "ResourceGroup1" –ServerName "Server01" –DatabaseName "Database02"
A variation, this example pipes the retrieved object to Suspend-AzSqlDatabase. As a result, the database is paused. The final command shows the results.
$database = Get-AzSqlDatabase –ResourceGroupName "ResourceGroup1" –ServerName "Server01" –DatabaseName "Database02"
$resultDatabase = $database | Suspend-AzSqlDatabase
$resultDatabase
Start data warehouse example
Resume operation of a database named "Database02" hosted on a server named "Server01." The server is contained in a resource group named "ResourceGroup1."
Resume-AzSqlDatabase –ResourceGroupName "ResourceGroup1" –ServerName "Server01" -DatabaseName "Database02"
A variation, this example retrieves a database named "Database02" from a server named "Server01" that is contained in a resource group named "ResourceGroup1." It pipes the retrieved object to Resume-AzSqlDatabase.
$database = Get-AzSqlDatabase –ResourceGroupName "ResourceGroup1" –ServerName "Server01" –DatabaseName "Database02"
$resultDatabase = $database | Resume-AzSqlDatabase
Note
Note that if your server is foo.database.windows.net, use "foo" as the -ServerName in the PowerShell cmdlets.
Other supported PowerShell cmdlets
These PowerShell cmdlets are supported with Azure Synapse Analytics data warehouse.
- Get-AzSqlDatabase
- Get-AzSqlDeletedDatabaseBackup
- Get-AzSqlDatabaseRestorePoint
- New-AzSqlDatabase
- Remove-AzSqlDatabase
- Restore-AzSqlDatabase
- Resume-AzSqlDatabase
- Set-AzSqlDatabase
- Suspend-AzSqlDatabase
Next steps
For more PowerShell examples, see:
For other tasks that can be automated with PowerShell, see Azure SQL Database cmdlets. Not all Azure SQL Database cmdlets are supported for Azure Synapse Analytics data warehouse. For a list of tasks that can be automated with REST, see Operations for Azure SQL Database.