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CData Connect Server

Integrate Azure Data Catalog Data into Automated Tasks with Power Automate



Use CData Connect Server to create a virtual SQL Server database for Azure Data Catalog data and integrate live Azure Data Catalog data into your Power Automate (Microsoft Flow) tasks.

Power Automate (Microsoft Flow) is an online service that automates events (known as workflows) across the most common apps and services. When paired with CData Connect Server, you get instant, cloud-to-cloud access to Azure Data Catalog data for visualizations, dashboards, and more. This article shows how to connect to Connect Server from Power Automate and integrate live Azure Data Catalog data into your workflows and tasks.

CData Connect Server provides a pure SQL interface for Azure Data Catalog, allowing you to easily integrate with live Azure Data Catalog data in Power Automate — without replicating the data. CData Connect Server looks exactly like a SQL Server database to Power Automate and uses optimized data processing out of the box to push all supported SQL operations (filters, JOINs, etc) directly to Azure Data Catalog, leveraging server-side processing to quickly return Azure Data Catalog data.

Create a Virtual SQL Database for Azure Data Catalog Data

CData Connect Server uses a straightforward, point-and-click interface to connect to data sources and generate APIs.

  1. Login to Connect Server and click Connections.
  2. Select "Azure Data Catalog" from Available Data Sources.
  3. Enter the necessary authentication properties to connect to Azure Data Catalog.

    You can optionally set the following to read the different catalog data returned from Azure Data Catalog.

      CatalogName: Set this to the CatalogName associated with your Azure Data Catalog. To get your Catalog name, navigate to your Azure Portal home page > Data Catalog > Catalog Name

    Connect Using OAuth Authentication

    You must use OAuth to authenticate with Azure Data Catalog. OAuth requires the authenticating user to interact with Azure Data Catalog using the browser. For more information, refer to the OAuth section in the help documentation.

  4. Click Save Changes
  5. Click Privileges -> Add and add the new user (or an existing user) with the appropriate permissions.

Connecting to CData Connect Server

To use Connect Server to integrate Azure Data Catalog data into your Power Automate tasks, you need a new SQL Server connection:

  1. Log in to Power Automate
  2. Click Data -> Connections -> New connection
  3. Select SQL Server
  4. In the connection wizard:

    • Set Authentication Type to "SQL Server Authentication"
    • Set SQL server name to the address of your Connect Server instance (connect_server_url)
    • Set SQL database name to the name of the virtual Azure Data Catalog database you created earlier (like azuredatacatalogdb)
    • Set the Username and Password and click Create

Integrating Azure Data Catalog Data into Power Automate Tasks

With the connection to Connect Server configured, you are ready to integrate live Azure Data Catalog data into your Power Automate tasks.

  1. Log in to Power Automate
  2. Click My flows -> New and choose to create the flow from blank or template
  3. Add (or configure) a SQL Server action (like Get rows) and configure the action to connect to your Connect Server connection
  4. Select a Table to work with (from the drop-down menu) and configure any advanced options (like filters, orders, etc)
  5. Configure any actions to follow and test, then save the flow

SQL Access to Azure Data Catalog Data from Applications

Now you have a direct connection to live Azure Data Catalog data from Power Automate tasks. You can create more connections and workflows to drive business — all without replicating Azure Data Catalog data.

To get SQL data access to 200+ SaaS, Big Data, and NoSQL sources directly from your applications, see the CData Connect Server.

Related Power Automate Articles

This article walks through using CData Connect Server with Power Automate (Online). Check out our other articles for more ways to work with Power Automate Desktop: