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* Enable doc-validator for specific directories Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Fix one linting error to trigger CI Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Update doc-validator to latest release Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Update make-docs procedure Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Use doc-validator version from CI in local make target Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Revert to 1.11.0 Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * adds missing descriptions * Fix titles and headings Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Fix link formats Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Fix easy to resolve anchors Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Remove broken anchor link This anchor appears to have been broken for a long time. Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Use doc-validator image with support for numbered anchors Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Update make-docs procedure to support doc-validator 2.0.x Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Fix a bunch of broken anchors Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Ignore old whatsnew content Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * Update doc-validator to v2.0.x and use reviewdog to report errors Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> * removes broken links --------- Signed-off-by: Jack Baldry <jack.baldry@grafana.com> Co-authored-by: Chris Moyer <chris.moyer@grafana.com>
59 lines
4.2 KiB
Markdown
59 lines
4.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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aliases:
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- ../guides/getting_started/
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- ../guides/gettingstarted/
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- getting-started-sql/
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description: Learn how to build your first MS SQL Server dashboard in Grafana.
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title: Get started with Grafana and MS SQL Server
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weight: 500
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---
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# Get started with Grafana and MS SQL Server
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Microsoft SQL Server is a popular relational database management system that is widely used in development and production environments. This topic walks you through the steps to create a series of dashboards in Grafana to display metrics from a MS SQL Server database.
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#### Download MS SQL Server
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MS SQL Server can be installed on Windows or Linux operating systems and also on Docker containers. Refer to the [MS SQL Server downloads page](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/sql-server/sql-server-downloads), for a complete list of all available options.
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#### Install MS SQL Server
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You can install MS SQL Server on the host running Grafana or on a remote server. To install the software from the [downloads page](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/sql-server/sql-server-downloads), follow their setup prompts.
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If you are on a Windows host but want to use Grafana and MS SQL data source on a Linux environment, refer to the [WSL to set up your Grafana development environment](/blog/2021/03/03/.how-to-set-up-a-grafana-development-environment-on-a-windows-pc-using-wsl). This will allow you to leverage the resources available in [grafana/grafana](https://github.com/grafana/grafana) GitHub repository. Here you will find a collection of supported data sources, including MS SQL Server, along with test data and pre-configured dashboards for use.
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#### Add the MS SQL data source
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1. Click **Connections** in the left-side menu and filter by `mssql`.
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1. Select the **Microsoft SQL Server** option.
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1. Click **Create a Microsoft SQL Server data source** in the top right corner to open the configuration page.
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1. Enter the information specified in the table below, then click **Save & test**.
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| Name | Description |
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| ---------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| `Name` | The data source name. This is how you refer to the data source in panels and queries. |
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| `Host` | The IP address/hostname and optional port of your MS SQL instance. If port is omitted, the default 1433 will be used. |
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| `Database` | Name of your MS SQL database. |
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| `User` | Database user's login/username. |
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| `Password` | Database user's password. |
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For installations from the [grafana/grafana](https://github.com/grafana/grafana/tree/main) repository, `gdev-mssql` data source is available. Once you add this data source, you can use the `Datasource tests - MSSQL` dashboard with three panels showing metrics generated from a test database.
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Optionally, play around this dashboard and customize it to:
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- Create different panels.
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- Change titles for panels.
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- Change frequency of data polling.
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- Change the period for which the data is displayed.
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- Rearrange and resize panels.
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#### Start building dashboards
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Now that you have gained some idea of using the pre-packaged MS SQL data source and some test data, the next step is to setup your own instance of MS SQL Server database and data your development or sandbox area.
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To fetch data from your own instance of MS SQL Server, add the data source using instructions in Step 4 of this topic. In Grafana [Explore]({{< relref "../explore" >}}) build queries to experiment with the metrics you want to monitor.
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Once you have a curated list of queries, create [dashboards]({{< relref "../dashboards" >}}) to render metrics from the SQL Server database. For troubleshooting, user permissions, known issues, and query examples, refer to [Using Microsoft SQL Server in Grafana]({{< relref "../datasources/mssql" >}}).
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