Table of Contents

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  1. Preface
  2. Transformations
  3. Source transformation
  4. Target transformation
  5. Access Policy transformation
  6. Aggregator transformation
  7. B2B transformation
  8. Chunking transformation
  9. Cleanse transformation
  10. Data Masking transformation
  11. Data Services transformation
  12. Deduplicate transformation
  13. Expression transformation
  14. Filter transformation
  15. Hierarchy Builder transformation
  16. Hierarchy Parser transformation
  17. Hierarchy Processor transformation
  18. Input transformation
  19. Java transformation
  20. Java transformation API reference
  21. Joiner transformation
  22. Labeler transformation
  23. Lookup transformation
  24. Machine Learning transformation
  25. Mapplet transformation
  26. Normalizer transformation
  27. Output transformation
  28. Parse transformation
  29. Python transformation
  30. Rank transformation
  31. Router transformation
  32. Rule Specification transformation
  33. Sequence transformation
  34. Sorter transformation
  35. SQL transformation
  36. Structure Parser transformation
  37. Transaction Control transformation
  38. Union transformation
  39. Vector Embedding transformation
  40. Velocity transformation
  41. Verifier transformation
  42. Web Services transformation

Transformations

Transformations

Passive mode configuration

Passive mode configuration

When you create an SQL transformation, you can configure it to run in passive mode instead of active mode. A passive transformation does not change the number of rows that pass through it. It maintains transaction boundaries and row types.
If you configure the SQL transformation to process a query, you can configure passive mode when you create the transformation. Configure passive mode in the transformation advanced properties.
When you configure the transformation as a passive transformation and a SELECT query returns more than one row,
Data Integration
returns the first row and an error to the SQLError field. The error states that the SQL transformation generated multiple rows.
If the SQL query has multiple SQL statements,
Data Integration
executes all statements but returns data for the first SQL statement only. The SQL transformation returns one row. The SQLError field contains the errors from all SQL statements. When multiple errors occur, they are separated by semicolons (
;
) in the SQLError field.

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