Data Driver

Blog archive

Microsoft Encourages Oracle Migrations to SQL Server 2014

Microsoft yesterday unveiled an updated SQL Server Migration Assistant (SSMA) to ease moving existing Oracle databases to SQL Server 2014.

It's the latest back-and-forth effort between the two companies to help users of competitors' RDBMS products switch to each company's own offering.

The free SSMA tool was announced on the TechNet SQL Server Blog.

"Available now, the SSMA version 6.0 for Oracle databases greatly simplifies the database migration process from Oracle databases to SQL Server," Microsoft said. "SSMA automates all aspects of migration including migration assessment analysis, schema and SQL statement conversion, data migration as well as migration testing to reduce cost and reduce risk of database migration projects."

SQL Server 2014 -- officially released in April -- features a new, much-publicized in-memory OLTP capability, and the new SSMA for Oracle can automatically move Oracle tables into SQL Server 2014 in-memory tables. Microsoft said SSMA can process up to 10,000 Oracle objects in one migration and boasts increased performance and report generation.

The new tool supports migrations of Oracle 9i databases and later to SQL Server 2005 editions and later. It's now available for download.

In addition to the in-memory OLTP capability, SQL Server 2014 features in-memory columnstore to boost query performance and hybrid cloud-related features such as the ability to back up to the cloud directly from SQL Server Management Studio. Microsoft also touted its ability to use the Microsoft Azure cloud as a disaster recovery site using SQL Server 2014 AlwaysOn. SQL Server 2014 is available for evaluation.

Oracle: your turn.

Posted by David Ramel on 07/25/2014


comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Uno Platform Studio and 'Hot Design' Reach General Availability

    Uno Platform, a .NET-centric open source project for building single-codebase apps across multiple platforms, this week announced v6.0 of its flagship offering, which introduces a zero-install, web-based IDE for rapid cross-platform development, alongside a modernized app architecture that embraces MVU and .NET-style extensions.

  • Mads Kristensen Eyes MCP Server for Visual Studio Copilot

    "What MCP server would be helpful to use with Copilot in Visual Studio? I want to write one."

  • Two Different Takes on Cursor/Copilot Vibe Coding Supremacy

    Cursor and GitHub Copilot go head-to-head in a pair of firsthand reviews. One coder returns to Copilot after it adds support for top LLMs. A coding writer falls for Cursor’s conversational style and beginner-friendly flow.

  • Linear Regression with Two-Way Interactions Using C#

    Dr. James McCaffrey from Microsoft Research presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of linear regression with two-way interactions between predictor variables. Compared to standard linear regression, which predicts a single numeric value based only on a linear combination of predictor values, linear regression with interactions can handle more complex data while retaining a high level of model interpretability.

  • Vibe Writing

    Why outline when you can prompt? Vibe writing is the new vibe coding, and yes, it’s exactly what it sounds like.

Subscribe on YouTube

Upcoming Training Events

0 AM
Visual Studio Live! San Diego
September 8-12, 2025
Live! 360 Orlando
November 16-21, 2025
Cloud & Containers Live! Orlando
November 16-21, 2025
Data Platform Live! Orlando
November 16-21, 2025
Visual Studio Live! Orlando
November 16-21, 2025