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I am kind of new to SSIS, I'm following along some vidoes for .dtsx package deployment, however I just realized that I do not have the Integration Services Catalogs node in SSMS, also I do not have the Integration Services Instance of the system with File System or MSDB. Here's what it should be: enter image description here

I'm currently running SSMS v17.4 and I installed SSDT seperately, directly from MS website. I have Visual Studio 2017 SSDT version 15.9.11. I am clueless when it comes to this. Any help will be greatly appreciated. and here's what mine looks like: enter image description here

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In the first image, that is demonstrating the SQL Engine Explorer {Win-H8UQ1E4NSCN (SQL server 11.0.5058)} in the top portion and the Integration Services explorer {Win-H8UQ1E4NSCN (Integration Services 11.0.5058)}

The Integration Services Catalog correlates to packages stored in the SSISDB. If you have a full instance of SQL Server running, you can right click on the Integration Services and select Create Catalog to get things ready. This is only applicable to SQL Server 2012 and greater instances. This type of deployment will be referenced as Project Deployment Model and is the default project deployment type starting with 2012 (where it was introduced)

The IS explorer looks for packages in the MSDB or the SSIS Package Store (file system location approximately in Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\CantRemember). This is supported for 2005 to current. (For new development, I would not advocate the Package Deployment Model)

The second image is your machine {DESKTOP-54CO0D7\SQLEXPRESS (SQL Server 14.0.2002)} That is an Express instance. If you expand the Business Intelligence section of SQL Server Editions you can observe that Integration Services is unchecked for Express Edition. That is why you won't have the expected nodes available to you.

However, the Integration Services (image 1, part 2) explorer should be available to you. In Object Explorer, click the down arrow under Connect

Connect, Integration Services..

Personally, I detested working with the IS Explorer because it's weird. Your instance is localhost\SQLEXPRESS When you open a connection, that is what you specify. However for IS Explorer, you'd just specify localhost No named instance \SQLExpress If you had 2 instances on a single machine, you could only use the IS explorer to communicate with one of them. Ultimately, I found it easier to just work with the methods in msdb and the dtutil.exe to install/delete packages, create folders, etc than work with the IS explorer node. Oh, and it only runs packages in ...32 or 64 bit mode. Something wonky that is now relegated to my archival memory.

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  • thanks a lot, i didn't even realize that it wasn't accessible for Express. I just realized that I can get Developer for free as well (i'm doing this from home, I have enterprise SSMS at work)
    – Koosh
    Apr 23, 2019 at 1:50

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