While this is saving, you’ll see on your ADF page that Save as Template is grayed out but underneath that you’ll see 2 new Save buttons pop up.This is where all your branching will merge back, as well as where a copy of all the changes you’ve made will be published to the Azure Data Factory that runs, via trigger or event. Collaboration Branch: I suggest you stick with Master.Git Repository Name: We can create a new one or use the existing repository when we created it.Choose Project Name (the one we just created).Select Azure DevOps account that it’s associated with (my account in this case).Select Repository Type: Azure DevOps Git.This will open Repository Settings where we can set up the connection to the code repository we just created.In the upper left corner, you’ll see Data Factory and when you pull that drop-down, click on Set Up Code Repository. While that’s creating, I’ll go back into my Data Factory.You could go also into Advanced and change your version control and work item process (I’ll work in Agile). First step is to log into Azure DevOps () then click on New Project, fill in the default fields and click Create.In this demo, I’ll work with Azure DevOps. Azure DevOps supports two versions of a code repository: Azure DevOps and GitHub. I’ve created a simple Data Factory that counts and copies an author cable from an Azure SQL Database to an Azure Storage Blob.
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