Power BI is turning 10, and we’re marking the occasion with a special community challenge. Use your creativity to tell a story, uncover trends, or highlight something unexpected.
Get startedJoin us at FabCon Vienna from September 15-18, 2025, for the ultimate Fabric, Power BI, SQL, and AI community-led learning event. Save €200 with code FABCOMM. Get registered
I am working on building a table in our Lakehouse that consolidates data from both CSV files and an ODBC connection. However, I encountered some challenges regarding the upload of CSV files directly in lakehouse GUI; specifically, the column types are not defined, which is leading to issues.
To address this, I have created a dataflow that consolidates the CSV files into a single table. Now, I would like to extend this table by appending data retrieved via the ODBC connection. The data sourced from the ODBC connection mirrors the data contained in the CSV files, which we save quarterly before deleting it from its original source.
Is there a way to verify whether the information from the CSV files is already present before appending the ODBC data to the Lakehouse table? Essentially, I would like to perform a check for existing records prior to the appending process.
Your insights on this process would be greatly appreciated! Maybe a dataflow is not the best approach here
Hi @joshua1990
Thanks for reaching out to the Microsoft fabric community forum.
Thanks for your prompt response
Step-by-Step Approach to Append ODBC Data to Lakehouse after Checking CSV History
1.Standardize Schema Early
You’ve likely done this in your dataflow, but just to be safe: define explicit column types and ensure both CSV and ODBC sources match. You can do this in Power Query inside your Dataflow by setting each column's data type manually this avoids schema drift or mismatches downstream
2.Stage ODBC Data in a Temporary Table
Before appending to your main table, load the ODBC data into a staging table in the Lakehouse (e.g., stg_odbc_quarterly). You can ingest using Dataflow Gen2, Pipelines, or even a Notebooks-based Fabric data task
3.Deduplicate with a SQL Statement
Once you have both datasets available in the Lakehouse, use a MERGE or INSERT ... SELECT SQL statement with a NOT EXISTS or LEFT JOIN condition to append only new records:
INSERT INTO final_consolidated_table
SELECT *
FROM stg_odbc_quarterly AS o
WHERE NOT EXISTS (
SELECT 1
FROM final_consolidated_table AS f
WHERE f.primary_key = o.primary_key
);
Make sure the primary_key (or composite key) you're comparing is consistent between both CSV and ODBC sources.
If this post helped resolve your issue, please consider the Accepted Solution. This not only acknowledges the support provided but also helps other community members find relevant solutions more easily.
We appreciate your engagement and thank you for being an active part of the community.
Best regards,
LakshmiNarayana.
Two things to keep in mind
1. CSV data sources by definition do not fold.
2. The smallest granularity you can achieve with non-folding data sources is the partition level. The smallest partition you can create via normal means is a daily partition
Ideally you would load all that data into a SQL database (in Fabric or elsewhere) and then do the deduplication there.
@lbendlin : Why not just using a dataflow instead of creating a full SQL database for the deduplication?
A dataflow is just a bunch of CSV files in Azure Blob storage. Duplication of storage for no functional gain.
This is your chance to engage directly with the engineering team behind Fabric and Power BI. Share your experiences and shape the future.
Check out the June 2025 Fabric update to learn about new features.
User | Count |
---|---|
2 | |
1 | |
1 | |
1 | |
1 |
User | Count |
---|---|
4 | |
3 | |
1 | |
1 | |
1 |