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Category: Microsoft Fabric

Trying out Fabric Unified Admin Monitoring

Reitse Eskens tries out a tool for monitoring Microsoft Fabric installations:

Let me set the scene quickly for you. You’re working for an organisation where Fabric is in the process of being adopted or it’s already fully in use. Regardless of the number of capacities, workspaces, etc, you’re interested in what’s going on in your Fabric environment. You have questions like “Who is using the reports?”, “Who is changing settings in the Admin panel?” and “How is my capacity being used?”.

Read on for a single tool that can solve these sorts of questions.

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The Small Data Showdown in Microsoft Fabric

Miles Cole does a bit of testing:

First, let’s revisit the purpose of the benchmark: The objective is to explore data engineering engines available in Fabric to understand whether Spark with vectorized execution (the Native Execution Engine) should be considered in small data architectures.

Beyond refreshing the benchmark to see if any core findings have changed, I do want to expand in a few areas where I got great feedback from the community:

I really appreciate the approach behind this, both in terms of sticking to more realistic data sizes for many operations as well as performing this test given all of the recent improvements in each engine.

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Incremental Copy Job in Microsoft Fabric now GA

Ye Xu has an announcement:

Copy job has been a go-to tool for simplified data ingestion in Microsoft Fabric, offering a seamless data movement experience from any source to any destination. Whether you need batch or incremental copying, it provides the flexibility to meet diverse data needs while maintaining a simple and intuitive workflow.

We continuously refine Copy job based on customer feedback, enhancing both functionality and user experience. In this update, we’re introducing several key improvements designed to streamline your workflow and boost efficiency.

Click through to see what’s new.

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Customer Managed Keys in OneLake

Harmeet Gill shows us how we can bring our own keys to data in OneLake:

One of the highly requested features in Microsoft Fabric is now available: the ability to encrypt data in OneLake using your own keys. As organizations face growing data volumes and tighter regulatory expectations, Customer-Managed Keys (CMK) offer a powerful way to enforce enterprise-grade security and ensure strict ownership of encryption keys and access.

With Microsoft’s OneLake, we’ve built a unified data lake that’s open, secure, and ready for enterprise scale. Now, with support for CMK, we’re giving customers the power to take encryption into their own hands.

Read on to learn more about Microsoft’s default for data encryption, and how you can use your own keys to encrypt the data.

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Microsoft Fabric Extension for VS Code Update

Sunitha Muthukrishna has an update:

Microsoft Fabric Extension for VS Code enables users to manage Fabric items efficiently from within VS Code. We are announcing two new features for Microsoft Fabric Extension for VS Code that allow you to manage Fabric items directly within your workspace. These enhancements are based on customer feedback, and we welcome further input to improve this product.

Click through to see what’s new in the product.

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What’s New in Microsoft Fabric, June 2025 Edition

Patrick LeBlanc has a big list for us:

The June 2025 Fabric update introduces several key enhancements across multiple areas. Power BI celebrates its 10th anniversary with a range of community events, contests, expert-led sessions, and special certification exam discounts. In Data Engineering, Fabric Notebooks now support integration with variable libraries in preview, empowering users to manage configuration values centrally for improved modularity and scalability.

Additional updates span Data Science, Data Warehouse, Real-Time Intelligence, and Data Factory, with new features such as upgraded AI functions, enhanced real-time data capabilities, and improvements to data ingestion and security. These updates collectively aim to streamline workflows, boost performance, and foster greater collaboration across teams.

Click through for the full update.

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Writeback Options in Power BI

Jon Vöge comes continues looking at Power BI writeback:

This blog has previously covered the basics of native Microsoft Fabric / Power BI write-back with Translytical Task Flows.

In my first post on the subject, we created a simple Comment/Annotation solution, allowing the user to input free text comments on Data Points directly in Power BI.

However, Translytical Task Flows do not only support Free Text as an input type for the users of your reports. All of the new & updated Power BI Slicer visuals work with Translytical Task Flows, and we can use List and Button slicers for users to add categorical data to our task flows too.

Read on to see these other options in action.

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OneLake Security Updates

Aaron Merrill shares some news:

It’s been almost 3 months since we announced OneLake security at FabCon 2025 in Las Vegas, and while the interest has not slowed down, we’ve also been working behind the scenes to improve the feature and address your feedback. In this blog post, we’ll go through some of the latest updates on OneLake security including further support for OneLake shortcuts, improved RLS authoring, and updated permissions to manage OneLake security.

Read on to see what has changed.

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Inline Scalar UDFs in Microsoft Fabric Warehouse

Srdjan Martin has an announcement:

SQL native Scalar user-defined functions (UDFs) in Microsoft Fabric Warehouse and SQL analytics endpoint are now in preview.

A scalar UDF is a custom code implemented in T-SQL that accepts parameters, performs an action such as complex calculation, and returns a result of that action as a single value.

I wonder if the same advice for SQL Server will apply to these: don’t use them because they are performance sinks. Knowing that these are scalar functions, I’d be inclined to do some considerable performance testing before rolling them out.

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