Public preview
This feature is public preview and available to select accounts. Reach out to your Immuta support professional to enable it on your tenant.
Connections allow you to register your data objects in a technology through a single connection, making data registration more scalable for your organization. Instead of registering schema and databases individually, you can register them all at once and allow Immuta to monitor your data platform for changes so that data sources are added and removed automatically to reflect the state of data on your data platform.
Once you register your connection, Immuta presents a hierarchical view of your data that reflects the hierarchy of objects in your data platform:
Host
Database
Schema
Tables: These represent the individual objects in your data platform, and when active, become data sources
Beyond making the registration of your data more intuitive, connections provides more control. Instead of performing operations on individual schemas or tables, you can perform operations (such as object sync) at the connection level.
See the Snowflake or Databricks Unity Catalog connection registration how-to guides for a list of requirements.
With connections, you configure the integration and register data sources simultaneously. Once you save your connection, Immuta manages and applies Snowflake or Unity Catalog governance features to data objects registered in Immuta.
Then, Immuta crawls your connection to register all tables within every schema and database that the Snowflake role or Databricks account credentials you provided during the registration has access to. The object metadata, user metadata, and policy definitions are stored in the Immuta metadata database, and this metadata is used to enforce policies for users accessing this data.
After initial registration, your connection can be crawled in two ways:
Periodic crawl: This crawl happens once every 24 hours. Currently, updating this schedule is not configurable.
Manual crawl: You can manually trigger a crawl of your host.
During these subsequent crawls of your connection, Immuta identifies tables, schemas, or databases that have been added or removed. If tables are added, new data sources are created in Immuta. If remote tables are deleted, the corresponding data sources and data objects will be removed from Immuta.
For more information about the Snowflake or Databricks Unity Catalog integration and and how policies are enforced, see the Snowflake integration reference guide or Databricks Unity Catalog integration reference guide.
When there is an active policy that targets the New
tag, Immuta sends validation requests to data owners for the following changes made in the remote data platform:
Column added: Immuta applies the New
tag on the column that has been added and sends a request to the data owner to validate if the new column contains sensitive data. Once the data owner confirms they have validated the content of the column, Immuta removes the New
tag from it and as a result any policy that targets the New
column tag no longer applies.
Column data type changed: Immuta applies the New
tag on the column where the data type has been changed and sends a request to the data owner to validate if the column contains sensitive data. Once the data owner confirms they have validated the content of the column, Immuta removes the New
tag from it and as a result any policy that targets the New
column tag no longer applies.
Column deleted: Immuta deletes the column from the data source's data dictionary in Immuta. Then, Immuta sends a request to the data owner to validate the deleted column.
Data source created: Immuta applies the New
tag on the data source that has been newly created and sends a request to the data owner to validate if the new data source contains sensitive data. Once the data owner confirms they have validated the content of the data source, Immuta removes the New
tag from it and as a result any policy that targets the New
data source tag no longer applies.
For instructions on how to view and manage your tasks and requests in the Immuta UI, see the Manage access requests guide. To view and manage your tasks and requests via the Immuta API, see the Manage data source requests section of the API documentation.
When registering a connection, Immuta sets the connection to the recommended default settings to protect your . The recommended settings are described below:
Object sync: This setting allows Immuta to monitor the connection for changes. When Immuta identifies a new table, a data source will automatically be created. Similarly, if remote tables are deleted, the corresponding data sources and data objects will be deleted in Immuta. This setting is enabled by default and cannot be disabled.
Default run schedule: This sets the time interval for Immuta to check for new objects. By default, this schedule is set to 24 hours.
Sensitive data discovery: This setting enables sensitive data discovery and allows you to select the sensitive data discovery framework that Immuta will apply to your data objects. This setting is enabled by default to use the preconfigured or global framework.
Impersonation: This setting enable and defines the role for user impersonation in Snowflake. User impersonation is not supported in the Databricks Unity Catalog integration. This setting is disabled by default.
Project workspaces: This setting enables Snowflake project workspaces. If you use Snowflake secure data sharing with Immuta, enable this setting, as project workspaces are required. If you use Snowflake table grants, disable this setting; project workspaces cannot be used when Snowflake table grants are enabled. Project workspaces are not supported in the Databricks Unity Catalog integration. This setting is disabled by default.
Deregistering a connection automatically deletes all of its child objects in Immuta. However, Immuta will not remove the objects in your Snowflake or Databricks account.
Snowflake and Databricks Unity Catalog are currently the only integrations that support connections
Databricks Unity Catalog: Delta shares are unsupported.