cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Does datasphere work good with ECC or should it be with S4/Hana

tek_ib
Explorer
332

Hello

Gurus,

I would like to know that if SAP Datasphere with work fine with ECC 6.0 as far as performance and all the features are concerned or Is it best delivered in when connected with S4/HANA.

We have ECC 6.0 and our roadmap to implement S4 in 2027 but we are trying to do PoC  on Datasphere which is connected with ECC and I am just wondering what are the advantages or pros & cons of datasphere connected with ECC or should we wait for S4 and then implement datasphere.

Thanks for your advice in advance.

Regards

View Entire Topic
Matt_Sisley
Explorer

Datasphere is very much optimised for S/4HANA but it's compatible with ECC. Semantic Onboarding and Datasphere Business Content are all oriented towards SAP S/4HANA and the CDS View architecture.

Datasphere has an ABAP Connector and an ECC Connector which can be used to access data from within an ECC system using a number of different approaches including remote tables.

Datasphere adds tremendous value to your business through improved insights, better decision making and next generation self-serviceability. There's no reason to defer those opportunities until you move to SAP S/4HANA. It's true that you may want to rework some of the data integration when you move to S/4HANA but the effort to optimise those integrations is trivial when compared to the benefits you'll unlock by using Datasphere for the intervening period.  

tek_ib
Explorer
0 Kudos
Thanks for the reply Matt. Since S4HANA is based on HANA inmemory database whereas ECC is on Oracle database how is the performance compared when connected to Datasphere as far as data loading is concerned. Is there any use case you can refer me so I can read. Thanks
Matt_Sisley
Explorer
0 Kudos
It's not generally a concern but it is good idea to avoid doing large full loads, especially at times when there are user actively working on the system. General data warehousing good practice applies i.e. deltas, efficient code, potentially queues rather than direct reads, etc.