Users can now edit active data sources without pausing & schedule source configuration changes to be applied at future dates and times. This update provides improved workflow flexibility and eliminates the need to make critical updates precisely when they should take effect.
The new source configuration scheduling capability transforms how teams manage data source updates by allowing configuration changes to be made to active sources without pausing them, and providing the flexibility to apply those changes immediately or schedule them for future application. Instead of editing sources to make configuration updates exactly when changes needed to take effect—often requiring off-hours work or precise timing coordination—users can edit active sources at any time and schedule modifications to be applied before the next ingestion cycle. This update dramatically improves operational convenience and reduces the risk of missed update windows.
🔷 Here's how scheduled source configuration enhances your data operations:
- Edit active sources without disruption
Modify and save configuration changes to active sources without pausing data ingestion, maintaining continuous data flow while preparing future updates. - Flexible scheduling control
Choose to apply changes immediately for urgent updates or schedule them for future application, giving you complete control over when modifications take effect in your data pipeline. - Advanced preparation capability
Configure source changes days or weeks in advance, enabling proactive management of planned data source updates, maintenance windows, or business requirement changes. - Enhanced schema detection
Regular activation calls during source creation ensure reliable schema detection and validation, maintaining data integrity throughout the scheduling process.
This enhancement eliminates the operational burden of precisely-timed configuration updates, allowing teams to prepare changes during business hours and apply them automatically at optimal times—significantly reducing coordination overhead and the risk of manual timing errors.