docs-mintlify/docs/integrations/snowflake-semantic-views.mdx
Snowflake Semantic Views integration is available in Cube on the Enterprise plan.
</Info>Cube supports bi-directional integration with Snowflake Semantic Views. This integration enables you to author views in Cube and use them in Snowflake, or work with Snowflake semantic views directly in Cube. This ensures consistency between your Cube definitions and Snowflake's semantic layer, allowing teams to work in their preferred environment.
The Snowflake Semantic Views integration provides two-way synchronization between Cube and Snowflake:
This bi-directional approach ensures that your semantic layer definitions remain consistent across both platforms, regardless of where they are authored.
From the IDE, users can pull semantic views from Snowflake and turn them into cubes and views in Cube. The pull integration generates code files with cube and view definitions in your Cube repository, making it easy to work with existing Snowflake semantic views.
This allows you to leverage existing Snowflake semantic views in Cube without manual conversion, ensuring consistency between your Snowflake and Cube definitions.
Alternatively, you can push Cube views into Snowflake as native semantic views. The push integration creates DDL from Cube's definitions and executes it in Snowflake, creating Snowflake Semantic Views that match your Cube schema.
This enables you to use Cube-authored views directly in Snowflake, maintaining consistency across both platforms.
The push integration uses the SQL Runner to execute DDL statements in Snowflake. To successfully create semantic views, ensure the following:
CUBEJS_DB_SNOWFLAKE_ROLE)
has privileges to create semantic views in the target database and schema
(CREATE SEMANTIC VIEW on the schema, plus USAGE on the parent database and schema).USAGE on the warehouse specified by CUBEJS_DB_SNOWFLAKE_WAREHOUSE
and SELECT on the underlying tables referenced by the view.CUBEJS_DB_SNOWFLAKE_QUOTED_IDENTIFIERS_IGNORE_CASE
is set consistently with how identifiers are defined in your Cube data model. The
default value is false.If a push fails with a permissions error, verify that Enable DDL operations is turned on in your deployment configuration and that the configured role has the required privileges listed above. See Snowflake data source configuration for the full list of relevant environment variables.
Cube's data modeling layer is broader than what can be expressed natively in Snowflake Semantic Views today, so not every Cube view can be pushed as-is. Views that rely on the features below will continue to work in Cube, and the push wizard will flag them during validation so you can adjust them or keep them in Cube only.
When pushing a Cube view to Snowflake, the following are currently not supported:
sql_table. Each cube referenced by the view must be
backed by a physical table. Cubes defined with an arbitrary sql block
(subqueries, CTEs, or other inline SQL) can't be pushed.primary_key dimension that resolves to a single physical column. Composite
primary keys and primary keys defined as SQL expressions aren't supported.LOWER({CUBE}.user_id) = {users.id}),
inequality operators, OR conditions, and other expression-based join
conditions can't be translated.count, count_distinct, sum, avg, min, and max.
Cube measures that combine other measures, apply per-measure filters, or use
rolling windows don't have a direct equivalent and can't be pushed.We're working closely with Snowflake to expand coverage as Snowflake Semantic Views evolves.
The Snowflake Semantic Views integration provides several advantages: