Release Notes 4.4.0¶
Improvements¶
On the execution result catalog page, we now show the exact statement run to get that result.
Bug Fixes¶
Users no longer see private conversations listed. Previously, a user could see the title of a private conversation, but not view the contents.
You can now share articles with any email address. Previously, you could only share with Alation users.
If you sort queries by “Last Execution” we are now sorting by last executed date. Previously we were sorting by last successful run.
All columns now display properly in the Column tab on the Table page. Previously pages two and beyond displayed as faded out.
When logging in via Internet Explorer, icons now always appear to indicate what each field is. Previously, the icons would not render in some cases.
You can now remove top users from a Data Source, even if you aren’t the owner of the Data Source. Previously, you needed to be the owner of the data source.
A version of the article is saved each time you hit “save.” Previously, we collapsed edits together if they were within fifteen minutes of each other.
Articles that have been deleted are now marked “[Gone]” when referenced in Custom Fields, as they are elsewhere.
Lexicon pages are now only viewable by admins.
In Advanced Search, you can now edit the titles of queries when clicking on the pencil. Previously we were opening the query in a new window.
The column filter in the Compose results pane now displays properly.
You can now view the text in the “While you’re waiting…” text field when using Dusk Compose.
Viewing a previous version of an article now correctly shows the custom field values at that time. Previously we showed the custom field values for the most recent version.
“Download Data Dictionary” no longer includes objects that were excluded from the catalog.
Admin Release Notes
Bug Fixes¶
We no longer incorrectly report a “not running” error for a sync job (metadata extraction, profiling, or query log ingestion) that actually is running. Previously this could happen arbitrarily based on fluctuation in an operating system metric we use.