![]() |
VOOZH | about |
The CData Cmdlets Module for Dynamics 365 is a standard PowerShell module offering straightforward integration with Dynamics 365. Below, you will find examples of using our Dynamics365 Cmdlets with native PowerShell cmdlets.
CData simplifies access and integration of live Microsoft Dynamics 365 data. Our customers leverage CData connectivity to:
CData customers use our Dynamics 365 connectivity solutions for a variety of reasons, whether they're looking to replicate their data into a data warehouse (alongside other data sources) or analyze live Dynamics 365 data from their preferred data tools inside the Microsoft ecosystem (Power BI, Excel, etc.) or with external tools (Tableau, Looker, etc.).
Edition and OrganizationUrl are required connection properties. The Dynamics 365 connector supports connecting to the following editions: CustomerService, FieldService, FinOpsOnline, FinOpsOnPremise, HumanResources, Marketing, ProjectOperations and Sales.
For Dynamics 365 Business Central, use the separate Dynamics 365 Business Central driver.
OrganizationUrl is the URL to your Dynamics 365 organization. For instance, https://orgcb42e1d0.crm.dynamics.com
$conn = Connect-Dynamics365 -OrganizationUrl "$OrganizationUrl" -Edition "$Edition" -InitiateOAuth "$InitiateOAuth"
Follow the steps below to retrieve data from the GoalHeadings table and pipe the result into to a CSV file:
Select-Dynamics365 -Connection $conn -Table GoalHeadings | Select -Property * -ExcludeProperty Connection,Table,Columns | Export-Csv -Path c:\myGoalHeadingsData.csv -NoTypeInformation
You will notice that we piped the results from Select-Dynamics365 into a Select-Object cmdlet and excluded some properties before piping them into an Export-Csv cmdlet. We do this because the CData Cmdlets append Connection, Table, and Columns information onto each "row" in the result set, and we do not necessarily want that information in our CSV file.
The Connection, Table, and Columns are appended to the results in order to facilitate piping results from one of the CData Cmdlets directly into another one.The following line deletes any records that match the criteria:
Select-Dynamics365 -Connection $conn -Table GoalHeadings -Where "Name = MyAccount" | Remove-Dynamics365
The cmdlets make data transformation easy as well as data cleansing. The following example loads data from a CSV file into Dynamics 365, checking first whether a record already exists and needs to be updated instead of inserted.
Import-Csv -Path C:\MyGoalHeadingsUpdates.csv | %{
$record = Select-Dynamics365 -Connection $Dynamics365 -Table GoalHeadings -Where ("Id = `'"+$_.Id+"`'")
if($record){
Update-Dynamics365 -Connection $dynamics365 -Table GoalHeadings -Columns ("GoalHeadingId","Name") -Values ($_.GoalHeadingId, $_.Name) -Where ("Id = `'"+$_.Id+"`'")
}else{
Add-Dynamics365 -Connection $dynamics365 -Table GoalHeadings -Columns ("GoalHeadingId","Name") -Values ($_.GoalHeadingId, $_.Name)
}
}
As always, our goal is to simplify the way you connect to data. With cmdlets users can install a data module, set the connection properties, and start building. Download Cmdlets and start working with your data in PowerShell today!
Download a free trial of the Dynamics 365 Cmdlets to get started:
Download NowLearn more:
👁 Dynamics 365 IconAn easy-to-use set of PowerShell Cmdlets offering real-time access to Dynamics 365. The Cmdlets allow users to easily read, write, update, and delete live data - just like working with SQL server.