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Power BI transforms your company's data into rich visuals for you to collect and organize so you can focus on what matters to you. When paired with CData Connect AI, you get instant access to Microsoft Planner data for visualizations, dashboards, and more. This article shows how to build and publish a dataset from Microsoft Planner data in Power BI and then create reports on Microsoft Planner data in the Power BI service.
CData Connect AI provides a pure SQL interface for Microsoft Planner, allowing you to easily build reports from live Microsoft Planner data in Power BI β with no need to replicate the data. As you build visualizations, Power BI generates SQL queries to gather data. Using optimized data processing out of the box, CData Connect AI pushes all supported SQL operations (filters, JOINs, etc) directly to Microsoft Planner, leveraging server-side processing to quickly return Microsoft Planner data.
NOTE: You can also import Microsoft Planner data into Power BI through Connect AI (instead of using the on-premise gateway). Read how in the related Knowledge Base article.
Connectivity to Microsoft Planner from Power BI is made possible through CData Connect AI. To work with Microsoft Planner data from Power BI, we start by creating and configuring a Microsoft Planner connection.
You can connect without setting any connection properties for your user credentials. Below are the minimum connection properties required to connect.
When you connect the Driver opens the MS Planner OAuth endpoint in your default browser. Log in and grant permissions to the Driver. The Driver then completes the OAuth process.
When connecting to Connect AI through the REST API, the OData API, or the Virtual SQL Server, a Personal Access Token (PAT) is used to authenticate the connection to Connect AI. It is best practice to create a separate PAT for each service to maintain granularity of access.
With the connection configured and a PAT generated, you are ready to connect to Microsoft Planner data from Power BI.
To connect to and visualize live Microsoft Planner data in the Power BI service, install the on-premise data gateway, add a data source to the gateway from the Power BI service, and publish a dataset from Power BI Desktop to the service.
The Microsoft on-premise data gateway provides secure data transfer between connected data sources and various cloud-based Microsoft tools and platforms. You can read more about the gateway in the Microsoft documentation.
You can download and install the gateway from the Power BI service:
Once you have installed the data gateway, you add Connect AI as a data source to the Power BI service:
With the gateway installed and Connect AI added as a datasource to the Power BI service, you can publish a dataset from Power BI Desktop to the service.
Power BI detects each column's data type from the Microsoft Planner metadata reported by Connect AI.
Power BI records your modifications to the query in the Applied Steps section, adjusting the underlying data retrieval query that is executed to the remote Microsoft Planner data. When you click Close and Apply, Power BI executes the data Retrieval query.
Otherwise, click Load to pull the data into Power BI.
Now that you have published a dataset to the Power BI service, you can create new reports and dashboards based on the published data:
Now you have a direct connection to live Microsoft Planner data from the Power BI service. You can create more data sources and new visualizations, build reports, and more β all without replicating Microsoft Planner data.
To get live data access to hundreds of SaaS, Big Data, and NoSQL sources directly from your cloud applications, sign up for a free trial of CData Connect AI.
Learn more about CData Connect AI or sign up for free trial access:
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