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This article shows how to connect to SAP Business Warehouse from Jaspersoft Studio as a standard JDBC data source with the CData JDBC Driver for SAP Business Warehouse. You will use the standard Jaspersoft wizards to build SQL queries to SAP Business Warehouse. The queries are executed directly to the SAP Business Warehouse APIs, enabling real-time connectivity to SAP Business Warehouse data.
To create a JDBC data source in Jaspersoft Studio, create a data adapter:
To connect to SAP Business Warehouse, set the URL property to a valid SAP Business Warehouse server base URL. The driver must connect to SAP Business Warehouse instances hosted over HTTP with XMLA access.
The driver supports the following authentication schemes via the AuthScheme property:
By default, the driver attempts to negotiate SSL/TLS by checking the server's certificate against the system's trusted certificate store. To specify another certificate, see the SSLServerCert property for the available formats.
For assistance in constructing the JDBC URL, use the connection string designer built into the SAP Business Warehouse JDBC Driver. Either double-click the JAR file or execute the jar file from the command-line.
java -jar cdata.jdbc.sapbusinesswarehouse.jar
Fill in the connection properties and copy the connection string to the clipboard.
π Using the built-in connection string designer to generate a JDBC URL (Salesforce is shown.)When you configure the JDBC URL, you may also want to set the Max Rows connection property. This will limit the number of rows returned, which is especially helpful for improving performance when designing reports and visualizations.
Below is a typical JDBC URL for SAP Business Warehouse:
jdbc:sapbusinesswarehouse:URL=https://mysapserver:8000;AuthScheme=Basic;User=username;Password=password;π A data adapter configured to use the JDBC Driver. (Salesforce is shown.)
Follow the steps below to build an SQL query to SAP Business Warehouse, the basis of a simple report:
SELECT CustomerCount, City FROM Sales WHERE Country = 'US'π The SQL query to be used to pull data into the report. (Salesforce is shown.)
In the Preview tab, you can see the report as it would look with the current SAP Business Warehouse data.
π A JasperReport template populated with live data. (Salesforce is shown.)The following sections show how to create a chart tied to its own SQL query. When retrieving the data from the remote data source, more restrictive queries, written for specific report objects, can result in faster performance.
Follow the steps below to create a new dataset to populate the chart:
SELECT CustomerCount, City FROM Sales WHERE Country = 'US'π The SQL query to be used to fill the chart. (Salesforce is shown.)
After adding the dataset, follow the steps below to map column values to the chart axes in the chart wizard:
Specify the y-axis values: In the chart wizard, click the button next to the Value box. In the Expression Editor, double-click City to set the expression to $F{City}.
$F{CustomerCount}.toString()
π Columns selected for the axes of the chart.You can now generate reports on SAP Business Warehouse data just as you would any other JDBC data source. Jaspersoft Studio periodically refreshes the data across report runs.
π The finished report's last page, displaying the chart. (Salesforce is shown.)Download a free trial of the SAP Business Warehouse Driver to get started:
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π SAP Business Warehouse IconRapidly create and deploy powerful Java applications that integrate with SAP Business Warehouse.