![]() |
VOOZH | about |
The CData ADO.NET Provider for SQL Analysis Services is fully integrated into the SAP Crystal Reports for Visual Studio development environment. You can employ standard ADO.NET components to construct reports, much like you would with SQL Server, but with the added advantage of real-time connectivity to SQL Analysis Services. This article will guide you through the essential three steps to incorporate SQL Analysis Services data into a report that refreshes upon opening.
Note: You will need to install SAP Crystal Reports, developer version for Visual Studio to follow this tutorial.
To follow this article, you will also need a Visual Studio Crystal Reports project. This article will add a report to a WPF application. You can create one by clicking File -> New Project and then selecting the Crystal Reports WPF Application template. In the resulting wizard, select the option to create a blank report.
Creating an ADO.NET data source for SQL Analysis Services from Server Explorer makes it easy to create a DataSet that can be used in Crystal Reports wizards and the Crystal Reports Designer. You can find a guide to working with SQL Analysis Services data in Server Explorer in the "Getting Started" chapter of the help documentation.
To connect, provide authentication and set the Url property to a valid SQL Server Analysis Services endpoint. You can connect to SQL Server Analysis Services instances hosted over HTTP with XMLA access. See the Microsoft documentation to configure HTTP access to SQL Server Analysis Services.
To secure connections and authenticate, set the corresponding connection properties, below. The data provider supports the major authentication schemes, including HTTP and Windows, as well as SSL/TLS.
Set AuthScheme to "Basic" or "Digest" and set User and Password. Specify other authentication values in CustomHeaders.
Set the Windows User and Password and set AuthScheme to "NTLM".
To authenticate with Kerberos, set AuthScheme to NEGOTIATE. To use Kerberos delegation, set AuthScheme to KERBEROSDELEGATION. If needed, provide the User, Password, and KerberosSPN. By default, the data provider attempts to communicate with the SPN at the specified Url.
By default, the data provider 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.
You can then access any cube as a relational table: When you connect the data provider retrieves SSAS metadata and dynamically updates the table schemas. Instead of retrieving metadata every connection, you can set the CacheLocation property to automatically cache to a simple file-based store.
See the Getting Started section of the CData documentation, under Retrieving Analysis Services Data, to execute SQL-92 queries to the cubes.
When you configure the connection, 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.
Follow the steps below to use the Visual Studio ADO.NET DataSet Designer to create an ADO.NET DataSet object. Crystal Reports will bind to the DataSet object, which contains SQL Analysis Services table metadata. Note that this approach also adds a connection string to App.config; you will use this connection string later to load data into the report.
Follow the steps below to add columns from the DataSet to the report:
Having created the DataSet, which will only contain the metadata, you will now need to create the DataTable containing the actual data. You can use the SSASDataAdapter to fill a DataTable with the results of an SQL query.
<startup useLegacyV2RuntimeActivationPolicy="true"> <supportedRuntime version="v4.0" sku=".NETFramework,Version=v4.0"/> </startup>
Add the following references in your Window.xaml.cs file:
using System.Configuration; using CrystalDecisions.CrystalReports.Engine; using CrystalDecisions.Shared; using System.Data.CData.SSAS; using System.Data;
Add the following Window_Loaded method in your Window.xaml.cs to execute the SQL query that will return the DataTable. Note that your query needs to select at least the same columns used in your report.
private void Window_Loaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e) {
ReportDocument report = new ReportDocument();
report.Load("../../CrystalReport1.rpt");
var connectionString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["MyAppConfigConnectionStringName"].ConnectionString;
using (SSASConnection connection = new SSASConnection(connectionString)) {
SSASDataAdapter dataAdapter = new SSASDataAdapter(
"SELECT Fiscal_Year, Sales_Amount FROM Adventure_Works", connection);
DataSet set = new DataSet("_set");
DataTable table = set.Tables.Add("_table");
dataAdapter.Fill(table);
report.SetDataSource(table);
}
reportViewer.ViewerCore.ReportSource = report;
}
In the Window.xaml file, add the Loaded event so that your Window tag resembles the following:
<Window x:Class="CrystalReportWpfApplication4.Window1" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation" xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml" xmlns:cr="clr-namespace:SAPBusinessObjects.WPF.Viewer;assembly=SAPBusinessObjects.WPF.Viewer" Title="WPF Crystal Report Viewer" Height="600" Width="800" Loaded="Window_Loaded"> ... </Window>
You can also use the DataSet with experts like the Chart Expert:
Note that Crystal Reports performs the aggregation on the data already loaded into DataTable, instead of, for example, executing a GROUP BY to the SQL Analysis Services API. This will also be true for the report creation wizards.
You could gain more control over the queries executed to SQL Analysis Services by creating another DataSet and populating it with a different query. See the help documentation for more information on the driver's SQL engine.
👁 DataSet columns to be added to a chart. (Salesforce is shown.)Download a free trial of the SQL Analysis Services Data Provider to get started:
Download NowLearn more:
👁 SQL Server Analysis Services IconRapidly create and deploy powerful .NET applications that integrate with SQL Analysis Services.