Hi all,
I would like to see a list of all the scheduled refresh jobs.
Where is that visible?
Or do I have to run some kind of report to see it?
I want to be sure I do not have 50 reports all set to run at the same moment every day (or even 2 or 3) - I would have to imagine that would cause some kind of problem...
I am running the March (2018) update of On Premises Report Server
Solved! Go to Solution.
It's not entirely straight forward or obvious how you query this. There are a number of tables in the ReportServer DB that need to be linked together but you also have to hop onto MSDB to get the actual schedule details. The actual refresh jobs get built as SQL agent jobs with GUIDs for names. These GUIDS track back to the schedules you create in SSRS in the ReportServer DB.
This query gives you a good chunk of the kind of data you might need. Other stuff is available in the various tables but this gives you a decent starting point for how it all hooks together to generate somehting useful
SELECT e.name AS ReportName ,e.path AS ReportPath ,d.description as SubscriptionName , a.SubscriptionID , d.laststatus , d.eventtype , d.LastRunTime ,j.date_created AS ScheduleCreatedDate ,j.date_modified AS ScheduleModifiedDate ,CASE j.[enabled] WHEN 1 THEN 'Yes' WHEN 0 THEN 'No' END AS Job_Enabled ,CASE sch.[enabled] WHEN 1 THEN 'Yes' WHEN 0 THEN 'No' END AS Schedule_enabled, CASE sch.freq_type WHEN 1 THEN 'Once' WHEN 4 THEN 'Daily' WHEN 8 THEN 'Weekly' WHEN 16 THEN 'Monthly' WHEN 32 THEN 'Monthly relative' WHEN 64 THEN 'When SQLServer Agent starts' END AS Frequency, CASE sch.active_start_date WHEN 0 THEN null ELSE substring(convert(varchar(15),sch.active_start_date),1,4) + '-' + substring(convert(varchar(15),sch.active_start_date),5,2) + '-' + substring(convert(varchar(15),sch.active_start_date),7,2) END AS ScheduleStartDate, CASE len(sch.active_start_time) WHEN 3 THEN cast('00:0' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,3),1) +':' + right(sch.active_start_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 4 THEN cast('00:' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,4),2) +':' + right(sch.active_start_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 5 THEN cast('0' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,5),1) +':' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,4),2) +':' + right(sch.active_start_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 6 THEN cast(Left(right(sch.active_start_time,6),2) +':' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,4),2) +':' + right(sch.active_start_time,2) as char (8)) END AS ScheduleStartTime ,CASE jsch.next_run_date WHEN 0 THEN null ELSE substring(convert(varchar(15),jsch.next_run_date),1,4) + '-' + substring(convert(varchar(15),jsch.next_run_date),5,2) + '-' + substring(convert(varchar(15),jsch.next_run_date),7,2) END AS nextRunDate, CASE len(jsch.next_run_time) WHEN 3 THEN cast('00:0' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,3),1) +':' + right(jsch.next_run_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 4 THEN cast('00:' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,4),2) +':' + right(jsch.next_run_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 5 THEN cast('0' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,5),1) +':' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,4),2) +':' + right(jsch.next_run_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 6 THEN cast(Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,6),2) +':' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,4),2) +':' + right(jsch.next_run_time,2) as char (8)) END AS NextRunTime FROM ReportServer.dbo.ReportSchedule a LEFT OUTER JOIN ReportServer.dbo.ReportSchedule c ON a.ScheduleID = c.ScheduleID LEFT OUTER JOIN ReportServer.dbo.Subscriptions d ON c.SubscriptionID = d.SubscriptionID LEFT OUTER JOIN ReportServer.dbo.[Catalog] e ON d.report_oid = e.itemid LEFT OUTER JOIN msdb.dbo.sysjobs j ON CAST(a.ScheduleID AS VARCHAR(100)) = j.name LEFT OUTER JOIN msdb.dbo.sysjobschedules jsch ON j.job_id = jsch.job_id LEFT OUTER JOIN msdb.dbo.sysschedules sch ON sch.schedule_id = jsch.schedule_id
-- to find specific report last status -- WHERE e.name = 'Usage Stats'
-- to find failed status --WHERE -- LastStatus <> 'Completed Data Refresh'
-- or for a specific SQL Agent Job --WHERE
--b.name = '9B7BED26-A81C-479C-A23B-016C9E05E760' -- NOTE you have to look in subscription history for any error messages/details and decode the JSON response (good luck with that!)
SSMS-->Databases-->ReportServer-->Tables-->Schedule
Maybe it's not the "Schedule" table but it's in a table somewhere.
It's not entirely straight forward or obvious how you query this. There are a number of tables in the ReportServer DB that need to be linked together but you also have to hop onto MSDB to get the actual schedule details. The actual refresh jobs get built as SQL agent jobs with GUIDs for names. These GUIDS track back to the schedules you create in SSRS in the ReportServer DB.
This query gives you a good chunk of the kind of data you might need. Other stuff is available in the various tables but this gives you a decent starting point for how it all hooks together to generate somehting useful
SELECT e.name AS ReportName ,e.path AS ReportPath ,d.description as SubscriptionName , a.SubscriptionID , d.laststatus , d.eventtype , d.LastRunTime ,j.date_created AS ScheduleCreatedDate ,j.date_modified AS ScheduleModifiedDate ,CASE j.[enabled] WHEN 1 THEN 'Yes' WHEN 0 THEN 'No' END AS Job_Enabled ,CASE sch.[enabled] WHEN 1 THEN 'Yes' WHEN 0 THEN 'No' END AS Schedule_enabled, CASE sch.freq_type WHEN 1 THEN 'Once' WHEN 4 THEN 'Daily' WHEN 8 THEN 'Weekly' WHEN 16 THEN 'Monthly' WHEN 32 THEN 'Monthly relative' WHEN 64 THEN 'When SQLServer Agent starts' END AS Frequency, CASE sch.active_start_date WHEN 0 THEN null ELSE substring(convert(varchar(15),sch.active_start_date),1,4) + '-' + substring(convert(varchar(15),sch.active_start_date),5,2) + '-' + substring(convert(varchar(15),sch.active_start_date),7,2) END AS ScheduleStartDate, CASE len(sch.active_start_time) WHEN 3 THEN cast('00:0' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,3),1) +':' + right(sch.active_start_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 4 THEN cast('00:' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,4),2) +':' + right(sch.active_start_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 5 THEN cast('0' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,5),1) +':' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,4),2) +':' + right(sch.active_start_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 6 THEN cast(Left(right(sch.active_start_time,6),2) +':' + Left(right(sch.active_start_time,4),2) +':' + right(sch.active_start_time,2) as char (8)) END AS ScheduleStartTime ,CASE jsch.next_run_date WHEN 0 THEN null ELSE substring(convert(varchar(15),jsch.next_run_date),1,4) + '-' + substring(convert(varchar(15),jsch.next_run_date),5,2) + '-' + substring(convert(varchar(15),jsch.next_run_date),7,2) END AS nextRunDate, CASE len(jsch.next_run_time) WHEN 3 THEN cast('00:0' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,3),1) +':' + right(jsch.next_run_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 4 THEN cast('00:' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,4),2) +':' + right(jsch.next_run_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 5 THEN cast('0' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,5),1) +':' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,4),2) +':' + right(jsch.next_run_time,2) as char (8)) WHEN 6 THEN cast(Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,6),2) +':' + Left(right(jsch.next_run_time,4),2) +':' + right(jsch.next_run_time,2) as char (8)) END AS NextRunTime FROM ReportServer.dbo.ReportSchedule a LEFT OUTER JOIN ReportServer.dbo.ReportSchedule c ON a.ScheduleID = c.ScheduleID LEFT OUTER JOIN ReportServer.dbo.Subscriptions d ON c.SubscriptionID = d.SubscriptionID LEFT OUTER JOIN ReportServer.dbo.[Catalog] e ON d.report_oid = e.itemid LEFT OUTER JOIN msdb.dbo.sysjobs j ON CAST(a.ScheduleID AS VARCHAR(100)) = j.name LEFT OUTER JOIN msdb.dbo.sysjobschedules jsch ON j.job_id = jsch.job_id LEFT OUTER JOIN msdb.dbo.sysschedules sch ON sch.schedule_id = jsch.schedule_id
-- to find specific report last status -- WHERE e.name = 'Usage Stats'
-- to find failed status --WHERE -- LastStatus <> 'Completed Data Refresh'
-- or for a specific SQL Agent Job --WHERE
--b.name = '9B7BED26-A81C-479C-A23B-016C9E05E760' -- NOTE you have to look in subscription history for any error messages/details and decode the JSON response (good luck with that!)
Gday,
This is great. Not sure why there is a self join in there... it was giving me duplicate results:
FROM ReportServer.dbo.ReportSchedule a LEFT OUTER JOIN ReportServer.dbo.ReportSchedule c ON a.ScheduleID = c.ScheduleID
This was brilliant thank you!
It took me such a long time to reply because I do not have database level access to this server, and so I had to wait for my IT team to reate a view on another server I do have databse access that presents this data. And as it turned out, I ended up waiting until we hired a new DBA, and that ended up being one of his first jobs...