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Hi - PowerBI Service allows you to view report usage via the Admin Portal and in the service. Is this possible in Report Server. We are moving to report server and it would be nice to see report usage metrics.
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@shera276 The Power BI Report Server sits on a SQL instance (the same as normal SSRS) you have access to all the capabilities and information stored in the database. the view "dbo.ExecutionLog3" will provide you the metrics that you are looking for.
@shera276 The Power BI Report Server sits on a SQL instance (the same as normal SSRS) you have access to all the capabilities and information stored in the database. the view "dbo.ExecutionLog3" will provide you the metrics that you are looking for.
Hi @shera276: I have the same question. Did you get the required audit info from this view?
Thanks
Hi @hernan_russy - Until this is available in Report Server, I created reports based on the following suggestion by another PowerBI users in the community:
'The Power BI Report Server sits on a SQL instance (the same as normal SSRS) you have access to all the capabilities and information stored in the database. the view "dbo.ExecutionLog3" will provide you the metrics that you are looking for.'
So I connected to the dbo.ExecutionLog3 view from our SQL database and was able to create some usage stats.
It would be good to have Usage Statistics function in Report Server
I've created the same process, I pull the data from the log files into a table on a daily basis via a SP
Then I can create reports in SSRS or Power BI by date by user, or even which reports have the longest rendering time
SELECT Substring (el2.username,4,20) as Logs_User, el2.ReportPath as Logs_ReportPath, CONVERT(varchar,el2.TimeStart,111) as Logs_Date, el2.TimeStart as Logs_TimeStart, el2.TimeEnd as Logs_TimeEnd, el2.[Status] as Logs_Status FROM Portal.dbo.ExecutionLog2 el2 --Portal is the name of my Report Server where ReportPath not like '/02%' and Status = 'rsSuccess' and ReportPath != 'Unknown' and CONVERT(varchar,el2.TimeStart,111) = CONVERT(varchar,getdate()-1,111) and username not like 'NT SERVICE%' and Format not like 'E%' and ByteCount != 0
hope this helps
cheers,
Dave
Hi DaveW
Thanks for your input. We are building a small repository of PBI Report Server and this has been helpful. I am in the process of using your script and merging that together with view of users and their access and all reports. Could you please explain your choice of restrictions in the script. I can see that the Where ByteCount != 0 eliminates about 95% of all rows from the original LOG table. Are these all irrelevant for measuring usage?
Thanks again,
Bjarki
Hey Bjarki,
good to hear it's helped. I just opened a PBI report with slicers, before I selected any slicer options I looked at the Log and I could see multiple rows, the only row where ByteCount != 0 there was another field: ItemAction with value: ConceptualSchema
So you could also filter on this.
When I then selected some slicer options in the PBI report and looked at the Log, I could see more rows but all had ByteCount = 0 and ItemAction = QueryData. So I would either use the ByteCount != 0 or the ItemAction field = ConceptualSchema in your report filter.
I'd suggest to do some testing with opening various reports with multiple functions and work out the triggers that you need to filter
enjoy... Dave
@hernan_russy The report server won't mimc the same metrics that you see in Power BI in that view. It will essentially provide you with who or what process executed the report. I have not tested this completely with Power BI Desktop executions, but my understanding is that this will be tracked in the same fashion.
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