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We are trying to configure the Power BI Snowflake connection for reporting purposes. We followed the Microsoft documentation by setting up the SSO, a few questions:
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi, @117325
Yes, you can use Azure Key Vault to store the password for the service account securely and retrieve it programmatically during runtime. Here are the high-level steps you can follow:
Bring your own encryption keys for Power BI - Power BI | Microsoft Learn
Best Regards,
Community Support Team _Charlotte
If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.
Hi, @117325
Yes, you can use a service account for initial Azure AD authentication. This is a common practice for connecting to Snowflake from Power BI.
Regarding your second question, while Azure Key Vault can be used to store and manage secrets, it is not a replacement for Azure AD authentication. You will still need to use Azure AD to authenticate to Snowflake. However, you can use Azure Key Vault to securely store the credentials needed to authenticate with Snowflake.
I would recommend following the Microsoft documentation for setting up the Power BI Snowflake connection, as it provides a step-by-step guide for using Azure AD authentication and securely storing credentials using Azure Key Vault. Connect to Snowflake with Power BI - Power BI | Microsoft Learn
Best Regards,
Community Support Team _Charlotte
If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.
I would recommend following the Microsoft documentation for setting up the Power BI Snowflake connection, as it provides a step-by-step guide for using Azure AD authentication and securely storing credentials using Azure Key Vault. Connect to Snowflake with Power BI - Power BI | Microsoft Learn
Linked documentation does not even mention key vault. Did you provide correct link?
Hi, @117325
Yes, you can use Azure Key Vault to store the password for the service account securely and retrieve it programmatically during runtime. Here are the high-level steps you can follow:
Bring your own encryption keys for Power BI - Power BI | Microsoft Learn
Best Regards,
Community Support Team _Charlotte
If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.
Yes, you can use Azure Key Vault to store the password for the service account securely and retrieve it programmatically during runtime. Here are the high-level steps you can follow:
- 1. Create an Azure Key Vault instance and store the password for the service account as a secret in the Key Vault.
- 2. In your Power BI report, use the Azure Key Vault REST API to retrieve the secret during runtime.
- 3. Use the retrieved password to authenticate with Snowflake.
Bring your own encryption keys for Power BI - Power BI | Microsoft Learn
How is CMK related with the steps you listed? Wrong link again?
Is there actual documentations for the steps you listed?
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