Book Image

SQL Server 2016 Reporting Services Cookbook

By : Dinesh Priyankara, Robert Cain
Book Image

SQL Server 2016 Reporting Services Cookbook

By: Dinesh Priyankara, Robert Cain

Overview of this book

Microsoft SQL Server 2016 Reporting Services comes with many new features. It offers different types of reporting such as Production, Ad-hoc, Dashboard, Mash-up, and Analytical. SQL Server 2016 also has a surfeit of new features including Mobile Reporting, and Power BI integration. This book contains recipes that explore the new and advanced features added to SQL Server 2016. The first few chapters cover recipes on configuring components and how to explore these new features. You’ll learn to build your own reporting solution with data tools and report builder, along with learning techniques to create visually appealing reports. This book also has recipes for enhanced mobile reporting solutions, accessing these solutions effectively, and delivering interactive business intelligence solutions. Towards the end of the book, you’ll get to grips with running reporting services in SharePoint integrated mode and be able to administer, monitor, and secure your reporting solution. This book covers about the new offerings of Microsoft SQL Server 2016 Reporting Services in comprehensive detail and uses examples of real-world problem-solving business scenarios.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
SQL Server 2016 Reporting Services Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.Packtpub.com
Preface

How to publish reports


In this recipe, we will provide a brief overview of how to publish reports to the new SSRS 2016 Report Portal. Formerly called Report Manager in previous versions of SQL Server, the Report Portal has been completely redesigned.

Getting ready

For this recipe, we won't be creating new reports; instead we will be using the reports we've created in this chapter.

You will need to know the two URLs for your report portal. Yes, two. One is the user interface with which users can browse your reports. The other is the backend you will send the reports to when you publish them. The tool to find both of these is the Reporting Services Configuration Manager.

Go to the Start menu, locate Microsoft SQL Server 2016, and open the Reporting Services Configuration Manager. On versions of Windows without a desktop start menu, such as Windows 8 or Windows Server 2012 R2, you can use the search option.

When it opens, you'll need to connect to your server. For SQL Server 2016 Developer Edition...