I built two new PowerShell commands to deploy SSRS projects, and they have finally been merged into the ReportingServicesTools module. The commands are Get-RsDeploymentConfig & Publish-RsProject. While the Write-RsFolderContent command did already exist, and is very useful, it does not support deploying the objects in your SSRS Project to multiple different folders in your report server. These two new commands can handle deployment to multiple folders.
The concept is fairly simple, first you run the Get-RsDeploymentConfig
command to pull in all the deployment-target details from the SSRS project file. In SSRS projects you can have multiple deployment configurations, so you can specify which configuration you want to use by supplying the name of that configuration for the -ConfigurationToUse parameter. This will give you back a PSObject with all the info it collected.
After that, you need to add the URL of the report portal manually (unfortunately, these are not included in the SSRS Project config files).
You can put all of that together and see the results like this:
$RSConfig = Get-RsDeploymentConfig –RsProjectFile ‘C:sourcereposFinancial ReportsSSRS_FRSSRS_FR.rptproj‘ –ConfigurationToUse Dev01 $RSConfig | Add-Member –PassThru –MemberType NoteProperty –Name ReportPortal –Value ‘http://localhost/PBIRSportal/‘
$RSConfig
Once that looks good to you, all you have to do is pipe that object to the Publish-RsProject command, and your deployment should start.
$RSConfig | Publish-RsProject
Some quick notes:
- Obviously, the account running these commands will need a copy of the SSRS project it can point to, as well as the necessary credentials to deploy to the SSRS/PRIRS server you point it to.
- For the Get-RsDeploymentConfig command, the SSRS project you are using must be in the VS 2019 project format. Otherwise, the command won’t know where to look for the correct info.
- If you don’t know the name of the configuration you want to use, just point Get-RsDeploymentConfig to the project file, and it will give you back a list of configuration options to choose from.
- Make sure you run Update-Module ReportingServicesTools
to get these new commands.
FYI: I only had two SSRS projects available to test these commands with. They worked great for those two projects, but your SSRS project might include some complexities that I just didn’t have in either of the projects I tested with. If you have any trouble making this work, please give me a shout or file a bug on the GitHub project and I will try to help out.
Big thanks to Doug Finke ( t ) for his code contributions, and Mike Lawell ( t ) for his help testing, to make these two commands a reality.
Deploy SSRS Projects with these two new PowerShell commands in the ReportingServicesTools module!
The post Deploy SSRS Projects with Two New PowerShell Commands first appeared on SQLvariations: SQL Server, a little PowerShell, maybe some Power BI.