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CData Connect Server

Import JDBC-ODBC Bridge Data into the Power BI Service for Visualizations



Use CData Connect Server to create an OData feed for JDBC-ODBC Bridge and create custom reports in the Power BI Service.

Power BI transforms your company's data into rich visuals for you to collect and organize so you can focus on what matters to you. When paired with CData Connect Server, you get access to JDBC-ODBC Bridge data for visualizations, dashboards, and more. This article shows how to use the CData Connect Server to generate an OData feed for JDBC-ODBC Bridge, import JDBC-ODBC Bridge data into Power BI and then create reports on JDBC-ODBC Bridge data in the Power BI service.

NOTE: You can also use the on-premise data gateway and the SQL interface in Connect Server to connect to JDBC-ODBC Bridge data in real-time (instead of importing the data). Read how in the related Knowledge Base article.

Create a Virtual SQL Database for JDBC-ODBC Bridge Data

CData Connect Server uses a straightforward, point-and-click interface to connect to data sources and generate APIs.

  1. Login to Connect Server and click Connections.
  2. Select "JDBC-ODBC Bridge" from Available Data Sources.
  3. Enter the necessary authentication properties to connect to JDBC-ODBC Bridge. To connect to an ODBC data source, specify either the DSN (data source name) or specify an ODBC connection string: Set Driver and the connection properties for your ODBC driver.
  4. Click Save Changes
  5. Click Privileges -> Add and add the new user (or an existing user) with the appropriate permissions.

Connecting to Connect Server from Power BI

To import and visualize your JDBC-ODBC Bridge data in the Power BI service, add a Connect Server API user, add JDBC-ODBC Bridge OData endpoints in Connect Server, and create & publish a dataset from Power BI Desktop to the service.

Add a Connect Server User

Create a User to connect to JDBC-ODBC Bridge from Power BI through Connect Server.

  1. Click Users -> Add
  2. Configure a User.
  3. Click Save Changes and make note of the Authtoken for the new user.
  4. Click Database and select the JDBC-ODBC Bridge virtual database.
  5. On the Privileges tab, add the newly created user (with at least SELECT permissions) and click Save Changes.

Publish a Dataset from Power BI Desktop

With the JDBC-ODBC Bridge connection configured in Connect Server, you can create a dataset in Power BI desktop using SQL Server connectivity and publish the dataset to the Power BI service.

  1. Open Power BI Desktop and click Get Data -> Other -> SQL Server and click "Connect"
  2. Set Server to the address and port of your CData Connect instance (localhost:8033 by default) and set Database to the name of the virtual database you just created (JDBCODBC1)
  3. Use "Database" authentication, enter the credentials for a CData Connect user and click "Connect"
  4. Select tables in the Navigator dialog
  5. Click Load to import the data into Power BI
  6. Define any relationships between the selected entities on the Relationships tab.
  7. Click Publish (from the Home menu) and select a Workspace.

Build Reports and Dashboards on JDBC-ODBC Bridge Data in the Power BI Service

Now that you have published a dataset to the Power BI service, you can create new reports and dashboards based on the published data:

  1. Log in to PowerBI.com.
  2. Click Workspaces and select a workspace.
  3. Click Create and select Report.
  4. Select the published dataset for the report.
  5. Choose fields and visualizations to add to your report.

SQL Access to JDBC-ODBC Bridge Data from Applications

Now you have a direct connection to live JDBC-ODBC Bridge data from the Power BI service. You can create more data sources and new visualizations, build reports, and more — all without replicating JDBC-ODBC Bridge data.

To get SQL data access to 200+ SaaS, Big Data, and NoSQL sources directly from your applications, see the CData Connect Server.