Expose the same Report Manager interface as in previous versions of SSRS
Expose the same Report Manager interface as in previous versions of SSRS
View, search, print, and subscribe to reports.
Create, secure, and maintain the folder hierarchy to organize items on the server.
Configure role-based security that determines access to items and operations.
Configure report execution properties, report history, and report parameters.
Create report models that connect to and retrieve data from a Microsoft SQL Server Analysis Services data source or from a SQL Server relational data source.
Set model item security to allow access to specific entities in the model, or map entities to predefined clickthrough reports that you create in advance.
Create shared schedules and shared data sources to make schedules and data source connections more manageable.
Create data-driven subscriptions that roll out reports to a large recipient list.
Create linked reports to reuse and repurpose an existing report in different ways.
Launch Report Builder to create reports that you can save and run on the report server.
2 comments
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Kevin O'Sullivan
commented
I agree expose the Report manager interface through the existing Azure portal. The simple directory listing of the reports looks very crude and not very user friendly to end users. Also include the 'Bread-Crumb' link so that the users know where they are in the report hierarchy and can navigate it without resorting to the browser 'back page' control.
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Anonymous
commented
You can use an on-premise report manager to manage a SQL Azure Reporting server. Refer to:
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/andy_yunxin_wus_weblog/archive/2011/11/17/sql-azure-reporting-with-on-premise-report-manager.aspx