The most common issue faced with Reporting is with the Service Account losing authorization. You can find the resolution for this in the section of this article here: Service account has lost authorization
Question 1
I’m getting a message that says "Reporting restart has been initiated" and that "this can take some time depending on the number of work items in DevOps and worklogs in 7pace Timetracker." Why is my reporting page being restarted?
Question 2
7pace Timetracker Reporting or API (and therefore Excel, PowerBi, etc.) is not working and I am seeing "Current Report State is Being processed" (for more than a day now) / "Error Calling DevOps API" / "API call returns Unauthorized message." Why is my Reporting or API not working?
Answer
The Reporting page may be restarting or processing due to the following reasons:
The Reporting page was accessed for the very first time by someone in your DevOps organization and is being refreshed.
SOLUTION: This is normal behavior and no action is necessary. Please wait for Reporting to build.Reporting & API were not used for six (6) months or more.
SOLUTION: This is normal behavior and no action is necessary. Please wait for Reporting to rebuild.Reporting was restarted manually by someone from Settings -> Reporting & API.
SOLUTION: Please wait for the restart to complete in order to use 7pace Timetracker Reporting.Your Service Account has lost authorization.
SOLUTION: The user who is set as your Service Account user needs to log in and access any 7pace Timetracker page, where they will be prompted to authorize 7pace Timetracker. It is required for the Service Account user to authorize Timetracker by using a DevOps PAT.
In order to check which user is set as the Service Account, please navigate to 7pace Timetracker Settings -> Reporting and API -> Service Account.
The time necessary for Reporting to process all data depends on the amount of data you have both in 7pace Timetracker and in Azure DevOps. It can take from 30 minutes to several hours in some cases (up to 4 hours).
If the reporting restart is taking longer, you will need to check the reporting health state error message by navigating to 7pace Timetracker Settings -> Reporting & API and click on the Details button:
COMMON REPORTING AND API ERRORS FOUND UNDER CURRENT REPORT STATE / API ERROR MESSAGES
Problem: Error with Service Account authorization/permissions:
You will find keywords like Token, authorize, Service Account in the reporting state error details
Examples:
Could not perform request to DevOps Services. Token may be invalid. Refresh token or check AAD Settings.
7pace Timetracker is not authorized. Personal Access Token (PAT) has expired or has been revoked.
Error occurred calling the DevOps API. Please click Details for more info.
Token for Service Account … is empty
Solution: Your Service Account user needs to log in and access any 7pace Timetracker page, where they will be prompted to authorize 7pace Timetracker. It is required for the Service Account user to authorize 7pace Timetracker by using a DevOps PAT.
Problem: Cannot insert the value NULL into column 'System_State', table 'tfstimetracker_db.dbo.WorkItemCacheEntry'; column does not allow nulls. UPDATE fails.
Solution: This issue can only be solved with the help of the 7pace team, so please contact 7pace Timetracker Support at support@7pace.com.
Question 3
I'm receiving an error saying “Not allowed parameter in request” when I try to execute an Odata request on the workitem-related endpoint with $select=WorkItem. What should I do?
Answer
Worklogs can be tracked via comments only, and for those worklogs, the complex property WorkItem is null. Odata can't process null for complex types on workitem-related endpoints. Add a filter to exclude the workitem with the null value, e.g.
$filter=WorkItem ne null
and the error message should disappear.
Question 4
Why do I get a timeout expired error from the Timetracker Reporting API and how do I avoid it?
Answer
Some fields that the Reporting API endpoints return are not just stored in our database as values, but calculated every time that users make requests. These are referred to as calculated fields.
Calculating these fields - "TrackedItself", "TrackedTotal", "TrackedItselfBillable", "TrackedTotalBillable" - is a heavy operation, so retrieving them can take a considerable amount of time. This might lead to a "timeout expired" exception if a user requests a large amount of data. In this case, we suggest decreasing the amount of data by using more filters or removing calculated fields from the select statement if you don't need them.
How to sort and filter by calculated fields
Usually, it's relatively easy to sort or filter data by some value, but with calculated fields, their values should be calculated first and then filtered or sorted. For example, let's say a user runs a query that returns the first 100 rows ordered by TrackedItself field. Only 100 rows are requested, but the application has to calculate TrackedItself for the whole organization's work items based on all worklogs that were ever tracked to just sort them.
The same approach is true for filtering by calculated fields - both operations are extremely heavy and there's a good chance that it could lead to a timeout exception. That's why we've made additional filtering required.
Right now, it's impossible to sort or filter by a calculated field based on all data for all times. If such a filter or order is added to query, then using worklogsFilter becomes required to limit the number of worklogs for calculation. Learn more about worklogsFilter here.
Here are some examples:
// this query is allowed because it doesn't use sorting or filtering by a calculated field
https://your_org_name.timehub.7pace.com/api/odata/v3.0/workitems?$select=System_Id,System_WorkItemType,TrackedItself&$filter=System_TeamProject eq 'My project'
// following queries will throw an exception
// because worklogsFilter is not used and values are calculated basing on all worklogs
https://your_org_name.timehub.7pace.com/api/odata/v3.0/workitems?$select=System_Id,System_WorkItemType,System_TeamProject,TrackedItself&$filter=System_TeamProject eq 'My project'&$orderby=TrackedItself desc
https://your_org_name.timehub.7pace.com/api/odata/v3.0/workitems?$select=System_Id,System_WorkItemType,System_TeamProject,TrackedItself&$filter=System_TeamProject eq 'My project' and TrackedItself ge 3600
// these queries are allowed -
// although they use filtering or sorting by a calculated field
// those calculations are based on worklogs filered by dates,
// so TrackedItself would contain sums of worklogs from a specified month only
https://your_org_name.timehub.7pace.com/api/odata/v3.2/workitems?$select=System_Id,System_WorkItemType,System_TeamProject,TrackedItself&$filter=System_TeamProject eq 'My project'&$orderby=TrackedItself desc&worklogsFilter=Timestamp ge 2023-05-01 and Timestamp lt 2023-09-01
https://your_org_name.timehub.7pace.com/api/odata/v3.2/workitems?$select=System_Id,System_WorkItemType,System_TeamProject,TrackedItself&$filter=System_TeamProject eq 'My project' and TrackedItself ge 3600&worklogsFilter=Timestamp ge 2023-05-01 and Timestamp lt 2023-09-01
Sort and filter by other fields
Most work item fields can be used in any statement without any issues, but some of them are not really expected to be used for filtering or sorting, so queries are slow in such cases.
You can find the list of fields available to sort by in your 7pace Timetracker Reporting API Reference, at the very end of the bottom of the Reference page in the ReportingWorkItem model schema.
Below you can find a list of some of the available fields:
System_AreaId
System_CreatedBy
System_NodeName
System_Reason
System_RevisedDate
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_Blocked
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_FoundInEnvironment
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_HowFound
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_Probability
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_RequirementType
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_RequiresReview
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_RequiresTest
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_RootCause
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_TargetResolveDate
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_TaskType
Microsoft_VSTS_CMMI_UserAcceptanceTest
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_ActivatedBy
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_ActivatedDate
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_BacklogPriority
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_BusinessValue
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_ClosedBy
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_ClosedDate
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_Discipline
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_Issue
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_Priority
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_Rating
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_ResolvedBy
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_ResolvedDate
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_ResolvedReason
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_ReviewedBy
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_Risk
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_Severity
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_StackRank
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_StateChangeDate
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_TimeCriticality
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_Triage
Microsoft_VSTS_Common_ValueArea
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_CompletedWork
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_DueDate
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_Effort
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_FinishDate
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_OriginalEstimate
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_RemainingWork
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_Size
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_StartDate
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_StoryPoints
Microsoft_VSTS_Scheduling_TargetDate
Question 5
How to solve "Response 406.0 from Timetracker server" error?
I'm trying to use the reporting API Odata endpoint from Excel, but I'm getting a HTTP 406 error: "Response 406.0 from Timetracker server". My coworker, who is using a different version of Excel gets a different error along the lines of "Unexpected error. Cannot access a disposed object ..." etc. Can you help?
Answer
These are known issues in the latest versions of Excel and Power BI* that have already been reported to Microsoft.
Here is a related topic in Power BI.
If you receive “Error 406” when connecting Excel to 7pace Timetracker’s reporting API, please check the query details through the Advanced Editor:
If you find the Implementation=”2.0” setting, please remove it from the query and check if the issue persists:
If you were not able to resolve your issues by following the steps described, please contact 7pace Timetracker Support at support@7pace.com.