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Make backing tables consumable as financial dimensions

This article provides the steps to make a backing table usable as a Financial dimension.

Important

Don't create financial dimensions that have values that are not reusable or use one-to-one dimension value combinations. A physical table, and not a view must be used as a source of dimension values for a DimAttribute[BackingTable] view you will create in the following steps. Though using a view as the base data source may seem to work, financial reporting queries will fall back to row-by-row processing to get the dimension fact data imported to the database. This results in extremely slow performance or broken reports.

The primary table that is to be used as a source of financial dimension data MUST have a unique natural key value of 30 characters or less, and that value MUST resolve to a single RECID within that table. The extended Name column can come from another source join (such as DirPartyTable or elsewhere) because it is used only for displaying additional context to the user and isn't used to resolve uniqueness on natural key entry.

Financial dimensions should be reusable values needed for transaction and analytical processes. These dimensions should represent sources of data that can provide high level of reuse across multiple transactions. Don't select a backing table that supplies identity data that represents high volatility when represented with other dimension values. This can increase storage and processing costs and negatively impact performance and analytical value.

Examples of highly variable data include timestamps and identifiers that are frequently incremented, such as:

  • Documents
  • Sales orders
  • Purchase orders
  • Transactions
  • Checks
  • Serials
  • Tickets
  • License numbers

These are considered highly variable values and shouldn't be used as financial dimensions. The correct use is to implement these as financial tags. For more information about financial tags, see Financial tags.

By following these steps, your view automatically appears in the Use values from drop-down menu on the Financial dimensions page, and the values are populated on the Financial dimension values page.

Note

If your dimension is backed by the OMOperatingUnit table then many of the steps are already completed for you. Follow the steps in the "Add a new OMOperatingUnit type backed entity" section.

Step 1: Create a view

The first step is to create a view in the same model as your backing table. Before you complete the following steps, verify that the backing table has Create Rec Id Index = Yes in the Table Properties pane. Alternatively, ensure that the table has a unique index and RECID is the first segment of that index.

  1. In your project, click Add > New Item. Select View and then click Add.

  2. Right-click View and select Rename. Name the view DimAttribute[BackingTableName]. For example, DimAttributeCustTable.

  3. Expand View Metadata, and then drag your table to the Data Sources node on the view.

  4. Rename the node from BackingTableName to BackingEntity.

  5. Identify the key, value, and name for the table that you want to use as a financial dimension. Find the fields and drag to the BackingEntity data source list, or copy and paste the fields on the data source. Rename the three fields to:

    • Key – This is the surrogate key, typically the RecID.
    • Value - This is the natural key, for example the AccountNum. It is a string up to 30 characters.
    • Name – This is the description, which is typically the Name or Description field. It is a string up to 60 characters.
  6. You may need to create a Range on the view if the backing table removes data. For example, if you are using an Operating unit and only want Department, use the range for that operating unit.

  7. Right-click Indexes and select New Index. Select Value as the Data field on the Properties pane. You can rename the index if needed, however, you need to set Allow Duplicates to No.

  8. Right-click Indexes and select New Index. Select Name as the Data field on the Properties pane. You can rename the index if needed, however, you need to set Allow Duplicates to Yes.

  9. Click View, and in the Properties pane, set the Singular label field to the reference label ID of your choice. This should be the label that indicates a single value, such as Customer.

  10. Set the Label field to the reference label ID of your choice. This should be the label that indicates multiple values, such as Customers. This value shows in the drop-down list in the Use Values from field on the Financial dimensions page.

  11. Enter Value in the TitleField1 field in the Properties pane.

  12. Enter Name in the TitleField2 field in the Properties pane.

  13. Review the backing table properties and identify the config key it is using. On View, enter the same Configuration key as the backing table.

    Important

    Security access must be granted to non-admin users for the new view.

    • For releases 7.2 and earlier where over-layering is used - Search for DimensionEssentials and add it to the Project. Expand DimensionEssentials, right-click Permissions, and then select New Permission. In the Properties pane, set the Access Level to Read. Click Security Privilege and add the view under the Permissions node with an Access Level of Read. You may need to extend one of these into the model that you're using.
    • For releases 7.3 and later where extensions are used - Create a new Security Privilege in your custom model alongside the new view. Right-click the Permissions node, and choose New Permission. Enter the name of new DimAttribute[DimensionName] view created above in step 2 and set the Access Level to Read. Search for Security Duty SysServerAXBasicMaintain. Right-click and choose Create extension. Rename the extension as appropriate. Drag-and-drop the newly created Security Privilege into the Privileges list.
  14. Right-click View and select View Code. Add the following code to the view. This registers it in the dimension framework. Here's an example using the view created for CustTable.

    [SubscribesTo(classstr(DimensionEnabledType),
    delegatestr(DimensionEnabledType,
    registerDimensionEnabledTypeIdentifiersDelegate))]
    
    public static void registerDimensionEnabledTypeIdentifier(DimensionIEnabledType _dimensionEnabledType)
    {
       _dimensionEnabledType.registerViewIdentifier(tablestr(DimAttribute**CustTable**));
    }
    
  15. Select Microsoft Dynamics 365 and click Options. Select Best Practices. Select your model and then scroll until you find Microsoft.Dynamics.AX.Framework.ViewRules/ViewDimensionEnabledTypeChecker. Verify that the rule and its children are selected.

  16. Build and then synchronize the view.

Step 2: Validate that the view returns the correct data in SQL

At this point you should be able to run the following query in SQL Server Management Studio to ensure that it's pulling the correct data. Here's an abbreviated example using the view created for CustTable.

select * from DIMATTRIBUTECUSTTABLE

 

KEY VALUE DATA AREA ID PARTITION RECID NAME PARTITION #2
22565425322 US_SI_0129 ussi 5637144576 22565425322 Adventure Services 5637144576
22565424579 US_SI_0128 ussi 5637144576 22565424579 Alpine Electronics 5637144576

Step 3: Override methods on the backing table

To integrate with the dimensions framework when deleting or renaming the natural key of the backing table, you must write custom code on the backing table's delete method, and on either the update or renamePrimaryKey method. If your table blocks updates of the natural key, you need to use the renamePrimaryKey override. If it doesn't, then you can put the code in the update method. Here's an example from CustTable.

public void delete()
{
    if (!DimensionValidation::canDeleteEntityValue(this))
    {
        throw error(strFmt("@SYS134392", this.AccountNum));
    }
      
    ttsbegin;
    DimensionAttributeValue::updateForEntityValueDelete(this);
    ttscommit;
}
   
public void update()
{
    Common originalRecord = this.orig();
    super();
    DimensionValueRename::syncRenamedValue(this, originalRecord);
}
   
public void renamePrimaryKey()
{
     Common originalRecord = this.orig();
     DimensionValueRenameV2 rename = DimensionValueRenameV2::construct(this, originalRecord);
     rename.syncRenamedValuePreSuper();
     super();
     rename.syncRenamedValuePostSuper();
}

Step 4: Clear caches to force detection of the new view

Because the list of entities that can be consumed as a dimension are cached on the server, the creation of a new entity won't appear in the list of existing entities until a call to clear the caches is performed, or until both the client and the server are restarted. To clear the caches and have the new view appear immediately, you must execute the following line of code within a runnable class.

DimensionCache::clearAllScopes();

Step 5: Verify that the dimension appears in the Use Value From lookup

Now that you have completed the steps, navigate to the Financial dimensions page in the General ledger. Click the drop-down menu on the Use Values from field and verify that your value is available.

Add a new OMOperatingUnit type backed entity

If a new Organization Model OMOperatingUnitType enumeration is added, the steps to make it consumable as a dimension are similar but can be made shorter as follows:

  1. Copy one of the existing DimAttributeOM[BackingTableName] views, rename it appropriately, and then adjust all associated labels and help text.
  2. Expand the Datasource\BackingEntity (OMOperatingUnit)\Ranges node on the copied view. Change the value property on the range to the new OMOperatingUnitType enumeration value that was added.
  3. Build and synchronize the project.
  4. Follow the steps in this article starting with Step 2, where you validate the data in SQL, and then continue through Step 5, where you validate that the dimension appears in the Use Value From lookup.

Because the OMOperatingUnitType is backed by the OMOperatingUnit table, generic code already exists to handle the delete, update, and renamePrimaryKey methods. Therefore, you don't need to update these methods.

Step 6: Setting a dimension to be self-referenced

If you also want to create a data entity for your new entity, and that entity has a reference to default dimensions, add this code to the persistEntity() method.

if (_entityCtx.getDatabaseOperation() == DataEntityDatabaseOperation::Insert)
{
    this.<Your entity ‘private’ RecId Dimension field> = DimensionDefaultResolver::checkAndCreateSelfReference(tablenum(<Your backing table>), this.<Your entity Key field>, this.<Your entity ‘public’ DisplayValue field>);
}

Example

public void persistEntity(DataEntityRuntimeContext _entityCtx)
{
    if (_entityCtx.getDatabaseOperation() == DataEntityDatabaseOperation::Insert)
    {
        this.DefaultDimension = DimensionDefaultResolver::checkAndCreateSelfReference(tablenum(BankAccountTable), this.BankAccountId, this.DefaultDimensionDisplayValue);
    }

    super(_entityCtx);
}

Note

This ensures that if you also want the dimension to use itself as a default dimension value, the information is created in the correct sequence.