Example 5—Giving Access to a Specific Measure Within a Dimension

In this example, the database role has access to cells for the North America member and its descendants in the Geography dimension, but the role does not have access to cells for any other members in that dimension. The database role also has access to cells for the 1998 member and its descendants in the Time dimension, but does not have access to cells for any other members in that dimension.

The following expression is the Multidimensional Expressions (MDX) expression that sets these permissions:

Ancestor(Geography.CurrentMember,[Continent]) IS North America
AND Ancestor(Time.CurrentMember,[Year])IS 1998

Reviewing the Result Set

Based on these cell data permissions for this database role, a query on all cells returns the result set shown in the following table.

Continent

Region

Cost

Cost

Revenue

Revenue

Tax

Tax

1997

1998

1997

1998

1997

1998

Asia

.

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

.

Japan

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

.

Korea

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

Europe

.

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

.

France

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

.

Germany

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

#N/A

N. America

.

#N/A

2544

#N/A

3201

#N/A

432

.

Canada

#N/A

511

#N/A

691

#N/A

58

.

USA

#N/A

2033

#N/A

2510

#N/A

374

Important

If a Microsoft Windows user or group belongs to multiple database roles, a query on all cells would first result in a dataset being generated based on each database role to which the user or group belongs. Then, Microsoft SQL Server Analysis Services would combine all these datasets into one dataset, and return that combined dataset to the user or group.

See Also

Concepts

Grant custom access to cell data (Analysis Services)

Example 1—Permitting Access to All Members

Example 2—Permitting Access to a Single Member

Example 3—Denying Access to a Single Member

Example 4—Limiting Access to a Member and its Descendants

Example 6—Excluding Selected Measures from a Dimension

Example 7—Making Exceptions to Denied Members