I migrated our reporting services from version 2008 to another server version 2008 R2. In version 2008 the reports work fine on Safari. The new version 2008 R2 the reports do not show up at all. All I see is the parameter section and then the report is blank. Same in Chrome. According to Microsoft Safari IS supported if in a limited fashion. The reports are not complex. In fact I created a report that only had a line on it to see if it would show up in Safari but no, that report is completely blank as well. Did anyone make SSRS reports viewable on Safari? Do I have to mess with some kind of a configuration setting?
10 Answers
Ultimate solution (works in SSRS 2012 too!)
Append the following script to the following file (on the SSRS Server)C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\MSRS10_50.MSSQLSERVER\Reporting Services\ReportManager\js\ReportingServices.js
function pageLoad() {
var element = document.getElementById("ctl31_ctl10");
if (element)
{
element.style.overflow = "visible";
}
}
Note: As azzlak noted, the div's name isn't always ctl31_ctl10
. For SQL 2012 tryctl32_ctl09
and for 2008 R2 try ctl31_ctl09
. If this solution doesn't work, look at the HTML from your browser to see if the script has worked properly changing the overflow:auto
property to overflow:visible
.
Solution for ReportViewer control
Insert into .aspx
page (or into a linked .css
file, if available) this style line
#reportViewer_ctl09 {
overflow:visible !important;
}
Reason
Chrome and Safari render overflow:auto
in different way respect to IE.
SSRS HTML is QuirksMode HTML and depends on IE 5.5 bugs. Non-IE browsers don't have the IE quirksmode and therefore render the HTML correctly
The HTML page produced by SSRS 2008 R2 reports contain a div
which has overflow:auto
style, and it turns report into an invisible report.
<div id="ctl31_ctl10" style="height:100%;width:100%;overflow:auto;position:relative;">
I can see reports on Chrome by manually changing overflow:auto
to overflow:visible
in the produced webpage using Chrome's Dev Tools (F12).
I love Tim's solution, it's easy and working.
But there is still a problem: any time the user change parameters (my reports use parameters!) AJAX refreshes the div, the overflow:auto tag is rewritten, and no script changes it.
This technote detail explains what is the problem:
This happens because in a page built with AJAX panels, only the AJAX panels change their state, without refreshing the whole page. Consequently, the
OnLoad
events you applied on the<body>
tag are only fired once: the first time your page loads. After that, changing any of the AJAX panels will not trigger these events anymore.
User einarq suggested this solution:
Another option is to rename your function to pageLoad. Any functions with this name will be called automatically by asp.net ajax if it exists on the page, also after each partial update. If you do this you can also remove the onload attribute from the body tag
So wrote the improved script that is shown in the solution.
I am using Chrome version 21 with SQL 2008 R2 SP1 and none of the above fixes worked for me. Below is the code that did work, as with the other answers I added this bit of code to Append to "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\MSRS10_50.MSSQLSERVER\Reporting Services\ReportManager\js\ReportingServices.js" (on the SSRS Server) :
//Fix to allow Chrome to display SSRS Reports
function pageLoad() {
var element = document.getElementById("ctl31_ctl09");
if (element)
{
element.style.overflow = "visible";
}
}
This is a known issue. The problem is that a div tag has the style "overflow: auto" which apparently is not implemented well with WebKit which is used by Safari and Chrome (see Emanuele Greco's answer). I did not know how to take advantage of Emanuele's suggestion to use the RS:ReportViewerHost element, but I solved it using JavaScript.
Problem
Solution
Since "overflow: auto" is specified in the style attribute of the div element with id "ctl31_ctl10", we can't override it in a stylesheet file so I resorted to JavaScript. I appended the following code to "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\MSRS10_50.MSSQLSERVER\Reporting Services\ReportManager\js\ReportingServices.js"
function FixSafari()
{
var element = document.getElementById("ctl31_ctl10");
if (element)
{
element.style.overflow = "visible"; //default overflow value
}
}
// Code from http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9434/how-do-i-add-an-additional-window-onload-event-in-javascript
if (window.addEventListener) // W3C standard
{
window.addEventListener('load', FixSafari, false); // NB **not** 'onload'
}
else if (window.attachEvent) // Microsoft
{
window.attachEvent('onload', FixSafari);
}
Note
There appears to be a solution for SSRS 2005 that I have not tried but I don't think it is applicable to SSRS 2008 because I can't find the "DocMapAndReportFrame" class.
My solution based on the ideas above.
function pageLoad() {
var element = document.querySelector('table[id*=_fixedTable] > tbody > tr:last-child > td:last-child > div');
if (element) {
element.style.overflow = "visible";
}
}
It's not limited to a certain id plus you don't need to include any other library such as jQuery.
Here is the solution I used for Report Server 2008 R2
It should work regardless of what the Report Server will output for use for in its "id" attribute of the table. I don't think you can always assume it will be "ctl31_fixedTable"
I used a mix of the suggestion above and some ways to dynamically load jquery libraries into a page from javascript file found here
On the server go to the directory: C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\MSRS10_50.MSSQLSERVER\Reporting Services\ReportManager\js
Copy the jquery library jquery-1.6.2.min.js into the directory
Create a backup copy of the file ReportingServices.js Edit the file. And append this to the bottom of it:
var jQueryScriptOutputted = false;
function initJQuery() {
//if the jQuery object isn't available
if (typeof(jQuery) == 'undefined') {
if (! jQueryScriptOutputted) {
//only output the script once..
jQueryScriptOutputted = true;
//output the script
document.write("<scr" + "ipt type=\"text/javascript\" src=\"../js/jquery-1.6.2.min.js\"></scr" + "ipt>");
}
setTimeout("initJQuery()", 50);
} else {
$(function() {
// Bug-fix on Chrome and Safari etc (webkit)
if ($.browser.webkit) {
// Start timer to make sure overflow is set to visible
setInterval(function () {
var div = $('table[id*=_fixedTable] > tbody > tr:last > td:last > div')
div.css('overflow', 'visible');
}, 1000);
}
});
}
}
initJQuery();
You can fix this easily with jQuery - and a little ugly hack :-)
I have a asp.net page with a ReportViewer user control.
<rsweb:ReportViewer ID="ReportViewer1" runat="server"...
In the document ready event I then start a timer and look for the element which needs the overflow fix (as previous posts):
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function () {
// Bug-fix on Chrome and Safari etc (webkit)
if ($.browser.webkit) {
// Start timer to make sure overflow is set to visible
setInterval(function () {
var div = $('#<%=ReportViewer1.ClientID %>_fixedTable > tbody > tr:last > td:last > div')
div.css('overflow', 'visible');
}, 1000);
}
});
</script>
Better than assuming it has a certain id. You can adjust the timer to whatever you like. I set it to 1000 ms here.
FYI - none of the above worked for me in 2012 SP1...simple solution was to embed credentials in the shared data source and then tell Safari to trust the SSRS server site. Then it worked great! Took days chasing down supposed solutions like above only to find out integrated security won't work reliably on Safari - you have to mess with the keychain on the mac and then still wouldn't work reliably.
The solution provided by Emanuele worked for me. I could see the report when I accessed it directly from the server but when I used a ReportViewer control on my aspx page, I was unable to see the report. Upon inspecting the rendered HTML, I found a div by the id "ReportViewerGeneral_ctl09" (ReportViewerGeneral is the server id of the report viewer control) which had it's overflow property set to auto.
<div id="ReportViewerGeneral_ctl09" style="height: 100%; width: 100%; overflow: auto; position: relative; ">...</div>
I used the procedure explained by Emanuele to change this to visible as follows:
function pageLoad() {
var element = document.getElementById("ReportViewerGeneral_ctl09");
if (element) {
element.style.overflow = "visible";
}
}
I've used this. Add a script reference to jquery on the Report.aspx page. Use the following to link up JQuery to the microsoft events. Used a little bit of Eric's suggestion for setting the overflow.
$(document).ready(function () {
if (navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase().indexOf("webkit") >= 0) {
Sys.Application.add_init(function () {
var prm = Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager.getInstance();
if (!prm.get_isInAsyncPostBack()) {
prm.add_endRequest(function () {
var divs = $('table[id*=_fixedTable] > tbody > tr:last > td:last > div')
divs.each(function (idx, element) {
$(element).css('overflow', 'visible');
});
});
}
});
}
});