Share via


About dashboards, charts, reports, & widgets

TFS 2017 | TFS 2015

Gain visibility into your team's progress by adding one or more widgets or charts to your dashboard. Customizable, highly configurable dashboards provide you and your teams with the flexibility to share information, monitor progress and trends, and improve your workflow processes. Each team can tailor their dashboards to share information and monitor their progress.

If you're just starting out, read Add, rename, and delete dashboards. Looking for instructions on a specific task, in context chart, widget, or report? See Dashboards and widgets quick reference. To learn about our reporting solutions, read Reporting Roadmap.

Important

Select a version from TFS Content Version selector.

To view the content available for your platform, make sure that you select the correct version of this article from the version selector which is located above the table of contents. Feature support differs depending on the on-premises version of TFS you are using. .
To learn which on-premises version you are using, see What platform/version am I using?

Supported capabilities, permissions, and access

Access to Azure DevOps web portal features are managed through access levels assigned to users.

Web portal data views and reports

The following features provide support for viewing Azure DevOps data through the web portal:

  • Dashboards are customizable interactive signboards that provide real-time information. Dashboards are associated with a team or a project and display configurable charts and widgets.
  • Charts are query-based status or trend charts derived from a work item query or test results.
  • Widgets display configurable information and charts on dashboards. The widget catalog provides brief descriptions of those widgets available to you. Also, you can add widgets provided through the Azure DevOps Marketplace.
  • In-context reports are system-generated charts that support specific services. Examples are team velocity, sprint burndown, and the Cumulative Flow Diagram (CFD), and the Test Failures Report. These reports are displayed on the Analytics tab for a specific service and derive data from Analytics.

SQL Server reports

SQL Server Reporting is the legacy reporting solution available with Azure DevOps Server 2020 and earlier versions. The following features provide support for viewing Azure DevOps data using SQL Server Reports and SQL Server Analysis Services.

Supported features and access level

Users granted Stakeholder access have limited access to select features as indicated in the following table. To learn more, see About access levels. In addition to access levels, select features require permissions to execute.

Note

Data displayed within a chart or widget is subject to permissions granted to the signed in user. To learn more, see FAQs on Azure DevOps dashboards, charts, and reports, Access and permissions.

Supported features and tasks

Stakeholder

Basic


Dashboards (View)

✔️

✔️

Dashboards (Create and edit)

✔️

Charts, Widgets (View)

✔️

✔️

Charts, Widgets (Add and configure)

✔️

In-context reports

✔️

✔️

SQL Server reports

✔️

✔️

Default permissions

Dashboards

You set dashboard permissions at the team level for team dashboards.


Task

Readers

Contributors

Team admins

Project admins



View team dashboards

✔️

✔️

✔️



Add and configure team dashboards

✔️

✔️

✔️

Configurable dashboards

With dashboards, you can configure an array of charts and widgets.

Each team can add and configure multiple dashboards to:

  • Share information.
  • View status, progress, and trends
  • Access quick links and other functions.

Easily add and rearrange widgets on the dashboard to show recent changes made to view build status, bug trends, and more.

Example dashboard

Sequence for adding and customizing a dashboard

Select a box below to open the corresponding article.

Add dashboardAdd widget

With flat-list queries, you can create various charts to monitor status, progress, and trends. Before you monitor work progress and trends, you'll need to have planned your project and made progress on work you're tracking.

You can open a shared query, create a chart, and add it to the dashboard. Once it's been added to the dashboard, you can change the Chart for work items widget configuration to resize or change the chart parameters. Or, from the dashboard, you can add a Chart for work items widget and choose a shared query and set the chart parameters. Chart types include status—pie, bar, column, stacked bar, and pivot—and trend—stacked area, line, and area—charts.

For details, see:

Sample Agile tool light-weight charts

Active bugs

Sequence for adding query-based charts to a dashboard

Select a box below to open the corresponding article.

Edit queryCreate chartAdd chart to dashboard

The steps to creating charts that track manual testing progress and results are similar to the ones for tracking work. The starting point, however, begins with the test plan rather than a query. For example, you can find out how many test cases are ready to run, or how many tests are passing and failing in each test suite. And, just like work item query-based charts, you can add these charts to a dashboard.

For details, see:

Sample light-weight test charts

Web Team test plan is a chart that shows counts of test in various stages. Tests by Suite breaks down the same tests by test suite.

Widgets

You add widgets to a dashboard to display a chart, information, or set of links. Most widgets are configurable. For a description of each supported widget for your platform and version, see the Widget catalog. Here are the widgets that support the indicated service.



Repos





Sprint chart widgets

Sprint capacity widget Sprint burndown widget

Monitor code activity, build progress and deployment status

With the code tile widgets, you can monitor the activity occurring within a repository or branch folder. Build history displays a histogram of all builds run for a specific build pipeline. Bar color indicates: green-completed, red-failed, and yellow-completed without tests.

Code, build, and release chart widgets

Code tile widget   Pull request widget
Build history widget    Deployment status widget

In-context reports: Work tracking

Azure Boards provides several in-context reports that derive from the work tracking data store. From your backlog or board, you can view the Cumulative Flow Diagram and team Velocity reports by choosing the miniature charts that appear on each page. From a Sprint backlog, you can view the sprint burndown.

Cumulative Flow Diagram

The CFD report shows the count of work items in the backlog based on their state over time.

Opened CFD chart

Velocity

Velocity is based on the values entered for Effort, Story Points, or Size fields for work items that belong to the Requirement Category.

Web portal, Velocity chart showing seven sprints of in progress and completed work

Sprint burndown

Each sprint provides access to two charts. The first tracks capacity for the team, team activities—such as Development, Test, Design—and individual team members. The second tracks the sprint burndown for remaining work.

Capacity bars Burndown
Capacity bars Burndown chart

Note

You can't add the in-context reports to a dashboard. However, you may find a comparable widget listed in the widget catalog that tracks the same or similar data which you can add to the dashboard.

To learn more about these reports, see one of the following articles:

Add custom work tracking fields

You can add data to support reporting requirements by adding a custom field.

Marketplace widgets and extensibility

In addition to the widgets available in the widget catalog, you may find interesting widgets in the Marketplace.

Or, you can create your own widget using the REST API.

Next steps