Power Automate flows: Licensing, Ownership, and API Limits

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  • čas přidán 29. 07. 2024
  • In this Power Automate tutorial, we will explore key aspects of Power Automate cloud flows that every user (Beginner or Advanced) must be aware of. We'll explore the three types of cloud flows and how connector classification (standard vs. premium) is tied to licensing. Understand the different Power Automate licensing options: Power Automate Premium per User and Power Automate Process licenses. I'll guide you on how to determine if your flow is premium and how to identify the license you have along with its capabilities.
    Learn about the critical role of flow ownership in driving license needs for your flow and explore Power Platform API request limits. Additionally, I'll show you how to change the primary owner of a cloud flow and the benefits of having Service Principal ownership for a cloud flow.
    Join me to uncover these important details and much more.
    Change the owner of a cloud flow
    learn.microsoft.com/power-aut...
    Power Automate licenses & Understanding Power Platform Requests
    learn.microsoft.com/power-pla...
    learn.microsoft.com/power-aut...
    Power Platform Connectors
    learn.microsoft.com/connector...
    Requests limits and allocations
    learn.microsoft.com/power-pla...
    #powerautomate #microsoft #powerplatform #licensing
    0:00 Must know about Power Automate cloud flows
    0:29 What is Power Automate & cloud flow types
    1:53 Power Automate Connectors
    2:44 How to check if my flow needs a premium license?
    3:06 How do I check my own license?
    3:33 Power Automate license options
    4:08 Importance of Power Automate flow primary owner
    4:45 When to change Power Automate flow primary owner?
    6:04 Power Platform Request Limits
    8:02 How to change Primary Owner of Power Automate flow?
    10:24 How does licensing and API limits work for Instant flows?
    11:23 Advantages of Service Principal Owned cloud flows
    12:33 Use Power Apps premium license for flows by associating apps and flows
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Komentáře • 93

  • @chrisgarty
    @chrisgarty Před 2 měsíci +2

    Fantastic video Reza! This information represents 90% of the questions and support cases I get related to ownership and licensing of flows 😅
    On the benefits of solution cloud flows defined in Dataverse, you missed a chance to promote your recent video on another Dataverse-specific capability for flows: Drafts and Versioning 🙂

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +2

      Thanks so much Chris!
      I definitely missed that :(
      Drafts and flows is my favorite

  • @sudhanshuyadav1658
    @sudhanshuyadav1658 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Wow! Reza came just on time when I was really confused with the plan of Power Automate and the API Call limit.
    Could not thanks more.
    Thanks

  • @chap666ish
    @chap666ish Před 2 měsíci +1

    A very informative video, Reza - thank you.
    The API limits are another good reason to use batch updates in flows rather than loop through every single record in turn.

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Most welcome!
      Batch for the win.

  • @WillCooper1
    @WillCooper1 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Well done Reza! Rock solid information. One interesting aspect of this to me which isn't well documented is the amount of time it may take before a flow begins executing after the trigger condition. E.g. When a SharePoint list item is modified. If the flow is owned by a user with a Premium License, then the flow will begin to execute within a shorter period of time. I don't believe there is a precise documentation on the time window, but there is a clear difference if you do a comparison between non-premium license and premium license.

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      I am not aware of any documentation on this or if there is a time limit in play to trigger based on license

  • @dougydoe
    @dougydoe Před 2 měsíci +2

    Very useful and informative especially the account under with the flow run and changing ownership with the solution context. Thanks for sharing

  • @vlogbyharshda648
    @vlogbyharshda648 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This video is incredibly insightful and well-made! The explanations are clear, and the visuals are engaging. Great job!

  • @paulskelton8799
    @paulskelton8799 Před měsícem

    Very clear explanation of a complicated subject! The Change Ownership / non Solution Flow foxed me for some time. Many thanks for sharing your knowledge

  • @sergiizelenko4114
    @sergiizelenko4114 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Very insightful, as ususal!
    Thank you very much, Reza!

  • @JuliaRodriguez-lv8fn
    @JuliaRodriguez-lv8fn Před 2 měsíci +1

    This was well explained! Thank you!

  • @rob64166
    @rob64166 Před 2 měsíci

    Very clear video Reza, thank you.

  • @raulsanchez3756
    @raulsanchez3756 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Incredible video, very well explained and understandable. Congratulations! It would be great another one like it but of Power Apps 🙏🙏

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      Thanks so much!
      Would love to do one on Power Apps as well.
      Let’s see how well this video is received.

  • @user-qc4uo1ng8e
    @user-qc4uo1ng8e Před 4 dny +1

    Super informative Reza! Always thankful for providing us with all these resources much appreciated.
    Any plan to Demonstrate/show us how to build the ¨ Change the PIMARY owner of a flow¨? If we are considering moving all flows to solutions and changing ownership to SPN with so many flows created with different accounts it would be cool to see how to change the ownership in bulk using flows.
    Thanks!

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 4 dny

      Most welcome!
      No plans to demonstrate that (was done for a customer)
      I remember using Power Platform APIs to manage it.

  • @JarredHarvey-WS
    @JarredHarvey-WS Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great video and thanks for sharing this info, Reza.

  • @dhayanandkalimidi67
    @dhayanandkalimidi67 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Many Thanks Reza. Article is good on Power Platform resources with respect to licensing. Awesome

  • @toussaintmugisha5551
    @toussaintmugisha5551 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Hi, Thank you for this video

  • @Web3WondersUS
    @Web3WondersUS Před 2 měsíci

    You are one YT greatest content creators- thank you!

  • @vijaijs
    @vijaijs Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great breakdown of licensing in Power Automate flows, Reza! Understanding the nuances of licensing can be daunting, but your video makes it clear and concise. Thanks for sharing this valuable information with the community! Regarding your mention at the end of the video about flows running under the Power Apps license, could you please elaborate on what that entails?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Glad it was helpful!
      Power Apps license grants use rights for power automate (in context flows). If you associate a power app to a flow, then the app license will cover the flow. There are some requirements for it. Video description has link to the detailed documentation.

  • @oluwatobiyusuf
    @oluwatobiyusuf Před měsícem +1

    Thank you for this video

  • @jjpreston29
    @jjpreston29 Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks - very helpful video. I hope at some point Admins can see if the Flow is Standard or Premium e.g. from CoE, so it will help assign Premium licenses effectively

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +1

      CoE does have a premium flag from what I remember. Check documentation on coe.

  • @vinayayinapurapu
    @vinayayinapurapu Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much Reza for the explanation. One question do the SPNs need to have license assigned when adding as a primary owner to premium flows?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Most welcome!
      SPN cannot get a license as its a non-interactive user but since flow is premium you would need to license it with process license.

  • @germainkreigergapud6419
    @germainkreigergapud6419 Před 2 měsíci

    Very good video, however I wish you talked more about the license because there is a LOT of things that could change the limit. For example the Transition Period. I would love to know more about that, like how it changes the limit, if you are in that period do you run flows as per your plan or not, etc.

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      Transition period is a transition. I want this video to stand the test of time :)
      I have shared links to detailed documentation in video description

  • @mukeshgarg3283
    @mukeshgarg3283 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Hello Reza, Thanks for the fantastic video!
    I have a query.
    Does polling trigger also counted for API limits.
    Ex- I have a trigger - When an item is created in SharePoint list with frequency - 1 minute.
    Does every minute polling will be counted against API limits?
    Thanks in advance!!

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      Most welcome!
      I am not sure about that. My guess is Yes but please check the documentation.

  • @meshmut
    @meshmut Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much for this, very useful, one more thing, does Microsoft alert once an account hits maximum request limits on allowed flows within the 24hrs?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +2

      I believe if you are exceeding limits the flow owners are now getting an email warning

  • @ChristianPecksteiner
    @ChristianPecksteiner Před 2 měsíci +1

    Where can i see the request counter? Great video!

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +3

      Analytics option in flow. Video description has links to documentation that has the details.

  • @darlenesuarez7542
    @darlenesuarez7542 Před měsícem

    Thanks Reza, great video. Quick question, are the API limits per user per flow in 24 hrs or just per user for all flows owned by the user in 24 hrs?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před měsícem

      All flows (automated and scheduled) owned by the user and run by the user (manually triggered) in 24 hours

  • @hemadeepthi8837
    @hemadeepthi8837 Před 2 měsíci

    It is interesting video. I would need more information what type of licenses is required for Queue based process running of 2 machines and how to assign licenses in this scenario.

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      PAD is not an area I am well versed with

  • @shredernie
    @shredernie Před 20 dny

    Hi Reza, my question is more on power apps. If we are all have an o365 E3 in our tenancy, can we still access to a power app from an external tenancy if we are granted access? or do we need another license particular to that external tenancy?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 20 dny

      As far as I know, if that power app uses standard connectors then yes.

    • @shredernie
      @shredernie Před 20 dny

      @@RezaDorranithanks Reza! so we dont need another license in the external tenancy.

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 20 dny

      @@shredernie should not. Best to test with 1 user and confirm.

  • @afonso237
    @afonso237 Před 2 měsíci

    I would like to prepare some sort of forms to be accessed also by organization's guest. Is it possible?

  • @2007pradipta
    @2007pradipta Před 2 měsíci

    if we make the Service Application as Primary owner how the Licensing affect ? not sure if we can assign any license to it.

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      You can assign process license to the flow if flow is using premium connectors

  • @suryaraochowdarykoduri
    @suryaraochowdarykoduri Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent video @Reza. Can't thank you enough. Can you share custom connectors with Service Principal? I assume custom connectors require premium license much like http connector?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      Custom connectors are premium.
      I believe the connection can be shared with SPN.

  • @lernerfranck3840
    @lernerfranck3840 Před 2 měsíci

    Hey Reza, Thank you very much for this very useful video, as usual ;-) It is a coincidence that on my side I've just tried to run a flow few days ago with a Service Principal account I've created in Azure as it is a good solution (maybe the only one?) not to be user dependant. Very quickly I've succeded to run a flow with this Service Principal account to a Dataverse connector, but I could do it with a SharePoint connector (not able to connect the Service Principal acccount maybe due to access limitations?). Do you know if there are some limitations with the Service Principal account as owner of the flow ?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +1

      SharePoint connector does not support SPN. What you are doing is setting connections via SPN. What I show in video is the flow owner being the SPN.

    • @alexandrubadiu2355
      @alexandrubadiu2355 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@RezaDorrani, if the user leaves the company, the SPN, as owner of the flow, can continue using the users connections in the flow without erroring out?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      @@alexandrubadiu2355 No it cannot as the connection is not working.
      For connections, you can use a service account.

  • @karolzareba9003
    @karolzareba9003 Před 27 dny

    Thanks! Where we can find info about daily consumption API call related to an account? :)

  • @mkhijazi
    @mkhijazi Před měsícem

    Is every action considered an API call? e.g. Compose action where the API call in it?

  • @alexandrubadiu2355
    @alexandrubadiu2355 Před 2 měsíci

    Not sure to understand SPN licensing. I have some critical flows for the organization, no premium connectors. I do not want to have users to be owners of the flows as they might leave the company. I would like to use deployment pipelines and solutions. I do not share these flows with many people. Do I need process license for each flow (i have around 20) and each workspace Dev/Uat/Prod? Or maybe if the owners of the SP have premium per user licences is enough? Thank you for your reply

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +1

      A process license is recommended for SPN owned flows. You cannot assign a user license to an SPN.

    • @alexandrubadiu2355
      @alexandrubadiu2355 Před 2 měsíci

      @@RezaDorrani is the process license mandatory if the flows are NOT using premium ?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@alexandrubadiu2355 No but the API limits for all flows combined that have SPN ownership is only 25k

  • @jjactual9321
    @jjactual9321 Před měsícem

    Is there a way to convert .xls to .xlsx file through Power Automate?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před měsícem +1

      I have not tried that hence not sure

  • @sunpengjie4565
    @sunpengjie4565 Před 2 měsíci

    Can you please explain Powerapps licensing, especially the licensing relationship between powerapps and power automate?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      Dataverse requires premium license when used in apps or flows

  • @PowerTrainer
    @PowerTrainer Před 2 měsíci

    Case 1: Power Apps triggered Instant Flow "Associated" with an App
    Case 2: Power Apps triggered Instant Flow "Not Associated" with an App.
    In both the cases the flow will be triggered under the triggering user context, association is just to pair(App and Flow) from the relation point of view , it does not bend/skew/provide advantage from licensing perspective, this is my understanding, any correction to this?
    #SPN is going to be my next best friend in some scenarios (only some). Thank you!

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Power apps triggered flows always run in user context.

  • @situndassitun01
    @situndassitun01 Před 2 měsíci

    Need a video on new Coauthoring in power apps

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci

      I make videos when I receive multiple requests on a topic. Every 6 months I ask subscribers for topic suggestions on Community Tab of my channel. Most voted idea gets added to my backlog. Make sure to post this idea whenever I post the next topic suggestion post.

  • @bp2807
    @bp2807 Před 23 dny

    Is power automate desktop a separate tool and is it free ?

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 23 dny

      Separate tool.
      Free only for windows 10 or 11 users and that too only manually triggered and attended automations.
      You would need the premium license to utilize its full capabilities.

  • @anthonyleduc
    @anthonyleduc Před 7 hodinami

    As i understand if the owner of the flow is a SP, you must purchase per-flow licence

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 7 hodinami

      Yes if using premium features or require higher API limits

    • @anthonyleduc
      @anthonyleduc Před 6 hodinami

      @@RezaDorrani This does not make me want to use premium connectors. I use ALM, and therefore the owner of all my flows in PROD is an SPN account. A per-flow license is $100, with the minimum package being 5 licenses.

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 5 hodinami

      @@anthonyleduc There is a process license that allows you to tie it with a business process. Includes multiple flows. Check licensing page for Power Automate

  • @joywindsouza817
    @joywindsouza817 Před 2 měsíci

    Isn't Power Automate entirely a RPA tool? Why are you only calling desktop flows as RPA. Doesn't the cloud flows fall under RPA as well

    • @RezaDorrani
      @RezaDorrani  Před 2 měsíci +2

      No. DPA is cloud flows. RPA is desktop flows.