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$Id: README 13987 2010-05-14 16:03:36Z mjevans $

DBD::ODBC -- DBD module interfacing the ODBC databases.

   $Id: README 13987 2010-05-14 16:03:36Z mjevans $

   DBD::ODBC is Copyright (C) 1994,1995,1996,1997,1998  Tim Bunce
   portions Copyright (C) 1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002 Jeff Urlwin
   portions Copyright (C) 1997  Thomas K. Wenrich
   portions Copyright (C) 2007,2008,2009, 2010 Martin J. Evans

LICENSE INFORMATION:

   This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
   it under the same terms as Perl 5.10.0. For more details, see the
   full text of the licenses at
   <http://www.perlfoundation.org/artistic_license_1_0>, and
   <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html>.

   Files with different licenses or copyright holders:

   ConvertUTF.c:
     Copyright (C) 2001-2004, Unicode, Inc.
     see ConvertUTF8.c for the license.

   This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
   it is provided “as is” and without any express or implied
   warranties.

PLEASE READ THE ENTIRE README FILE CAREFULLY !

*BEFORE* BUILDING, TESTING AND INSTALLING this you will need to:

    Build, test and install Perl 5 (as per DBI specifications/compatibility)
    It is very important to TEST it and INSTALL it!

    Build, test and install the DBI module (at least DBI 1.201).
    It is very important to TEST it and INSTALL it!

    Remember to *read* the DBI README file!

    Remember to *read* the DBD::ODBC.pm POD documentation and the
    DBD::ODBC::Changes.pm POD documentation!!!

BUILDING:

  set-up these environment variables:
    DBI_DSN   The dbi data source, e.g. 'dbi:ODBC:YOUR_DSN_HERE'
    DBI_USER  The username to use to connect to the database
    DBI_PASS  The username to use to connect to the database
    ODBCHOME  (Unix only) The dir your driver manager is installed in
              or specify this via -o argument to Makefile.PL

  If you want UNICODE support on non-Windows platforms specify -u switch
  to Makefile.PL. If you don't want UNICODE support on Windows specify
  the -nou switch to Makefile.PL.

  perl Makefile.PL
  make                (or nmake, if VC++ on Win32)
  make test           (or nmake, if VC++ on Win32)

TESTING

  make test
  make test TEST_VERBOSE=1   (if any of the t/* tests fail)
  make install               (if the tests look okay)

  Note that the tests currently all pass when using the Microsoft SQL
  server driver up to SQL Server 2008 any many other ODBC drivers on
  Windows and UNIX (too numerous to mention here).

  If the tests from t/09bind.t fail, that is an indication of lack of
  ODBC Level 2 functionality.  This does not (necessarily) mean that
  your installation is broken.  It does indicate that your ODBC driver
  does not support certain level 2 calls (see below).  All other tests
  should pass, however, since I've tested with a limited number of
  ODBC drivers, I could have something wrong in the test.  Please
  notify me if you have an incompatibility in the other tests.  (For
  example, some Paradox ODBC drivers *could* fail, if they don't
  support long file names, since in Paradox file names are
  tableName.db.).  Please let me know about any incompatibilities you
  encounter. I will say, though, that I may not be able to reproduce
  or fix problems without some help, since I can't possibly install
  all the known ODBC drivers.  Please try to "solve" the problem, in
  addition to discovering it.

  If any of the tests fail and you are using SQL Server and Windows drivers,
  ensure you updated to MDAC 2.7 or later.

NOTES on ODBC Drivers and Compatibility with DBD-ODBC

This version utilizes at least one "Level 2" ODBC call
(SQLDescribeParam).  This *will* affect compatibility with specific
ODBC drivers.  If the driver is not level 2 (or does not support the
level 2 function(s) required), then full compatibility will not be
available. The best thing to do is build DBD::ODBC against an ODBC
driver manager like unixODBC (http://www.unixodbc.org) as it will
resolve many incompatibilities between ODBC versions for you.

IF YOU HAVE PROBLEMS:

Do not hand edit the generated Makefile unless you are completely sure
you understand the implications! Always try to make changes via the
Makefile.PL command line and/or editing the Makefile.PL.

You should not need to make any changes. If you do *please* let me
know so that I can try to make it automatic in a later release.

This software is supported via the dbi-users mailing list.  For more
information and to keep informed about progress you can join the
mailing list via http://dbi.perl.org (if you are unable to use the web
you can subscribe by sending a message to
dbi-users-subscribe@perl.org.

Please post details of any problems (or changes you needed to make) to
dbi-users@perl.org. But note...

** IT IS IMPORTANT TO INCLUDE THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION:

1. A complete log of a all steps of the build, e.g.:

  perl Makefile.PL           (do a make realclean first)
  make
  make test
  make test TEST_VERBOSE=1   (if any tests fail)

2. Full details of which software you are using, including:

  Perl version (the output of perl -V)

It is important to check that you are using the latest version before
posting. If you're not then I'm *very* likely to simply say "upgrade to
the latest". You would do yourself a favour by upgrading beforehand.

Please remember that I'm _very_ busy. Try to help yourself first,
then try to help me help you by following these guidelines carefully.

Regards,
Tim, Jeff and Martin.

===============================================================================
Other info:

DBI 'home page': http://dbi.perl.org

perldoc DBI
perldoc DBD::ODBC	(which will include the DBD::ODBC FAQ list)
perldoc DBD::ODBC::Changes

Win32 ODBC drivers:
http://www.microsoft.com/support/products/backoffice/odbc/
Follow "Microsoft ODBC Desktop Database Drivers 3.5 For 32-Bit Programs"
and "ODBC Drivers for Win95 Applications".
For Access use version "Access ODBC driver 3.40.2111 27/03/96" or later.

Also, see the examples in the tests and the mytest directory.  They *do* show
some of the things you can do with the special DBD::ODBC functions.

End.