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Posted by Dan on 06/19/05 01:44
I've never had a problem doing this on a shared hosting however, if this is
a problem, you can export from access into a CSV format and then do a form
upload. From there, you can use the fgetcsv to read through the file and
append to the table.
"Mike MacSween" <mike.macsween.getlostspammers@btinternet.com> wrote in
message news:42b4a126$0$38040$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk...
> On shared hosting?
>
> Aren't the sysadmins going to prevent direct access to the database
> server?
>
> "Malcolm Dew-Jones" <yf110@vtn1.victoria.tc.ca> wrote in message
> news:42b474e0@news.victoria.tc.ca...
>> Mike MacSween (mike.macsween.getlostspammers@btinternet.com) wrote:
>> : My client has an MS Access database application on her local machine. I
>> have
>> : full access to that in terms of changing the design.
>>
>> : I've got a simple PHP/MySql application on shared hosting, so no direct
>> : access to the db server.
>>
>> : I'd like to give her the facility to export the information in her
>> local
>> : Access application to the shared PHP/MySql site. From one command
>> button (or
>> : similar) in the Access application.
>>
>> : It would be probably be a complete overwrite. That is to say all the
>> : information on the shared site would be overwritten with that from the
>> local
>> : machine.
>>
>> : I'm assuming that I'd have to make an HTTP request to some PHP page
>> which
>> : would then run the SQL to delete all the records, then append all the
>> new
>> : ones.
>>
>> : Is this the right approach? I don't want to spend weeks finding out
>> that
>> : this is fundamentally flawed in some way. The client has an ADSL
>> connection.
>>
>>
>> A completely different approach comes to mind. - ODBC
>>
>> Long ago I was shown how Excel (on windows) could query data from a mysql
>> database _on Linux_ using ODBC. I wonder if that is still supported? I
>> beleived it used a mysql odbc driver that runs on windows and knows how
>> to
>> talk to the mysql server.
>>
>> Perhaps you could do this for updates as well. Install the mysql odbc
>> driver on windows, set up an odbc connection with the necessary details
>> to
>> access the linux mysql server, and then use that connection to allow MS
>> Access to update the mysql database. I think all the setups are done on
>> windows except for the network setups to allow the mysql server to accept
>> the remote incoming connections. The server itself simply sees it like
>> any
>> other mysql connection (i.e. there's no ODBC stuff going on at the server
>> end).
>>
>> The Access program would then have complete flexibility to do anything it
>> wanted with the data, including simply replacing the data in each table.
>> Within access you just define the remote tables using the relevent
>> options
>> on the menubar.
>>
>> delete from odbc_connection_table_x;
>> insert into odbc_connection_table_x select * from local_tbl_x;
>>
>> $0.10
>>
>> --
>>
>> This space not for rent.
>
>
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