(C) 2008 OpenLink Software
13-Jun-2011
Added support for MS Access. Tested with the following system:
>ruby -v
ruby 1.8.7 (2011-02-18 patchlevel 334) [i386-mingw32]
>ruby -e "require 'rubygems';require 'active_record'; puts ActiveRecord::VERSION::STRING"
2.3.12
To run the unit tests of Activerecord download the rails source code using the 2-3-stable branch: https://github.com/rails/rails/tree/2-3-stable. Run the install_odbc.rb script to copy all necessary files into the activerecord source, switch to that directory and start the tests:
install_odbc.rb c:\path\to\rails\activerecord
cd c:\path\to\rails\activerecord
rake test_odbc
If the ODBC drivers for MS Access are installed two database files will be created and the tests will run. There are lots of failures/errors but it's a start.
22-Nov-2008
Added new install information
23-Apr-2008
The adapter has been updated to support Rails 2.0.2 / ActiveRecord 2.0.2 The new adapter (v2.0) is not recommended for use with earlier releases of Rails or ActiveRecord.
- For Rails 2.0.2 / ActiveRecord 2.0.2 or later, use odbc-rails v2.0
- For Rails 1.2.x / ActiveRecord 1.15.x, use odbc-rails v1.5
- For Rails 1.1.x / ActiveRecord 1.14.x, use odbc-rails v1.3
The configuration instructions for v1.4 or earlier differ slightly from those included here for v2.0. Please refer to the documentation packaged with the respective adapter when using the previous releases.
Added support for DSN-less connections (thanks to Ralf Vitasek). Added support for SQLAnywhere (thanks to Bryan Lahartinger).
23-Feb-2007
The adapter has been updated to support Rails 1.2.x / ActiveRecord 1.15.x. The new adapter (v1.4) is not recommended for use with Rails 1.1 / ActiveRecord 1.14.x. Please use v1.3 of the adapter with Rails 1.1.
The driver now supports the new ActiveRecord :decimal type and an :emulate_booleans connection option. See http://odbc-rails.rubyforge.org for more information about this option.
09-Jan-2007
The adapter accompanying this note is a Generic ODBC Adapter for Ruby on Rails being developed by OpenLink Software[http://www.openlinksw.com].
The aim of this development is to provide a single ODBC-based adapter capable of supporting the most popular DBMSes, in contrast to the current approach in the Rails community of each database requiring its own adapter.
It currently supports Ingres r3, Informix 9.3 or later, Oracle 10g, MySQL 5 and OpenLink's Virtuoso (Open Source Edition[http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com]), SQL Server 2000/2005, Sybase ASE 15, DB2 v9, Progress v8/9/10 and PostgreSQL 8.2.
Testing to date has been limited to the ROR 'Expenses' sample application described at http://developer.apple.com/tools/rubyonrails.html and the ActiveRecord test modules base_test.rb and migration_test.rb.
Testing has been performed on Linux, Windows and Mac OS X using OpenLink's own ODBC drivers and the native Virtuoso ODBC client.
The OpenLink ODBC Adapter for Ruby on Rails needs the ActiveRecord[http://wiki.rubyonrails.com/rails/pages/ActiveRecord] package installed.
The Adapter also requires Christian Werner's Ruby ODBC Bridge[http://www.ch-werner.de/rubyodbc] (release 0.9991 or later), to bridge to an underlying ODBC driver.
In the accompanying sources, the lib directory structure is equivalent to the lib directory located under ACTIVE_RECORD_ROOT in your main Ruby tree.
On Windows ACTIVE_RECORD_ROOT will be something like:
c:\ruby\lib\ruby\gems\1.8\gems\activerecord-x.y.z
On Unix and Mac OS X ACTIVE_RECORD_ROOT will be something like:
/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/activerecord-x.y.z
or /usr/local/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/activerecord-x.y.z
On Mac OS X using Locomotive ACTIVE_RECORD_ROOT will be something like:
/Applications/Locomotive2/bundles/rails112.locobundle/i386/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/activerecord-x.y.z
lib/ contains the files which constitute the new ODBC adapter.
test/ contains the fixture definitions for testing the adapter.
support/odbc_rails.diff contains some patches to ActiveRecord tests.
The patches to base_test.rb and migration_test.rb are not essential. However, they modify or bypass certain tests to cope with limitations of particular databases. Other developers have previously modified the tests similarly to cope with limitations of other Rails-supported databases. The patched versions of files touched by odbc_rails.diff can be found in support/test.
There are 3 ways to install the ODBC Adapter package: either as a gem (recommended), a plugin, or by running the custom installation script. Pick one of the following, depending on whether you want the adapter to be available system-wide or just within a particular Rails project.
-
If you haven't done so already first add github to rubygems with:
gem sources -a http://gems.github.com
-
Install the odbc-rails gem by running:
gem install -r dosire-activerecord-odbc-adapter --include-dependencies
Installing the OpenLink ODBC Data Adapter as a plugin makes it available to a particular Rails application only.
The adapter can be automatically installed as a plugin by navigating to the root of your Rails application and typing either:
script/plugin install odbc-rails
or script/plugin install http://odbc-rails.rubyforge.org/plugins/odbc-rails
On Windows, replace script/plugin by ruby script/plugin. e.g. ruby script/plugin install odbc-rails
You can also install the plugin manually by unpacking the sources into the vendor/plugins directory of your Rails application.
When using rake install or running the install_odbc.rb script by hand, the script tries to determine the location of the activerecord package within your Ruby installation and allows you to overrule the directory it has found with a directory of your choice. If more than one version of activerecord is found, the default will be the latest version.
On Mac OS X the installation script is also capable of locating Locomotive, if installed, and will ask to install in there.
The install_odbc.rb script also verifies that the pre-requisites are installed.
If all else fails this document also describes the steps to install the ODBC adapter into activerecord manually.
The simplest way to install the adapter is by using the following command as root:
# rake install
or if your system supports sudo:
$ sudo rake install
The Rakefile also defines some targets specifically for developers:
$ rake rdoc # Generate rdoc documentation in ~/doc
$ rake package # Create distribution package in ~/distrib
$ rake clean # Remove generated files and directories
The second way of installing the adapter is running the install_odbc.rb script as root.
# ruby install_odbc.rb
or if your system supports sudo:
$ sudo ruby install_odbc.rb
The third way of installing the adapter is by performing the installation steps yourself.
-
Copy odbc_adapter.rb to the ACTIVE_RECORD_ROOT/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/ directory
-
Copy the odbcext_*.rb files to the ACTIVE_RECORD_ROOT/lib/active_record/vendor/ directory
Examples of the required connection parameters can be found in
test/connections/native_odbc/connection.rb
If you enable call-tracing by setting :trace #> true, specify the logger output file as illustrated in connection.rb, e.g.
ActiveRecord::Base.logger # Logger.new("debug_odbc.log")
The OpenLink ODBC Adapter for Ruby on Rails is released under the MIT license as detailed in the file COPYING.
Patches and new contributions can be submitted as diffs from the current CVS archive by:
$ cvs add newfiles
$ cvs -z3 diff -uN > diffs
Patches and contributions can be send to the OpenLink iODBC source archive mainainter at mailto:[email protected] to be included in the next distribution. Please provide accompanying documentation on which bugs are fixed or new features are introduced.