I have managed to read data of Microsoft Access file (.accdb) on Windows using PDO but I'm having problem getting to work on Linux (CentOS). I can see modules is installed:
[root@rapid host]# php -m | grep PDO
PDO
PDO_ODBC
[root@rapid host]# php -m | grep odbc
odbc
code:
<?php
try{
$dbhAccess = new PDO("odbc:Driver={Microsoft Access Driver (*.mdb, *.accdb)};Dbq=/root/access/data.accdb;Uid=Admin");
}
catch(PDOException $e){
echo $e->getMessage();
exit();
}
I get an erro when I execute (CLI) PHP file:
[root@rapid host]# php access.php
SQLSTATE[IM002] SQLDriverConnect: 0 [unixODBC][Driver Manager]Data source name not found, and no default driver specified
You can not use {Microsoft Access Driver (*.mdb, *.accdb)} as part of your data source because Microsoft do not make an MS Access ODBC driver for Linux. There are 2 ODBC drivers for MS Access as far as I know of. The MDB Tools and the Easysoft ODBC-Access Driver.
If you install either driver you can either use a DSN which you setup in your odbc.ini file or as you prefer a DSN-Less connection. Here is an example of the an Easysoft DSN-Less connection to an MS Access database
PDO("odbc:Driver={Driver=Easysoft ODBC-ACCESS};Dbq=/root/access/data.accdb");
More information on connecting and getting data back using PDO-ODBC can be found on Easysoft PHP guide There is a section about half way down that talks about PDO-ODBC.
I've never worked with a Microsoft Access database but I do regularly connect to DB2 (on IBM AS/400's) and MS SQL servers from Linux (Ubuntu) servers. Your error seems to indicate you don't have a MS Access driver installed - the only one I'm aware of is: http://www.easysoft.com/products/data_access/odbc-access-driver/index.html
Your error message also says the "Data source name not found" - in order for me to connect to DB2 or MSSQL I have to add some information to /etc/odbc.ini and /etc/odbcinst.ini.
/etc/odbcinst.ini - this is where you describe where to find the drivers for ODBC. Here's an example of what I use for DB2 and MSSQL:
In that last section ([ODBC]) I currently have Trace = no - if you change that to Trace = yes you will get some helpful debugging information in the /tmp/odbc.log file.
/etc/odbc.ini - this is where you define your data sources. Here's an example of what I use for DB2 and MSSQL:
I've seen a number of questions here on StackOverflow talking about using MSFT Access databases from a Linux machine - and there doesn't seem to ever be a happy ending. If there is any way you can port the data to a different, better supported, database system (like MySQL) I think you'll save yourself some headaches. Good luck!
For WINDOWS this is the solution.
After investing a lot of time I have the solution.
The 32-bit version of "AccessDatabaseEngine" must be installed.
Download the 32-bit Access Engine on: https://www.microsoft.com/es-es/download/confirmation.aspx?id=13255
And run it with the command line: AccessDatabaseEngine.exe /passive
After that, it should work.
you should install the MDB driver.
I have no way to try it now, but I think that MDB Tools (specifically the ODBC driver) can do what you' re interested to.