c# visual studio 2013 unable to connect to oracle database - c#

I have visual studio 2013 and oracle 11g
When I try to connect to the database I get the next errror:
"Attempt to load Oracle client libraries threw BadImageFormatException.
This problem will occur when running in 64 bit mode with the 32 bit
Oracle client compoonents installed."
I know there is an issue between the 64 bit visual studio and 32 bit Oracle client. But I am looking for a solution the whole day now and I can only find outdated posts on the internet about older versions.
I already tried to select "platform target: x86" in the build settings.
I also looked for a 64 bit version of the oracle client but that also failed a couple of times.
I Appreciate every help because I need this connection for a very important school project.
Thanks for your time!

you need install 64 bit oracle client
link: Instant Client Downloads for Microsoft Windows (x64)
instantclient-basiclite-windows.x64-11.2.0.4.0.zip (23,504,640 bytes)
as they said about installation
Installation Steps:
Download the appropriate Instant Client packages for your platform. All installations REQUIRE the Basic package.
Unzip the packages into a single directory such as "instantclient".
Set the library loading path in your environment to the directory in Step 2 ("instantclient"). On many UNIX platforms, LD_LIBRARY_PATH
is the appropriate environment variable. On Windows, PATH should be
used.
Start your application and enjoy.

Related

The 'Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0' provider is not registered on the local machine. in win10 [duplicate]

I'm trying to get data from an Excel file on a button click event. My connection string is:
string connString = "Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source=C:\\source\\SiteCore65\\Individual-Data.xls;Extended Properties=Excel 8.0;";
When I click on the button, I got the following error:
The 'Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0' provider is not registered on the local machine.
I have no clue how to fix this. My operating system is Windows 7.
Well, you need to install it. You're looking for:
The 2007 Office System Driver: Data Connectivity Components.
A 64-bit version of the 'Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010 Redistributable' that will allow you to use the 'Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0' provider is available here:
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=13255
If you use the download from the accepted answer, you will need to build for x86, as pointed out by #backtestbroker.com.
depending on the app(32/64bit) using the connection you could just install
Access 2007 engines (only 32bit)
Access 2010 (32&64bit)
Access 2013 full runtime (32&64bit ! >200mb)
Access 2016 runtime
Access 2019 runtime
Summary:
all offices from 2007-2016 contain the provider "Microsoft.ACE.Oledb.12.0"
depending on your application architecture choose the appropriate runtime engine (32/64)6
check your providers with the powershell-command from both 32 and 64bit shell:
(New-Object system.data.oledb.oledbenumerator).GetElements() | select SOURCES_NAME, SOURCES_DESCRIPTION
and you will see which provider your system can use
the long story:
the strings can be found with http://live.sysinternals.com/strings.exe
eg. on a 64bit System with 32bit drivers installed
strings.exe -u -n 10 "c:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\microsoft shared\OFFICE12\MSO.DLL" | findstr "ACE.O"
strings.exe -u -n 10 "c:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\microsoft shared\OFFICE14\MSO.DLL" | findstr "ACE.O"
strings.exe -u -n 10 "c:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\microsoft shared\OFFICE15\MSO.DLL" | findstr "ACE.O"
even in the upcoming office 2016
c:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\root\VFS\ProgramFilesCommonX64\Microsoft Shared\OFFICE16\MSO.DLL
c:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\root\VFS\ProgramFilesCommonX86\Microsoft Shared\OFFICE16\MSO.DLL
you will find the strings
Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB
Microsoft.ACE.Oledb.12.0
the Office 2013 comes also with csi.dll
c:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\microsoft shared\OFFICE15\Csi.dll
c:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\OFFICE15\Csi.dll
which contains the "Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.15.0"
and Office 2016
c:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\root\VFS\ProgramFilesCommonX64\Microsoft Shared\OFFICE16\Csi.dll
c:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\root\VFS\ProgramFilesCommonX86\Microsoft Shared\OFFICE16\Csi.dll
which has the "Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.16.0" version
The first thing you need to check is your build configuration of your application.
If you have built your project under x86 platform, then in order to
resolve you issue you should install the following packages on your
machine:
In order to use the 'Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0' provider you must
install the Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010 Redistributable
first, this installation is available at:
http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=13255 .
After the installation has complete, try running you application, if this
solves the issue great, if not, continue to step 2.
This next step is an unexplained workaround, which works for Office
2010, even though it is the Data Connectivity Components of Office 2007. I am not quite sure why this works, but it does and this has been proven to work in almost all cases. You need to install the 2007 Office System Driver: Data Connectivity Components, this installation is available at:
http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/confirmation.aspx?id=23734 .
After this installation is complete, try running your application, this should resolve the issue.
If you are trying to run an application built under x64 or AnyCPU
platform, I would recommend first validating that it runs as expected
under the x86 platform. In the event that it does not run under that
x86 platform, perform the steps in the first part and validate that
it runs as expected.
I did read that the MS Access drivers including the OLEDB Database
driver works only under the x86 platform and is incompatible under
the x64 or AnyCPU platform. But this appears to be untrue. I
validated my application was running when building x86, then I
installed the Access Database Engine using the passive flag.
First download the file locally You can download the installation
here: http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=13255
Installing using the command prompt with the '/passive' flag. In
the command prompt run the following command:
'AccessDatabaseEngine_x64.exe /passive'
After these 2 steps I managed to run my application after building in
x64 or AnyCPU build configuration. This appeared to solve my issue.
Note: The order of the steps seems to make a difference, so please follow accordingly.
I got this error/exception in Visual Studio 2010 when I changed my build in the Configuration Manager dialog box from "x86" to "Any CPU". This OLEDB database driver I understand only works in x86 and is not 64bit compatible. Changing the build configuration back to x86 solved the problem for me.
I installed the MS drivers and it still didn't work for me. Then I found this blog post that solved the issue. Read it there, else use these two images (linked from that post) as the TLDR sumamary:
Although many answers have been given, the problem I encountered was not yet mentioned.
My Scenario: 64-Bit Application, Win10-64, Office 2007 32-Bit installed.
Installation of the 32-Bit Installer AccessDatabaseEngine.exe as downloaded from MS
reports success, but is NOT installed, as verified with the Powershell
Script of one of the postings above here.
Installation of the 64-Bit installer AccessDatabaseEngine_X64.exe reported a shocking error message:
The very simple solution has been found here on an Autodesk site.
Just add the parameter /passive to the commandline string, like this:
AccessDatabaseEngine_X64.exe /passive
Installation successful, the OleDb driver worked.
The Excel files I am processing with OleDb are of xlsx type, produced with EPPlus 4.5 and modified with Excel 2007.
For all those still affected by this.
I've been getting the error...
OLEDB error "The 'Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0' provider is not registered on the local machine."
...as described by the OP, Shailesh Sahu.
I have 64bit Windows 7.
My problem is within PowerShell scripts, but is using a connection string, similar to the OP's post, so hopefully my findings can be applied to C#, PowerShell and any other language relying on the "Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB" driver.
I followed instructions on this MS forum thread: http://goo.gl/h73RmI
I first tried installing the 64bit version, then installing the 32bit version of the AccessDatabaseEngine.exe from this page
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=13255
But still no joy.
I then ran the code below in PowerShell (from SQL Panda's site http://goo.gl/A3Hu96)
(New-Object system.data.oledb.oledbenumerator).GetElements() | select SOURCES_NAME, SOURCES_DESCRIPTION
...which gave me this result (I've removed other data sources for brevity)...
SOURCES_NAME SOURCES_DESCRIPTION
------------ -------------------
Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.15.0 Microsoft Office 15.0 Access Database Engine OLE DB Provider
As you can see, I have Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.15.0 (fifteen) not Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0 (twelve)
So, I amended my connection string to 15 and it worked.
So, a quick PowerShell snippet to demonstrate how to soft-code the version...
$AceVersion = ((New-Object System.Data.OleDb.OleDbEnumerator).GetElements() | Where-Object { $_.SOURCES_NAME -like "Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB*" } | Sort-Object SOURCES_NAME -Descending | Select-Object -First 1 SOURCES_NAME).SOURCES_NAME
$connString = "Provider=$AceVersion;Data Source=`"$filepath`";Extended Properties=`"Excel 12.0 Xml;HDR=NO`";"
amended to pick the latest ACE version, if more than one
Hopefully, anyone finding this can now check to see what OLEDB version is installed and use the appropriate version number.
If you're using 64-bit but still having problem even after installing AccessDatabaseEngine, see this post, it solved the problem for me.
i.e. You need to install this AccessDatabaseEngine
You need to change the Solution Platform from "Any CPU" to "x86" or "x64" based on the bitness of office installation.
The steps are given below:
Right click on the Solution File in Solution Explorer:
Click on the Configuration Manager.
Click on the Active Platform Drop down, if x86 is already there then select that, else click on New.
Select x86 or x64 from the new platform dropdown:
Compile and run your application.
do this 2 steps:
in this menu: project -> yourproject properties... -> Build : uncheck "prefer 32-Bit"
in connectionString : write cuotes before and after Extended properties, like this: Extended Properties='Excel 12.0 Xml;HDR=YES'
var fileName = string.Format("{0}", openFileDialog1.FileName);
var connectionString = string.Format("Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source={0}; Extended Properties='Excel 12.0 Xml;HDR=YES'", fileName);
var adapter = new OleDbDataAdapter("SELECT * FROM [Sheet1$]", connectionString);
var ds = new DataSet();
adapter.Fill(ds, TableNmae);
DataTable data = ds.Tables[TableNmae];
dg1.DataSource = data;
I was able to fix this by following the steps in this article: http://www.mikesdotnetting.com/article/280/solved-the-microsoft-ace-oledb-12-0-provider-is-not-registered-on-the-local-machine
The key point for me was this:
When debugging with IIS,
by default, Visual Studio uses the 32-bit version. You can change this
from within Visual Studio by going to Tools » Options » Projects And
Solutions » Web Projects » General, and choosing
"Use the 64 bit version of IIS Express for websites and projects"
After checking that option, then setting the platform target of my project back to "Any CPU" (i had set it to x86 somewhere in the troubleshooting process), i was able to overcome the error.
If you are debugging a web project, just make sure IIS Express is running either in 32 or 64 bits depending on your project settings.
Goto
Tools > Options > Projects and Solutions > Web Projects
and from there check (or uncheck) the 'Use 64 bit version of IIS Express...'
If the installed "AccessDatabaseEngine" still does not help, below is solution:
You need to change the Active Solution Platform from "Any CPU" to "x86".
OLEDB Provider is Not Registered on the Local Machine
From CodeProject.com
First verify which version of microsoft.ace.oledb.12.0 is installed in your system.
Check in below path C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\OFFICE14\ACEOLEDB.DLL --64 bit is installed
Check in below path C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\OFFICE14\ACEOLEDB.DLL --x86 bit is installed
If (x86) is installed then using configuration manager change solution platform to x86, for x64 change to x64.
If not available then install using below link
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=23734
A 64-bit version of the 'Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010 Redistributable' that will allow you to use the 'Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0' provider is available here:
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=13255
If using VS 2012 or later, make sure that "Prefer 32-bit" checkbox is unchecked in the project's Properties => Build => General configuration
syp_dino,
The solution for me as you suggested for the "Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0' provider is not registered on the local machine" error is to change the Active Solution Platform from "Any CPU" to "x86".
When I performed those steps, rebuilt the solution, grabbed the EXE and placed in on the network, everything worked smoothly on the Windows 7 64 bit machine.
I faced this same problem. Go to the Solution Properties and change Any CPU to x86, I think it will do the job.
These configurations worked in January of 2020 on my new machine build:
(1 - x64 only) Windows 10 x64, Office 365 x64, AccessDatabaseEngine_x64 2016 installed with /passive argument, VStudio build settings set to x64 explicitly, with the following connection string: Provider= Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.16.0; Data Source=D:...\MyDatabase.accdb
(2 - x64 or x32) Windows 10 x64, Office 365 x64, AccessDatabaseEngine_x64 2016 installed with /passive argument, PLUS AccessDatabaseEngine 2010 (32bit) installed with /passive argument, VStudio build settings set to AnyCPU, with the following connection string: Provider= Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.16.0; Data Source=D:...\MyDatabase.accdb
(3 - x32 only) Windows 10 x64, Office 365 x32, AccessDatabaseEngine 2010 (32bit) installed with /passive argument, VStudio build settings set to x86, with the following connection string: Provider= Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0; Data Source=D:...\MyDatabase.accdb
FAILURE NOTES
Using the ACE.OLEDB.12.0 x64 provider in the connection string failed with only the AccessDatabaseEngine_x64 2016 installed as above in (1).
Using AnyCPU in the visual studio build settings failed in (1). Setting x64 is required. Maybe this is because AnyCPU means that Vstudio must see an x32 ACE.OLEDB.nn.0 provider at compile time.
The ACE.OLEDB.12.0 2016 x32 /passive engine would NOT install when it saw x64 applications around. (The ACE.OLEDB.12.0 2010 x32 /passive installer worked.)
CONCLUSIONS
To use x64 build settings, you need to have the 2016 x64 database engine AND the ACE.OLEDB.16.0 connection-string provider AND explicit x64 build settings to work with Office 365 in January of 2020. Using the /passive option makes installations easy. Credit to whoever posted that tip!
To use AnyCPU, I needed to have both the ACE.OLEDB.12.0 2010 x32 engine and the ACE.OLEDB.16.0 x64 engines installed. That way Vstudio could see both x32 and x64 engines at "AnyCPU" compile time. I could change the provider connection string to ACE.OLEDB.12.0 for x32 operation or to ACE.OLEDB.16.0 for x64 operation. Both worked fine.
To use x86 build settings, you need to have the 2010 x32 database engine AND the ACE.OLEDB.12.0 connection-string provider AND explicit x86 build settings to work with Office 365 x32 in January of 2020.
I have similar issue when we are reading Excel file.
History of the problem:
We recently migrated our application from 32-bit to 64-bit because of the memory requirement. For that we migrated our windows 7 from 32-bit to 64-bit. But still we installed 32-bit office on our machines.
because, of this we had this issue while importing Excel data into application.
Solution,
I downloaded 64-bit version of the http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=13255 and installed with argument as,
AccessDatabaseEngine_x64.exe /passive
Without any code change my issue get resolved.
Note:
On 64-bit OS and 64-bit office, my functionality was working fine without this fix. This fix is only required while our application is 64-bit running on 64-bit OS which is having 32-bit office installed on it.
I had this issue when attempting to import data from an excel file (xlsx) into a SQL Server DB using SSMS 2014.
The 2007 Office System Driver: Data Connectivity Components install did the trick for me.
I received this error when importing data from an Excel file into MS-SQL.
The provider was already installed (64-bit) and this surprised me why it didn't work.
So all I did was locate the Import/Export application used here i.e. the .EXE.
And I found it at
C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\130\DTS\Binn\DTSWizard.exe
I then ran the .exe directly to perform the data import. And it worked!
I followed the instructions set out by others; installing this patch, installing that patch as well as the Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010.
My issue was that I'm using the same library (linq2sql) in 2 sites on my machine; 1 works and 1 doesn't.
Eventually I found that I had to "enable 32 bit applications" in the advanced settings of the apppool for my non-working site.
Everything works fine now.
Just download & install the following Access DB engine (X86 or X64: as per your machine configuration) and see the magic :)
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/confirmation.aspx?id=13255
If you get this error when trying to use ACE from an ASP.NET application, the most likely cause is that you have installed either one of the 32-bit versions. By default, IIS on a 64-bit operating system will run applications in a 64-bit worker process. 64-bit processes cannot load 32-bit DLLs. When a call is made to the ACE provider, the 64 bit process will attempt to locate a 64-bit DLL. If it doesn't exist, you get the error message that brought you here.
In this case you have two options. First, you can install the 2010 64-bit version. If you have the 2007 32-bit version installed, you can simply install the 2010 64-bit version alongside it. If you have the 32-bit version of 2010 installed, you need to uninstall it and download and install the 64-bit 2010 version instead. You cannot have both the 32- and 64-bit versions of the 2010 provider installed at the same time. If you are performing the installation on your development machine, you may also be constrained by the bit-ness of any existing Office installations.
The second option is to change the application pool in IIS to enable 32-bit applications. If you are using the full version of IIS, you can use the management tool to do this (Control Panel » Administrative Tools » Internet Information Services (IIS) Manager).
For more understanding please refer below link
for Visual Studio 2022 (and newer)
I had this error every time and it didn't help anything. VS2019 was the solution.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/visualstudio/data-tools/accessing-data-in-visual-studio?view=vs-2022#data-providers
If you're using Visual Studio 2022 to connect to databases, you will
need to be aware that Visual Studio 2022 is a 64-bit process. This
means some of the data tools in Visual Studio will not be able to
connect to OLEDB or ODBC databases using 32-bit data providers.
If you need to maintain 32-bit applications that connect to OLEDB or
ODBC databases, you will still be able to build and run the
application with Visual Studio 2022. However, if you need to use any
of the Visual Studio Data Tools such as Server Explorer, Data Source
Wizard, or the DataSet Designer, you will need to use an earlier
version of Visual Studio that is still a 32-bit process. The last
version of Visual Studio that was a 32-bit process was Visual Studio
2019.
also can try these steps
In the SQL Server,
1.Open one data base
2.Clic in the option 'Server Obtect'
3.Clic in 'Linked Servers'
4.Clic in 'Providers'
5.Clic Rigth in 'Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0'
6.Uncheck all the options and close
I had the same issue but in this case microsoft-ace-oledb-12-0-provider was already installed on my machine and working fine for other application developed.
The difference between those application and the one with I had the problem was the Old Applications were running on "Local IIS" whereas the one with error was on "IIS Express(running from Visual Studio").
So what I did was-
Right Click on Project Name.
Go to Properties
Go to Web Tab on the right.
Under Servers select Local IIS and click on Create Virtual Directory button.
Run the application again and it worked.
I had Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010 Redistributable already installed on my machine but was still receiving the Microsoft ACE OLEDB Provider error.
Then I recalled that I had upgraded to Office 2016 recently, so, may be I should try reinstalling Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010 Redistributable. And that fixed the problem on my machine.
So, if you have upgraded to different version of MS Office or even repaired/reinstalled your MS Office then try reinstalling Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010 Redistributable before wasting time with finding other fixes. Good luck!
1.) Verify your connection string with ConnectionStrings.com.
2.) Make sure you have the correct database engine installed. These were the two database engines that helped me.
Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010 Redistributable
2007 Office System Driver: Data Connectivity Components
3.) There could be an issue with your build target platform being "Any CPU", it may need to be "X86" (Properties, Build, Platform Target).

Publish fails when Solution Builds - Oracle.DataAccess.dll 64bit

So I'm having a problem publishing my WebApp. I have set all the projects to AnyCPU in Configuration Manager. I was using a 32 bit version of Oracle.DataAccess.dll in my DAL but I need to use a 64 bit version for the server. The server is running a 64 bit version of Oracle.
Unfortunately when I put the 64 bit version of the dll in my project and rebuild it throws an error.
Could not load file or assembly 'Oracle.DataAccess' or one of its dependencies. An attempt was made to load a program with an incorrect format.
Any ideas would be greatly appreciated. I have been working on this one problem for a few days now and haven't been able to find help.
Oh also! I could actually publish before and it push the 32 bit version of the Oracle dll even though I had the 64 bit version in my DAL. I ended up removing the 32 bit version of Oracle off my computer so that wouldn't happen. But any ideas why it did that?
The fix from brandonbanks worked until installing oracle client 12c r2 (64bit). After install Visual Studio would not load oracle data access dll (same error as listed).
Previous oracle client was 12c r1 (64bit) but I needed oracle client r2. The new r2 oracle client broke ability to build asp.net project in visual studio.
The fix was to uninstall all oracle, followed by full clean (remove oracle from registry plus left behind oracle files). Then compile worked fine. Didn't need to change anything Visual studio side. Also didn't need to reinstall oracle Client for compile and publish to start working again (just need the 12c r2 oracle 64 bit data access dll).
Can then reinstall other oracle clients but if also installing 32bit client suggest doing 64bit client last.
Found out it was a problem with the compiling process in Visual Studio.
I added this line to the publish profile in the App_Data folder.
<AspnetCompilerPath>C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.30319</AspnetCompilerPath>
Also had to change my IIS to 64 bit. I used this cmd script.
reg add HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\12.0\WebProjects /v Use64BitIISExpress /t REG_DWORD /d 1
Hope this helps anyone out there who has a similar problem.

System.Data.OracleClient not working with 64 bit Oracle Client

I have designed a C# application to connect to Oracle Database and change schema users passwords. My reference assembly is System.Data.OracleClient from the location: "C:\Program Files (x86)\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\Framework.NETFramework\v4.5\System.Data.OracleClient.dll"
The platform that I used to design/test the application looks like this:
1. 64 bit Windows 7 platform.
2. 32 bit .Net Frameworkv4.5
3. 32 bit Oracle 10g Client.
I need this application to run for 64 bit Oracle Client too. But when I transfer my binaries to a machine which has 64 bit Oracle 11g installed, I get this error: "Attempt to load Oracle client libraries threw BadImageFormatException. This problem will occur when running in 64 bit mode with the 32 bit Oracle client components installed."
I am not sure how to work around this issue. Please suggest if I need to make any code changes or assembly reference. I read through a lot of similar forums but could not find anything helpful. Please help!
First of all, provider System.Data.OracleClient is deprecated. Microsoft is not supporting it anymore, you should consider to use the Oracle provider Oracle.DataAccess or Oracle.ManagedDataAccess.
My recommondation is to install both, 32-bit and 64-bit Oracle Client on your developing machine, then you can test and build anything. Here is an instruction how to do this: Install x86 and x64 Oracle Client on one machine
An x86 Oracle client can connect to a 64 bit Oracle Database, vice versa is also no problem.
I had the same issue on a Windows 10 PC. I copied the project from my old computer to the new one, both 64 bits, and I installed the Oracle Client 64 bit on the new machine. I got the same error message, but after trying many solutions to no effect, what actually worked for me was this:
In your Visual Studio (mine is 2017) go to
Tools > Options > Projects and Solutions > Web Projects
On that page, check the option that says: Use the 64 bit version of IIS Express for Websites and Projects
Try this:
Open Oracle Net Configuration Assistant
Select radio button option at Local Net Service Name Configuration, then click Next
Select radio button option at Reconfigure, then click next
Select net service name you want to reconfigure, either ORACLR_CONNECTION_DATA or ORCL, then click Next
input your Service Name, if your service name of installed oracle as ORCL, then write ORCL to the field, then click Next
select the protocol you want to use, for example, select TCP, then click Next
input hostname where your oracle database engine (service) installed, for example, installed on your desktop or notebook,
then fill as localhost, and fill your port number (select option Use the Standar port number of 1521) or if use other port, fill the port number
Then click next.
select Yes perform test,
if necessary, change user logon
then click next
if no configure another net service name, select No and then click next
you should download, extract and install the ODTwithODAC183.zip and BuildTools_Full.exe if you want use to connect on .net framework from MS Visual Studio

64 bit Micrsoft.ACE.OLEDB provider is not registered on the local machine

I have 64-bit Office installed on my computer and also the 64-bit Microsoft Access database engine.
Even though MADE (Microsoft Access Database Engine) is installed, Visual Studio is throwing an error as shown in the screenshot.
Try installing this first: http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=13255
If that doesnt work for you, try the following method:
NOTE: this DOES work for office 2010 even though it is for 2007 office :)
download and install this: http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/confirmation.aspx?id=23734
in VS click add data source, follow the wizard and enjoy! :)
1.Try to download this from here: http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/confirmation.aspx?id=23734
2.Go to Visual Studio click add data source, follow the wizard.
This is the same problem I had before and followed steps from here:
http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/vstsdb/thread/1d5c04c7-157f-4955-a14b-41d912d50a64
http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/officesetupdeploylegacy/thread/cc10d906-0fd8-49ef-a1b0-45814bd70c55/
You need to install the x86 version if the target machine is 32 bit or the x64 version if the target machine is 64 bit and your application is built with configuration Any CPU.

Windows Server 08 Standalone exe Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0 error

I have a standalone application used for CRON that I deployed to a Windows Server 2008 machine that keeps giving me the error below.
System.InvalidOperationException: The 'Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0' provider is not registered on the local machine.
I did some research on the subject and it seems a 64 bit application does not work with the MSJet dll for 64bit. So the solution was to recompile the application and have it targeted for a 32bit machine, however I cannot do that in my project. I looked the in the C:\Windows\SysWOW64 folder and found both the msjet40.dll and msjetoledb40.dll files. Is there any other way I can run this application as is or maybe in a compatibility setting since I cant target it to 32 bit when I build it.
You cannot use msjet40.dll or msjetoledb40.dll if your application is a 64-bit process. You will have to use the ACE OLEDB 12.0 which is the only real alternative that supports 64-bit process. Your only other option is to compile the application as a 32-bit process.
You can download this driver from: Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010 Redistributable and if you are looking for additional information you can find it here

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