![]() still no luck though.I have a funny feeling that MS Access is not JNDI compatible - I came across this in another javaranch:If there is anybody out there who has got this combination working MS Access + Tomcat + JNDI, let me know please. jar used by all Java applications to connect to the database. (jaxws-rt. ![]() I placed this jar file still not able to see. The JDBC-ODBC Bridge driver file from JDK 1.7, jdbc-odbc-bridge-jre7.jar, still works with the latest JDK. is not coming in that drop down, i came to know that that needs rt.jar file to be placed in Tibco/bw/lib I havenot find where to download that rt.jar. The JDBC-ODBC Bridge driver included in Java SE 7 (JDK 1.7) supports JDBC API 4.1. Hey guys thanks for your responses so far,Stu - jdbc-odbc is used when your not using JNDI - hence cant use it now that I am wanting to use JNDINaseem - I have followed the Tomcat instructions for configurig JNDI, so changed the web.xml and server.xml accordingly adding the context tag, then resource etc. JDBC drivers are Java library files with the extension. The JDBC-ODBC Bridge driver is not included in Java SE 8 (JDK 1.8) any more. Hence for I need a.jar file that I put in the.common/lib folder.MySQL and other DB's have drivers, I assumed that MS Access would also have one?Am on the right lines guys?ThanksZeinMost people use the JDBC-ODBC bridge, which is built into no seperate driver required.There are some commercial drivers for MS Access out there I've never used one and don't know any particular names. Go to the User DSN or System DSN tab and click the Add button. Navigate to the Drivers tab to verify that the driver (Simba Spark ODBC Driver) is installed. ![]() Originally posted by Zein Nunna:Thanks for your reply Naseem, but I mentioned I'm using Tomcat, but forgot to state I am also using JNDI etc. The installation directory is /Library/simba/spark.
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