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ruby-odbc 0.99991 with ruby 3.2 patch
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# $Id: README,v 1.47 2020/12/25 21:47:43 chw Exp chw $ ruby-odbc-0.999991 This is an ODBC binding for Ruby. So far it has been tested with - Ruby 1.[6-9], MySQL 3.22/MyODBC (local), unixODBC 2.1.0 on Linux 2.2-x86 and 2.6-x86_64 - Ruby 1.6.4, MySQL 3.22/MyODBC (local), libiodbc 2.50 on Linux 2.2-x86 - Ruby 1.[6-8], MySQL 3.22/MyODBC (remote), MS Jet Engine, MSVC++ 6.0 on Windows NT4SP6 - Ruby 1.6.[3-5], MySQL 3.22/MyODBC (remote), MS Jet Engine, cygwin, on Windows NT4SP6 and 2000 - Ruby 1.8.*, SQLite/ODBC >= 0.67, libiodbc 3.52.4 on Fedora Core 3 x86 - Ruby 2.0.0, SQLite/ODBC >= 0.93, unixODBC 2.2.14 on Ubuntu 12.04 x86 - Ruby >= 2.4 Michael Neumann <neumann @nospam@ s-direktnet.de> and Will Merrell <wmerrell @nospam@ catalystcorp.com> reported successful compilation with Cygwin on Win32. Requirements: - Ruby 1.6.[3-8] or Ruby >= 1.7 - unixODBC 2.x or libiodbc 3.52 on UN*X Installation: $ ruby -Cext extconf.rb [--enable-dlopen|--disable-dlopen] $ make -C ext # make -C ext install --enable/disble-dlopen turns on/off special initialization code to make ruby-odbc agnostic to unixODBC/iODBC driver manager shared library names when GCC is used for compile. In cases where unixODBC or iODBC is installed in non-standard locations, use the option --with-odbc-dir=<non-standard-location> when running extconf.rb Installation of utf8 version: $ ruby -Cext/utf8 extconf.rb [--enable-dlopen|--disable-dlopen] $ make -C ext/utf8 # make -C ext/utf8 install Installation MSVC: C:..>ruby -Cext extconf.rb C:..>cd ext C:..>nmake C:..>nmake install C:..>ruby -Cutf8 extconf.rb C:..>cd utf8 C:..>nmake C:..>nmake install Testing: $ ruby -Ctest test.rb DSN [uid] [pwd] or $ ruby -KU -Ctest/utf8 test.rb DSN [uid] [pwd] Usage: Refer to doc/odbc.html The difference between utf8 and non-utf8 versions are: - non-utf8 version uses normal SQL.* ANSI functions - utf8 version uses SQL.*W UNICODE functions and requires/returns all strings in UTF8 format Thus, depending on the -K option of ruby one could use that code snippet: ... if $KCODE == "UTF8" then require 'odbc_utf8' else require 'odbc' fi It is also possible to load both non-utf8 and utf8 version into ruby: ... # non-utf8 version require 'odbc' # utf8 version require 'odbc_utf8' Whichever is loaded first, gets the module name 'ODBC'. The second loaded module will be named 'ODBC_UTF8' (for 'odbc_utf8') or 'ODBC_NONE' (for 'odbc'). That should allow to use both versions simultaneously in special situations. TODO: - heavier testing - improve documentation Author: Christian Werner mailto:chw @nospam@ ch-werner.de http://www.ch-werner.de/rubyodbc
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