Dan Waters
dwaters at usinternet.com
Wed Dec 21 14:59:16 CST 2005
Hello John! I'm looking at this too. I pre-ordered a book titled Beginning SQL Server 2005 Express, and got it 2 days ago. Author is Rick Dobson. He does specifically say that you can create an Access Project that points to SSX, although he doesn't talk about upsizing per se. I tried to select my installed SSX database from the upsizing wizard in AXP, and wasn't able to do so. I may not have the 'service broker'(?) set up correctly. He also specifically talks about creating links from an mdb that point to SSX. You do need ODBC to do this. He doesn't talk about faster, slower, etc. According to SQL 2K5 Books On Line, you can import data a few different ways. Look at Importing Data. That's all I know for now. Dan Waters -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of John Colby Sent: Wednesday, December 21, 2005 1:05 PM To: 'Access Developers discussion and problem solving' Subject: [AccessD] Upsizing to SQL Server I have a rather large application that I would like to upsize to SQL Server express. My concern is that this is a "mission critical" app and am wondering how to do this. First, can the express edition be selected from the Access upsizing wizard? Second, there are 40 users. I have no idea what the actual impact will be on the speed of the app etc. This would be a straight data update at first, i.e. just moving the data to the Express server and linking via odbc (I assume) so that the app works "just like an access BE". Since I can't predict the impact, I can't really say whether it will stand up to the load, be faster, slower, immensely slower etc. and thus can't just recommend that we "just do it". SQL Server has a bunch of improvements that recommend it in general but I have no feel for whether this would really work. Has anyone ever done something like this? The Access BE is approaching 500 mbytes now, with about 40 concurrent users. John W. Colby www.ColbyConsulting.com Contribute your unused CPU cycles to a good cause: http://folding.stanford.edu/ -- AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com