We've had good luck with something we found at:
http://www.sevainc.com/
David Boerwinkle
-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Mascari <mascarm@mascari.com>
To: Chris Carbaugh <cjdesigns@sprintmail.com>
Cc: pgsql-general@postgreSQL.org <pgsql-general@postgreSQL.org>
Date: Sunday, December 26, 1999 6:08 PM
Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Import table from MS Access?
>Chris Carbaugh wrote:
>
>> What is the best way to import a table from Microsoft Access 2000?
>>
>> I was able to export to a text file from access, but this was only the
>> data. Can I export/import the table definition as well?
>>
>> I have been using pgaccess to administer my DB. It seems I can't tell
>> it to import a comma delimited file? Is there any way around this?
>>
>> Any help is greatly appreciated.
>>
>> Chris
>>
>
>One way is to use the PostgreSQL ODBC driver from Insight (search
>yahoo.com for: postgres Insight ODBC), and use the File->Export function
>in Access to export the tables to PostgreSQL. There are a few problems
>with this method, though, if I recall correctly:
>
>1. Table and field names will be case-sensitive, so if you have a table
>in Access called Employees with a field HireDate, then in PostgreSQL,
>you must refer to this as "Employees"."HireDate", not employees.hiredate,
>although you could programmatically rename the tables by performing an
>update on pg_class and pg_attribute.
>
>2. Column constraints are not exported. If I recall (its been some time),
>column constraints are not exported from Access when the tables are
>created. And, unfortunately, there's no easy way to add them in
>PostgreSQL using an ALTER TABLE statement.
>
>Nevertheless, it might be easier to perform the export in Access using
>ODBC, pg_dump the database to a text file, perform whatever cleanup is
>necessary, and then reimport.
>
>Also, I rember that there's a PostgreSQL upsizing tool somewhere that
>does all this stuff for you. But for the life of me I can't remember
>where...
>
>Hope that helps,
>
>Mike Mascari
>
>
>
>************
>