Re: Filtering ODBC table list - Mailing list pgsql-odbc
From | Obe, Regina |
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Subject | Re: Filtering ODBC table list |
Date | |
Msg-id | 53F9CF533E1AA14EA1F8C5C08ABC08D2028FE6D2@ZDND.DND.boston.cob Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Filtering ODBC table list (Stephen Frost <sfrost@snowman.net>) |
Responses |
Re: Filtering ODBC table list
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List | pgsql-odbc |
I think 2 is already done in the latest ODBC driver. I installed it recently on a client pc and was surprised that I didn't see the table I had just created as a link option when trying to link via Access and then after adding permissions to the table in PostgreSQL, I then saw it in the list. Hope that helps, Regina -----Original Message----- From: pgsql-odbc-owner@postgresql.org [mailto:pgsql-odbc-owner@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of Stephen Frost Sent: Wednesday, October 03, 2007 8:57 AM To: PostgreSQL ODBC List Subject: [ODBC] Filtering ODBC table list Greetings, We've run into a couple of issues that, in general, I think would be helped greatly by having some way to filter the list of tables which are shown in the ODBC link/import list. I'm curious if that is something which is possible to implement, the difficulty involved, and if anyone would be interested in working on it. Basically, it's like this: #1: Too many tables. If you have more than (I think) 65,535 tables in the database, access breaks. What happens is that if you pick a table beyond that point, it just tries to pull in all tables past that limit. For example, 70,000 tables, user picks table 67,000 (and *just* that table in the ODBC link list) then access will try and link/import all tables from 65,536 -> 70,000. This is kind of a problem. I might be off on the exact numbers, but I don't think so. #2: Permissions issues. Showing tables that a user doesn't have access to is, at best, frustrating. Even just filtering based on usage rights on schemas would be an improvement, if not going the full way to relation-level permission checks. It really strikes me that that's not a terribly difficult thing to check or incorporate into a query that pulls the table info. #3: Slow. It takes *forever* on a gigabit link w/ a good desktop box and a fast-as-hell server to get a full table list (see the 70k tables example above for the number of tables we're talking about here). I don't know what the latency is from but I suspect it's from Access getting the table definitions and whatnot for every table. The server doesn't seem busy at all while this is going on. I'm really hopeful that some kind of filtering mechanism would improve this situation greatly by only pulling down and getting the info for those tables which someone is interested in/has access to. What I would like to see, honestly, is two things: A config toggle to say "only show schemas/tables I have access to" and some way to say, preferrably w/o changing some "config" option, "show me only tables in this schema" or "show me only tables in schemas that match this regexp". I realize there are limitations from Access and the ODBC interface that might make these things impossible to do, if so, I'd really like to hear about them now so I can think about how I could implement the same thing through some other means (like making a bunch of different databases or something; I'd hate it, but if there's no other way... <Shrug>). Comments? Thoughts? I might be able to get some time to work on this myself, but I'd really like to hear what other people think or if anyone else is interested in working on it or already has some solution before spending resources on it. Thanks, Stephen ----------------------------------------- The substance of this message, including any attachments, may be confidential, legally privileged and/or exempt from disclosure pursuant to Massachusetts law. It is intended solely for the addressee. If you received this in error, please contact the sender and delete the material from any computer.
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