D
Dkline
We have a database on a server which is edited by 4 people daily. It has
recently had an increasing frequency of requiring a Compact and Repair to
the point where it is now a daily occurence.
There appear to be three solutions:
1. Get everyone one on the same Access versions. Current range is 2000,
2002, and 2003 - no one is the 97 version. So the thought is get these four
people on the same version of Access and the problem goes away.
2. Split the database. Have BE on the server and FE on each local machine.
3. Move to SQL Server.
In the file in question, there is one table with about 77,000 records in it
with 30 fields. Total file size is about 45 MB. This file is mission
critical.
My opinion is #3 - take the plunge and move to SQL. Senior management wants
#1.
So my question is: how well does the FE/BE split work? Enough to not need to
go to SQL Server at all? Or does it just buy me some time until I can get up
to speed on SQL Server?
recently had an increasing frequency of requiring a Compact and Repair to
the point where it is now a daily occurence.
There appear to be three solutions:
1. Get everyone one on the same Access versions. Current range is 2000,
2002, and 2003 - no one is the 97 version. So the thought is get these four
people on the same version of Access and the problem goes away.
2. Split the database. Have BE on the server and FE on each local machine.
3. Move to SQL Server.
In the file in question, there is one table with about 77,000 records in it
with 30 fields. Total file size is about 45 MB. This file is mission
critical.
My opinion is #3 - take the plunge and move to SQL. Senior management wants
#1.
So my question is: how well does the FE/BE split work? Enough to not need to
go to SQL Server at all? Or does it just buy me some time until I can get up
to speed on SQL Server?