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I have an application that needs to connect to a SQL database, and execute a SQL Agent Job.

The connection string I am trying to access is stored in the registry, which is easily enough pulled out.

This appliction is to be run on multiple computers, and I cannot guarantee the format of this connection string being consistent across these computers. Two that I have pulled out for example are:

Data Source=Server1;Initial Catalog=DB1;Integrated Security=SSPI;
Data Source=Server2;Initial Catalog=DB1;Provider=SQLNCLI.1;Integrated Security=SSPI;Auto Translate=False;

I can use an object of type System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection to connect to the database with the first connection string, howevever, I get the following error when I pass the second to it:

keyword not supported: 'provider'

Similarly, I can use the an object of type System.Data.OleDb.OleDbConnection to connect to the database with the second connection string, howevever, I get the following error when I pass the first to it:

An OLEDB Provider was not specified in the ConnectionString'

I can solve this by scanning the string for 'Provider' and doing the connect conditionally, however I can't help but feel that there is a better way of doing this, and handle the connection strings in a more generic fashion.

Does anyone have any suggestions?

2 Answers 2

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The normal way of handling this is storing the ADO.NET provider unique name (separately from the connection string) and using a DB Provider Factory.

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  • Maybe I'm not quite understanding you. I have no control over what is stored. The connection strings are fixed, and I cannot store anything more. May 19, 2010 at 15:45
  • Ah; well, then, you'll have to guess the provider from the connection string, unfortunately. There's no way to do this automatically. May 19, 2010 at 16:08
  • For general info. Accepted answer was on above comment, I.e. this was not possible. Thanks for the help May 24, 2010 at 7:09
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Use a SqlConnectionStringBuilder, initialize it with the connection string you find in registry and then read its ConnectionString property, which would normalize the connection string to proper SQL Client syntax.

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  • The SqlConnectionStringBuilder won't work with his OleDbConnection object.
    – code4life
    May 19, 2010 at 15:55
  • This still gives the same error: keyword not supported: 'provider' May 19, 2010 at 15:59

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