I've been tasked to take an Access 2007 application that relies on an ODBC connection and share it with other institutions with the same ODBC connection. Please forgive me if I don't communicate this very well. I'm not a developer, but have been tasked with this project since I've gotten it this far. I'm sure that's never happened before...
First I'll give a layout of our structure:
- I work for a college that shares an database via ODBC with 31 other schools.
- The system office that maintains the database for all campuses only allows us to access the read-only data through a VPN of a Common Access Point server (CAP) that then connects via ODBC
- The CAP server (the only location that can link to the ODBC) has Microsoft Office and does not have internet access.
- Each campus has a unique ODBC connection that requires relinking tables when the accdb is placed on their CAP server.
- With each launch of Access, the user must also login to the ODBC connection.
- The CAP server can can read-write on a network drive, but not vice-versa.
- We can safely assume that no other software can be installed on the CAP server, but files may be placed (which is why we can distribute an accdb file)
The Access application pulls student course activity from the ODBC and and applies logic to determine if/when the student stops attending all courses. At this time, this logic is a series of queries tied to a macro. The database then generates a report (with more information from the ODBC) of the students. An active tracking process is in place so a record can be cleared from the report unless a change occurs, which will then cause the record to reappear with the changes. This requires data to be stored locally as well since the ODBC is read-only. There are various forms and reports backed by VBA as well.
The goal is to package the software and distribute for launch at all other campuses. So far we've done small distribution by simply sending them the accdb file and having a button that launches the linked table manager. After initial distribution, I will continue developing the software and distributing updates, having to preserve the data locally stored in the accdb.
The catch is that I only have experience with Access and enough knowledge of VBA to be able to google solutions individually as they come up.
My question could be simple or complex, I'm not sure. Basically I'd like to know if there is a more appropriate approach other than what I've been doing: send accdb and the user copies and pastes the only table that needs to be carried over.
Clarification
Would it be practical to convert the accdb to an executable with each version that is distributed? Is this even possible when the ODBC requires reconnecting and the ODBC is unique between campuses?