3

I am working with MS Excel files in my web application built in Azure environment. I never run into following error when I am trying to access the excel file on my development fabric. But once I deploy to Azure in cloud, I get this error message.

The 'Microsoft.ACE.OleDb.12.0' provider is not registered on the local machine.

I was under impression that development fabric for Azure is replica of the environment you would expect in Cloud.

Is there something wrong I am doing here? Is ACE.OleDb provider not present in Azure?

4 Answers 4

3

The ACE.OLEDb provider isn't installed on the Azure VMs.

The Development Fabric won't give you an error here simply by its design (which in my opinion, is flawed in this area). Since the Fabric runs as a .NET assembly on your local machine, it has and leverages access to your local GAC. As a result, it can access anything you have installed even when those libraries are not present in the Azure image GAC. So, you aren't really doing anything wrong in terms of using the Dev Fabric, its just that the DevFab in its current state (SDK 1.2) cannot help you deal with assembly dependency (and other details) in the cloud.

As for the assembly itself, I don't know anything about that provider, the DAC, or Jet Drivers. However, assuming they work simply by DLL reference you should be able to make this happen in Azure, you'll just have to be explicit in your reference.

1.) Make sure you've selected "Copy Local" on the DLL

2.) Do some testing (maybe remove the component from your local machine) to ensure the code is accessing the DLL within the bin path for the application, as opposed to the GAC. The standard DLL searching algorithm should guarantee this, but always better to be sure.

In short, if you can make this work local without that component installed, using just local DLLs, you can replicate in Azure. Otherwise, you're at the mercy of the cloud, so to speak.

4
  • how to set copy local on dll? Apr 15, 2014 at 10:44
  • In VisualStudio, find the DLL under the references folder and right-click/Proprties (or ALT+ENTER). In the properties screen there is a "Build Action" option. Set that to "copy local" or "always copy" (forgot the current wording). That will force csc to place a copy of the .dll in the bin folder when it builds Apr 22, 2014 at 17:42
  • and by doing this can i run my application on azure ?? i tried adding the dll manually. but still it not able to use the dll Apr 23, 2014 at 4:37
  • If I add the file ACEOLEDB.DLL which I have extracted from the file AccessDatabaseEngine.exe (32-bit), Visual Studio complains about ... ACEOLEDB.DLL could not be added. Please make sure that the file is accessible, and that it is a valid assembly or COM component.
    – spikey
    Oct 22, 2019 at 10:18
1

That means the DAC is not installed (Data access component).

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/en/details.aspx?familyid=7554f536-8c28-4598-9b72-ef94e038c891&displaylang=en

Don't know about Windows Azure however.

2
  • How am I in control of installing anything in cloud? this error is seen in once I publish my code to Azure and not on local machine.
    – SVI
    Oct 14, 2010 at 22:24
  • @SVI: I don't know Windows Azure, can't answer you on that. I can only say that I am certain it's the MDAC for Office 2007, because I had this problem after uninstalling and reinstalling office 2010, and reinstalling MDAC 2007 solved the problem. But you could try exceldatareader.codeplex.com, which works without JET. And use this one for writing: epplus.codeplex.com Oct 14, 2010 at 22:40
0

The development fabric is as close an approximation of what you get on the cloud, without having to run a virtual machine on your development machine.

When you run code in the development fabric it has access to all of the components that are installed on your machine. The machine that your code runs on in the cloud only has a very minimal install on it. It's more or less a clean install of Windows Server 2008 (IIS will be running if it's a web role).

Any code that you deploy to Azure needs to be able to run if all you did was build the project, copy the build files to a new machine and run it. As such if this component you're trying to use is just a .Net assembly, change the reference so that it has "Copy Local" set to true and this should work. If to get your code to work requires you to actually install something, I'd look for a different way of doing things.

0

I also faced the same issue today. I am using Standard plan of Azure and access to deployment server is through Azure Web portal. I am not using Azure VM because it is a costlier option.

One of my colleagues suggested to use OpenSDK, using which I ultimately could do Excel manipulation without using OleDb drivers.

Some of the resources which helped me to accomplish what I wanted are these:

  1. https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=30425
  2. https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/office/hh298534.aspx?cs-save-lang=1&cs-lang=csharp#code-snippet-15
  3. reading Excel Open XML is ignoring blank cells

Please make sure open sdk dll is copied to local. In my case, it was referencing the dll installed in my computer in program files. So when I uploaded to Azure, it gave a dll missing error. I had copy the dll separately to the bin folder. I think if we try nuget option of referencing the dll then this issue would not show up, 've not tried it myself though.

Hope this helps someone who is looking for an alternative to Oledb, in case where installation of the dll on the server is not possible.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.