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Chili!Soft ASP and Databases
The Chili!Soft ASP engine is designed to make
connecting to a database easy to do. You can connect to a remote database, or to a
MySQL database running on your Virtual Private Server.
There are two basic methods for connecting to a database. The first uses a DSN (Data Source Name)
stored on your server which contains the connection information. DSNs are potentially insecure
because the user and password to access the database is stored in a file on the server that can be
accessed by others, if they know where to look. For more secure connections, you can use a
DSN-less connection. This stores the database connection information in the ASP source document,
which can not be viewed or used by others.
Creating a DSN
Chili!Soft stores its DSN information in the ~/usr/local/casp/asp-apache-3000/ directory,
in a file called odbc.ini. This file contains templates which it uses when creating
DSN-less connections, and is where your DSNs would be put. An example of a DSN for a local MySQL
database might look like this:
[mydatabase]
Driver=/usr/local/casp/odbc/opensource/lib/libmyodbc.so
Server=localhost
Port=3306
Database=mydatabase
User=myuser
Password=Shh!-dont_tell!
Option=
UseCursorLib=1
The DSN name, enclosed in square brackets, should be the same as the name of the database you
are accessing. If you are connecting to a remote database, you would replace the value
localhost in the Server= line with the name of the server where the database is (or
the TNS name for Oracle).
Once you have created your DSN and saved it in the odbc.ini file, you can then access
the database by creating a Connection String in your ASP code. You can also create a FileDSN,
which contains a DSN stored in a file other than the odbc.ini file.
The connection string for a DSN connection would look similar to either of these:
connect_string = "dsn=[mydatabase]"
connect_string="FileDSN=[/usr/local/etc/httpd/vhosts/mysubhost/MyDSNfile.dsn]"
If you want to create a DSN-less connection, you would need to include the same connection
information from the DSN in the Connection String. A DSN-less connection string might look like
the following:
connect_string = "Driver={Mysql}; Server=localhost; Database=mydatabase; UID=myuser;
PWD=Shh!-dont_tell!"
More Information
See the Chili!Soft ASP Documentation, chapter 4,
in the section Connecting to a Database for more information on using databases with your
ASP applications.
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