Provided by: libdbd-odbc-perl_1.61-2build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       DBD::ODBC - ODBC Driver for DBI

VERSION

       This documentation refers to DBD::ODBC version 1.61.

WARNING

       This version of DBD::ODBC contains a significant fix to unicode when inserting into
       CHAR/VARCHAR columns and it is a change in behaviour from 1.45. The change only applies to
       unicode builds of DBD::ODBC (the default on Windows but you can build it for unicode on
       unix too) and char/varchar columns and not nchar/nvarchar columns.

       Prior to this release of DBD::ODBC when you are using the unicode build of DBD::ODBC and
       inserted data into a CHAR/VARCHAR columns using parameters DBD::ODBC did this:

       1 if you set odbc_describe_parameters to 0, (thus preventing DBD::ODBC
         from calling SQLDescribeParam) parameters for CHAR/VARCHAR columns
         were bound as SQL_WVARCHAR or SQL_WLONGVARCHAR (depending on the
         length of the parameter).

       2 if you set odbc_force_bind_type then all parameters are bound as you
         specified.

       3 if you override the parameter type in the bind_param method, the
         type you specified would be used.

       4 if the driver does not support SQLDescribeParam or SQLDescribeParam
         was called and failed then the bind type defaulted as in 1.

       5 if none of the above (and I'd guess that is the normal case for most
         people) then DBD::ODBC calls SQLDescribeParam to find the parameter
         type. This usually returns SQL_CHAR or SQL_VARCHAR for CHAR/VARCHAR
         columns unsurprisingly. The parameter was then bound as SQL_VARCHAR.

       Items 1 to 4 still apply. 5 now has a different behaviour. In this release, DBD::ODBC now
       looks at your bound data first before using the type returned by SQLDescribeParam. If you
       data looks like unicode (i.e., SvUTF8() is true) it now binds the parameter as
       SQL_WVARCHAR.

       What might this might mean to you?

       If you had Perl scalars that were bound to CHAR/VARCHAR columns in an insert/update/delete
       and those scalars contained unicode, DBD::ODBC would actually pass the individual octets
       in your scalar not characters.  For instance, if you had the Perl scalar "\x{20ac}" (the
       Euro unicode character) and you bound it to a CHAR/VARCHAR, DBD::ODBC would pass 0xe2,
       0x82, 0xc2 as separate characters because those bytes were Perl's UTF-8 encoding of a
       euro. These would probably be interpreted by your database engine as 3 characters in its
       current codepage. If you queried your database to find the length of the data inserted
       you'd probably get back 3, not 1.

       However, when DBD::ODBC read that column back in a select statement, it would bind the
       column as SQL_WCHAR and you'd get back 3 characters with the utf8 flag on (what those
       characters were depends on how your database or driver translates code page characters to
       wide characters).

       What should happen now is that if your bound parameters are unicode, DBD::ODBC will bind
       them as wide characters (unicode) and your driver or database will attempt to convert them
       into the code page it is using. This means so long as your database can store the data you
       are inserting, when you read it back you should get what you inserted.

SYNOPSIS

         use DBI;

         $dbh = DBI->connect('dbi:ODBC:DSN=mydsn', 'user', 'password');

       See DBI for more information.

DESCRIPTION

   Change log and FAQs
       Please note that the change log has been moved to DBD::ODBC::Changes. To access this
       documentation, use "perldoc DBD::ODBC::Changes".

       The FAQs have also moved to DBD::ODBC::FAQ.pm. To access the FAQs use "perldoc
       DBD::ODBC::FAQ".

   Important note about the tests
       DBD::ODBC is unlike most other DBDs in that it connects to literally dozens of possible
       ODBC Drivers. It is practically impossible for me to test every one and so some tests may
       fail with some ODBC Drivers.  This does not mean DBD::ODBC will not work with your ODBC
       Driver but it is worth reporting any test failures on rt.cpan.org or to the dbi-users
       mailing list.

   DBI attribute handling
       If a DBI defined attribute is not mentioned here it behaves as per the DBI specification.

       ReadOnly (boolean)

       DBI documents the "ReadOnly" attribute as being settable and retrievable on connection and
       statement handles. In ODBC setting ReadOnly to true causes the connection attribute
       "SQL_ATTR_ACCESS_MODE" to be set to "SQL_MODE_READ_ONLY" and setting it to false will set
       the access mode to "SQL_MODE_READ_WRITE" (which is the default in ODBC).

       Note: There is no equivalent of setting ReadOnly on a statement handle in ODBC.

       Note: See ODBC documentation on "SQL_ATTR_ACCESS_MODE" as setting it to
       "SQL_MODE_READ_ONLY" does not prevent your script from running updates or deletes; it is
       simply a hint to the driver/database that you won't being doing updates.

       Note: Since DBD::ODCB 1.44_3, if the driver does not support setting
       "SQL_ATTR_ACCESS_MODE" and returns SQL_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO and "option value changed" a
       warning is issued (which you'll only see if you have DBI > 1.628).  In addition, any
       subsequent attempts to fetch the ReadOnly attribute will return the value last set.

       This attribute requires DBI version 1.55 or better.

   Private attributes common to connection and statement handles
       odbc_ignore_named_placeholders

       Use this if you have special needs (such as Oracle triggers, etc) where :new or :name mean
       something special and are not just place holder names. You must then use ? for binding
       parameters.  Example:

        $dbh->{odbc_ignore_named_placeholders} = 1;
        $dbh->do("create trigger foo as if :new.x <> :old.x then ... etc");

       Without this, DBD::ODBC will think :new and :old are placeholders for binding and get
       confused.

       odbc_default_bind_type

       This value defaults to 0.

       Older versions of DBD::ODBC assumed that the parameter binding type was 12
       ("SQL_VARCHAR").  Newer versions always attempt to call "SQLDescribeParam" to find the
       parameter types but if "SQLDescribeParam" is unavailable DBD::ODBC falls back to a default
       bind type. The internal default bind type is "SQL_VARCHAR" (for non-unicode build) and
       "SQL_WVARCHAR" or "SQL_VARCHAR" (for a unicode build depending on whether the parameter is
       unicode or not). If you set "odbc_default_bind_type" to a value other than 0 you override
       the internal default.

       N.B If you call the "bind_param" method with a SQL type this overrides everything else
       above.

       odbc_force_bind_type

       This value defaults to 0.

       If set to anything other than 0 this will force bound parameters to be bound as this type
       and "SQLDescribeParam" will not be used; in other words it implies
       "odbc_describe_parameters" is set to false too.

       Older versions of DBD::ODBC assumed the parameter binding type was 12 ("SQL_VARCHAR") and
       newer versions always attempt to call "SQLDescribeParam" to find the parameter types. If
       your driver supports "SQLDescribeParam" and it succeeds it may still fail to describe the
       parameters accurately (MS SQL Server sometimes does this with some SQL like select
       myfunc(?)  where 1 = 1). Setting "odbc_force_bind_type" to "SQL_VARCHAR" will force
       DBD::ODBC to bind all the parameters as "SQL_VARCHAR" and ignore SQLDescribeParam.

       Bear in mind that if you are inserting unicode data you probably want to use
       "SQL_WVARCHAR"/"SQL_WCHAR"/"SQL_WLONGVARCHAR" and not "SQL_VARCHAR".

       As this attribute was created to work around buggy ODBC Drivers which support
       SQLDescribeParam but describe the parameters incorrectly you are probably better
       specifying the bind type on the "bind_param" call on a per statement level rather than
       blindly setting "odbc_force_bind_type" across a whole connection.

       N.B If you call the "bind_param" method with a SQL type this overrides everything else
       above.

       odbc_force_rebind

       This is to handle special cases, especially when using multiple result sets.  Set this
       before execute to "force" DBD::ODBC to re-obtain the result set's number of columns and
       column types for each execute.  Especially useful for calling stored procedures which may
       return different result sets each execute.  The only performance penalty is during
       execute(), but I didn't want to incur that penalty for all circumstances.  It is probably
       fairly rare that this occurs.  This attribute will be automatically set when multiple
       result sets are triggered.  Most people shouldn't have to worry about this.

       odbc_async_exec

       Allow asynchronous execution of queries.  This causes a spin-loop (with a small "sleep")
       until the ODBC API being called is complete (i.e., while the ODBC API returns
       "SQL_STILL_EXECUTING").  This is useful, however, if you want the error handling and
       asynchronous messages (see the "odbc_err_handler" and t/20SQLServer.t for an example of
       this).

       odbc_query_timeout

       This allows you to change the ODBC query timeout (the ODBC statement attribute
       "SQL_ATTR_QUERY_TIMEOUT"). ODBC defines the query time out as the number of seconds to
       wait for a SQL statement to execute before returning to the application. A value of 0 (the
       default) means there is no time out. Do not confuse this with the ODBC attributes
       "SQL_ATTR_LOGIN_TIMEOUT" and "SQL_ATTR_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT". Add

         { odbc_query_timeout => 30 }

       to your connect, set on the "dbh" before creating a statement or explicitly set it on your
       statement handle. The odbc_query_timeout on a statement is inherited from the parent
       connection.

       Note that internally DBD::ODBC only sets the query timeout if you set it explicitly and
       the default of 0 (no time out) is implemented by the ODBC driver and not DBD::ODBC.

       Note that some ODBC drivers implement a maximum query timeout value and will limit
       timeouts set above their maximum. You may see a warning if your time out is capped by the
       driver but there is currently no way to retrieve the capped value back from the driver.

       Note that some drivers may not support this attribute.

       See t/20SqlServer.t for an example.

       odbc_putdata_start

       "odbc_putdata_start" defines the size at which DBD::ODBC uses "SQLPutData" and
       "SQLParamData" to send larger objects to the database instead of simply binding them as
       normal with "SQLBindParameter". It is mostly a placeholder for future changes allowing
       chunks of data to be sent to the database and there is little reason for anyone to change
       it currently.

       The default for odbc_putdata_start is 32768 because this value was hard-coded in DBD::ODBC
       until 1.16_1.

       odbc_column_display_size

       If you ODBC driver does not support the SQL_COLUMN_DISPLAY_SIZE and SQL_COLUMN_LENGTH
       attributes to SQLColAtrributes then DBD::ODBC does not know how big the column might be.
       odbc_column_display_size sets the default value for the column size when retrieving column
       data where the size cannot be determined.

       The default for odbc_column_display_size is 2001 because this value was hard-coded in
       DBD::ODBC until 1.17_3.

       odbc_utf8_on

       Set this flag to treat all strings returned from the ODBC driver (except columns described
       as SQL_BINARY or SQL_TIMESTAMP and its variations) as UTF-8 encoded.  Some ODBC drivers
       (like Aster and maybe PostgreSQL) return UTF-8 encoded data but do not support the SQLxxxW
       unicode API. Enabling this flag will cause DBD::ODBC to treat driver returned data as
       UTF-8 encoded and it will be marked as such in Perl.

       Do not confuse this with DBD::ODBC's unicode support. The "odbc_utf8_on" attribute only
       applies to non-unicode enabled builds of DBD::ODBC.

       odbc_describe_parameters

       Defaults to on. When set this allows DBD::ODBC to call SQLDescribeParam (if the driver
       supports it) to retrieve information about any parameters.

       When off/false DBD::ODBC will not call SQLDescribeParam and defaults to binding parameters
       as SQL_CHAR/SQL_WCHAR depending on the build type and whether your data is unicode or not.

       You do not have to disable odbc_describe_parameters just because your driver does not
       support SQLDescribeParam as DBD::ODBC will work this out at the start via SQLGetFunctions.

       Note: disabling odbc_describe_parameters when your driver does support SQLDescribeParam
       may prevent DBD::ODBC binding parameters for some column types properly.

       You can also set this attribute in the attributes passed to the prepare method.

       This attribute was added so someone moving from freeTDS (a driver which does not support
       SQLDescribeParam) to a driver which does support SQLDescribeParam could do so without
       changing any Perl. The situation was very specific since dates were being bound as dates
       when SQLDescribeParam was called and chars without and the data format was not a supported
       date format.

   Private methods common to connection and statement handles
       odbc_getdiagrec

         @diags = $handle->odbc_getdiagrec($record_number);

       Introduced in 1.34_3.

       This is just a wrapper around the ODBC API SQLGetDiagRec. When a method on a connection or
       statement handle fails if there are any ODBC diagnostics you can use this method to
       retrieve them. Records start at 1 and there may be more than 1. It returns an array
       containing the state, native and error message text or an empty array if the requested
       diagnostic record does not exist. To get all diagnostics available keep incrementing
       $record_number until odbc_getdiagrec returns an empty array.

       All of the state, native and message text are already passed to DBI via its set_err method
       so this method does not really tell you anything you cannot already get from DBI except
       when there is more than one diagnostic.

       You may find this useful in an error handler as you can get the ODBC diagnostics as they
       are and not how DBD::ODBC was forced to fit them into the DBI's system.

       NOTE: calling this method does not clear DBI's error values as usually happens.

       odbc_getdiagfield

         $diag = $handle->odbc_getdiagfield($record, $identifier);

       This is just a wrapper around the ODBC API SQLGetDiagField. When a method on a connection
       or statement handle fails if there are any ODBC diagnostics you can use this method to
       retrieve the individual diagnostic fields. As with "odbc_getdiagrec" records start at 1.
       The identifier is one of:

         SQL_DIAG_CURSOR_ROW_COUNT
         SQL_DIAG_DYNAMIC_FUNCTION
         SQL_DIAG_DYNAMIC_FUNCTION_CODE
         SQL_DIAG_NUMBER
         SQL_DIAG_RETURNCODE
         SQL_DIAG_ROW_COUNT
         SQL_DIAG_CLASS_ORIGIN
         SQL_DIAG_COLUMN_NUMBER
         SQL_DIAG_CONNECTION_NAME
         SQL_DIAG_MESSAGE_TEXT
         SQL_DIAG_NATIVE
         SQL_DIAG_ROW_NUMBER
         SQL_DIAG_SERVER_NAME
         SQL_DIAG_SQLSTATE
         SQL_DIAG_SUBCLASS_ORIGIN

       DBD::ODBC exports these constants as 'diags' e.g.,

         use DBD::ODBC qw(:diags);

       Of particular interest is SQL_DIAG_COLUMN_NUMBER as it will tell you which bound column or
       parameter is in error (assuming your driver supports it). See params_in_error in the
       examples dir.

       NOTE: calling this method does not clear DBI's error values as usually happens.

   Private connection attributes
       odbc_err_handler

       NOTE: You might want to look at DBI's error handler before using the one in DBD::ODBC
       however, there are subtle differences. DBD::ODBC's odbc_err_handler is called for error
       and informational diagnostics i.e., it is called when an ODBC call fails the SQL_SUCCEEDED
       macro which means the ODBC call returned SQL_ERROR (-1) or SQL_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO (1).

       Allow error and informational diagnostics to be handled by the application.  A call-back
       function supplied by the application to handle or ignore messages.

       The callback function receives four parameters: state (string), error (string), native
       error code (number) and the status returned from the last ODBC API. The fourth argument
       was added in 1.30_7.

       If the error handler returns 0, the error is ignored, otherwise the error is passed
       through the normal DBI error handling. Note, if the status is SQL_SUCCESS_WITH_INFO this
       will not reach the DBI error handler as it is not an error.

       This can also be used for procedures under MS SQL Server (Sybase too, probably) to obtain
       messages from system procedures such as DBCC.  Check t/20SQLServer.t and t/10handler.t.

         $dbh->{RaiseError} = 1;
         sub err_handler {
            ($state, $msg, $native, $rc, $status) = @_;
            if ($state = '12345')
                return 0; # ignore this error
            else
                return 1; # propagate error
         }
         $dbh->{odbc_err_handler} = \&err_handler;
         # do something to cause an error
         $dbh->{odbc_err_handler} = undef; # cancel the handler

       odbc_SQL_ROWSET_SIZE

       Setting odbc_SQL_ROWSET_SIZE results in a call to SQLSetConnectAttr to set the ODBC
       SQL_ROWSET_SIZE (9) attribute to whatever value you set odbc_SQL_ROWSET_SIZE to.

       The ODBC default for SQL_ROWSET_SIZE is 1.

       Usually MS SQL Server does not support multiple active statements (MAS) i.e., you cannot
       have 2 or more outstanding selects.  You can set odbc_SQL_ROWSET_SIZE to 2 to persuade MS
       SQL Server to support multiple active statements.

       Setting SQL_ROWSET_SIZE usually only affects calls to SQLExtendedFetch but does allow MAS
       and as DBD::ODBC does not use SQLExtendedFetch there should be no ill effects to
       DBD::ODBC.

       Be careful with this attribute as once set to anything larger than 1 (the default) you
       must retrieve all result-sets before the statement handle goes out of scope or you can
       upset the TDS protocol and this can result in a hang. With DBI this is unlikely as DBI
       warns when a statement goes out of scope with outstanding results.

       NOTE: if you get an error saying "[Microsoft][ODBC SQL Server Driver]Invalid
       attribute/option identifier (SQL-HY092)" when you set odbc_SQL_ROWSET_SIZE in the connect
       method you need to either a) upgrade to DBI 1.616 or above b) set odbc_SQL_ROWSET_SIZE
       after connect.

       In versions of SQL Server 2005 and later see "Multiple Active Statements (MAS)" in the
       DBD::ODBC::FAQ instead of using this attribute.

       Thanks to Andrew Brown for the original patch.

       DBD developer note: Here lies a bag of worms. Firstly, SQL_ROWSET_SIZE is an ODBC 2
       attribute and is usually a statement attribute not a connection attribute. However, in
       ODBC 2.0 you could set statement attributes on a connection handle and it acted as a
       default for all subsequent statement handles created under that connection handle. If you
       are using ODBC 3 the driver manager continues to map this call but the ODBC Driver needs
       to act on it (the MS SQL Server driver still appears to but some other ODBC drivers for MS
       SQL Server do not).  Secondly, somewhere a long the line MS decided it was no longer valid
       to retrieve the SQL_ROWSET_SIZE attribute from a connection handle in an ODBC 3
       application (which DBD::ODBC now is). In itself, this would not be a problem except for a
       minor bug in DBI which until release 1.616 mistakenly issued a FETCH on any attribute
       mentioned in the connect method call. As a result, it you use a DBI prior to 1.616 and
       attempt to set odbc_SQL_ROWSET_SIZE in the connect method call, DBI issues a FETCH on
       odbc_SQL_ROWSET_SIZE and the driver manager throws it out as an invalid attribute thus
       resulting in an error. The only way around this (other than upgrading DBI) is to set
       odbc_SQL_ROWSET_SIZE AFTER the call to connect. Thirdly, MS withdrew the SQLROWSETSIZE
       macro from the sql header files in MDAC 2.7 for 64 bit platforms i.e., SQLROWSETSIZE is
       not defined on 64 bit platforms from MDAC 2.7 as it is in a "#ifdef win32" (see
       http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms716287%28v=vs.85%29.aspx).  Setting
       SQL_ROWSET_SIZE still seems to take effect on 64 bit platforms but you can no longer
       retrieve its value from a connection handle (hence the issue above with DBI redundant
       FETCH).

       odbc_exec_direct

       Force DBD::ODBC to use "SQLExecDirect" instead of "SQLPrepare"/"SQLExecute".

       There are drivers that only support "SQLExecDirect" and the DBD::ODBC do() override does
       not allow returning result sets.  Therefore, the way to do this now is to set the
       attribute odbc_exec_direct.

       NOTE: You may also want to use this option if you are creating temporary objects (e.g.,
       tables) in MS SQL Server and for some reason cannot use the "do" method. see
       <http://technet.microsoft.com/en-US/library/ms131667.aspx> which says Prepared statements
       cannot be used to create temporary objects on SQL Server 2000 or later.... Without
       odbc_exec_direct, the temporary object will disappear before you can use it.

       There are currently two ways to get this:

           $dbh->prepare($sql, { odbc_exec_direct => 1});

       and

           $dbh->{odbc_exec_direct} = 1;

       NOTE: Even if you build DBD::ODBC with unicode support you can still not pass unicode
       strings to the prepare method if you also set odbc_exec_direct. This is a restriction in
       this attribute which is unavoidable.

       odbc_SQL_DRIVER_ODBC_VER

       This, while available via get_info() is captured here.  I may get rid of this as I only
       used it for debugging purposes.

       odbc_cursortype

       This allows multiple concurrent statements on SQL*Server.  In your connect, add

         { odbc_cursortype => 2 }.

       If you are using DBI > 1.41, you should also be able to use

        { odbc_cursortype => DBI::SQL_CURSOR_DYNAMIC }

       instead.  For example:

           my $dbh = DBI->connect("dbi:ODBC:$DSN", $user, $pass,
                         { RaiseError => 1, odbc_cursortype => 2});
           my $sth = $dbh->prepare("one statement");
           my $sth2 = $dbh->prepare("two statement");
           $sth->execute;
           my @row;
           while (@row = $sth->fetchrow_array) {
              $sth2->execute($row[0]);
           }

       See t/20SqlServer.t for an example.

       In versions of SQL Server 2005 and later see "Multiple Active Statements (MAS)" in the
       DBD::ODBC::FAQ instead of using this attribute.

       odbc_has_unicode

       A read-only attribute signifying whether DBD::ODBC was built with the C macro WITH_UNICODE
       or not. A value of 1 indicates DBD::ODBC was built with WITH_UNICODE else the value
       returned is 0.

       Building WITH_UNICODE affects columns and parameters which are SQL_C_WCHAR, SQL_WCHAR,
       SQL_WVARCHAR, and SQL_WLONGVARCHAR, SQL, the connect method and a lot more. See "Unicode".

       When odbc_has_unicode is 1, DBD::ODBC will:

       bind all string columns as wide characters (SQL_Wxxx)
           This means that UNICODE data stored in these columns will be returned to Perl
           correctly as unicode (i.e., encoded in UTF-8 and the UTF-8 flag set).

       bind parameters the database declares as wide characters or unicode parameters as SQL_Wxxx
           Parameters bound where the database declares the parameter as being a wide character,
           or where the parameter data is unicode, or where the parameter type is explicitly set
           to a wide type (e.g., SQL_Wxxx) are bound as wide characters in the ODBC API and
           DBD::ODBC encodes the perl parameters as UTF-16 before passing them to the driver.

       SQL SQL passed to the "prepare" or "do" methods which has the UTF-8 flag set will be
           converted to UTF-16 before being passed to the ODBC APIs "SQLPrepare" or
           "SQLExecDirect".

       connection strings
           Connection strings passed to the "connect" method will be converted to UTF-16 before
           being passed to the ODBC API "SQLDriverConnectW". This happens irrespective of whether
           the UTF-8 flag is set on the perl connect strings because unixODBC requires an
           application to call SQLDriverConnectW to indicate it will be calling the wide ODBC
           APIs.

       NOTE: You will need at least Perl 5.8.1 to use UNICODE with DBD::ODBC.

       NOTE: Binding of unicode output parameters is coded but untested.

       NOTE: When building DBD::ODBC on Windows ($^O eq 'MSWin32') the WITH_UNICODE macro is
       automatically added. To disable specify -nou as an argument to Makefile.PL (e.g. "perl
       Makefile.PL -nou"). On non-Windows platforms the WITH_UNICODE macro is not enabled by
       default and to enable you need to specify the -u argument to Makefile.PL. Please bear in
       mind that some ODBC drivers do not support SQL_Wxxx columns or parameters.

       You can also specify that you want UNICODE support by setting the "DBD_ODBC_UNICODE"
       environment variable prior to install:

         export DBD_ODBC_UNICODE=1
         cpanm DBD::ODBC

       UNICODE support in ODBC Drivers differs considerably. Please read the README.unicode file
       for further details.

       odbc_out_connect_string

       After calling the connect method this will be the ODBC driver's out connection string -
       see documentation on SQLDriverConnect.

       NOTE: this value is only set if DBD::ODBC calls the SQLDriverConnect ODBC API (and not
       SQLConnect) which only happens if a) DSN or DRIVER is specified in the connection string
       or b) SQLConnect fails.

       Typically, applications (like MS Access and many others) which build a connection string
       via dialogs and possibly SQLBrowseConnect eventually end up with a successful ODBC
       connection to the ODBC driver and database. The odbc_out_connect_string provides a string
       which you can pass to SQLDriverConnect (DBI's connect prefixed with dbi:ODBC:") which will
       connect you to the same datasource at a later date. You may also want to see
       "odbc_driver_complete".

       odbc_version

       This was added prior to the move to ODBC 3.x to allow the caller to "force" ODBC 3.0
       compatibility.  It's probably not as useful now, but it allowed get_info and get_type_info
       to return correct/updated information that ODBC 2.x didn't permit/provide.  Since
       DBD::ODBC is now 3.x, this can be used to force 2.x behavior via something like: my

         $dbh = DBI->connect("dbi:ODBC:$DSN", $user, $pass,
                             { odbc_version =>2});

       odbc_driver_complete

       This attribute was added to DBD::ODBC in 1.32_2.

       odbc_driver_complete is only relevant to the Windows operating system and will be ignored
       on other platforms. It is off by default.

       When set to a true value DBD::ODBC attempts to obtain a window handle and calls
       SQLDriverConnect with the SQL_DRIVER_COMPLETE attribute instead of the normal
       SQL_DRIVER_NOPROMPT option. What this means is that if the connection string does not
       describe sufficient attributes to enable the ODBC driver manager to connect to a data
       source it will throw a dialogue allowing you to input the remaining attributes. Once you
       ok that dialogue the ODBC Driver Manager will continue as if you specified those
       attributes in the connection string. Once the connection is complete you may want to look
       at the odbc_out_connect_string attribute to obtain a connection string you can use in the
       future to pass into the connect method without prompting.

       As a window handle is passed to SQLDriverConnect it also means the ODBC driver may throw a
       dialogue e.g., if your password has expired the MS SQL Server driver will often prompt for
       a new one.

       An example is:

         my $h = DBI->connect('dbi:ODBC:DRIVER={SQL Server}', "username", "password",
                              {odbc_driver_complete => 1});

       As this only provides the driver and further attributes are required a dialogue will be
       thrown allowing you to specify the SQL Server to connect to and possibly other attributes.

       odbc_batch_size

       Sets the batch size for execute_for_fetch which defaults to 10.  Bear in mind the bigger
       you set this the more memory DBD::ODBC will need to allocate when running
       execute_for_fetch and the memory required is max_length_of_pn * odbc_batch_size *
       n_parameters.

       odbc_array_operations

       NOTE: this was briefly odbc_disable_array_operations in 1.35 and 1.36_1.  I did warn it
       was experimental and it turned out the default was too ambitious and it was a poor name
       anyway. Also the default was to use array operations and now the default is the opposite.

       If set to true DBD::ODBC uses its own internal execute_for_fetch instead of DBI's default
       execute_for_fetch. The default is false.  Using the internal execute_for_fetch should be
       quite a bit faster when using arrays of parameters for insert/update/delete operations as
       batches of parameters are sent to the database in one go. However, the required support in
       some ODBC drivers is a little sketchy and there is no way for DBD::ODBC to ascertain this
       until it is too late.

       Please read the documentation on execute_array and execute_for_fetch which details subtle
       differences in DBD::ODBC's implementation compared with using DBI's default
       implementation. If these difference cause you a problem you can set odbc_array_operations
       to false and DBD::ODBC will revert to DBI's implementations of the array methods.

       You can use the environment variable ODBC_DISABLE_ARRAY_OPERATIONS to switch array
       operations on/off too. When set to 1 array operations are disabled. When not set the
       default is used (which currently is off).  When set to 0 array operations are used no
       matter what. I know this is slightly counter intuitive but I've found it difficult to
       change the name (it got picked up and used in a few places very quickly).

       odbc_taf_callback

       NOTE: this is experimental until I at least see more than one ODBC driver which supports
       TAF.

       Transparent Application Failover (TAF) is a feature in OCI that allows for clients to
       automatically reconnect to an instance in the event of a failure of the instance. The
       reconnect happens automatically from within the OCI (Oracle Call Interface) library.

       TAF supports a callback function which once registered is called by the driver to let you
       know what is happening and which allows you to a degree, to control how the failover is
       handled.

       You need to set up TAF on your instance first and that process is beyond the scope of this
       document. Once TAF is enabled you simply set "odbc_taf_callback" to a code reference which
       should look like this:

         sub taf_handler {
          my ($dbh, $event, $type) = @_;
          # do something here
         }

       DBD::ODBC will pass the connection handle ($dbh), the Oracle event type (OCI_FO_END,
       OCI_FO_ABORT, OCI_FO_REAUTH, OCI_FO_BEGIN, OCI_FO_ERROR) and the Oracle type (OCI_FO_NONE,
       OCI_FO_SESSION, OCI_FO_SELECT, OCI_FO_TXNAL).  Consult the Oracle documentation for what
       these are. You can import these constants using the :taf export tag. If your instance is
       not TAF enabled it is likely an attempt to register a callback will fail but this is
       driver dependent (all DBD::ODBC does is make a SQLSetConnectAttr call and provide a C
       wrapper which calls your Perl subroutine).

       Here is a commented example:

         my $h = DBI->connect('dbi:ODBC:oracle','xxx','yyy',
                              {RaiseError => 1,
                               odbc_taf_callback => \&taf_handler}) or die "connect";
         while (1) {
             my $s = $h->selectall_arrayref(q/select 1 from dual/);
             sleep 5;
         }

         sub taf_handler {
            my ($dbh, $event, $type) = @_;

            #print "taf_handler $dbh, $event, $type\n";

            if ($event == OCI_FO_BEGIN) {
                print "Instance unavailable, stand by\n";
                print "Your TAF type is : ",
                    ($type == OCI_FO_NONE ? "NONE" :
                         ($type == OCI_FO_SESSION ? "SESSION" :
                              ($type == OCI_FO_SELECT ? "SELECT" : "?"))) , "\n";
                # start a counter and each time OCI_FO_ERROR is passed in we will
                # count down and abort the failover when we hit 0.
                $count = 10;
                return 0;
            } elsif ($event == OCI_FO_ERROR) {
                # We get an OCI_FO_ERROR each time the failover fails
                # sleep a while until the count hits 0
                if (--$count < 1) {
                    print "Giving up\n";
                    return 0;            # give up
                } else {
                    print "Retrying...\n";
                    sleep 1;
                    return OCI_FO_RETRY; # tell Oracle to retry
                }
            } elsif ($event == OCI_FO_REAUTH) {
                print "Failed over user. Resuming Services\n";
            } elsif ($event == OCI_FO_END) {
                print "Failover ended - resuming\n";
            }
            return 0;
         }

       NOTE: The above example is for use with the Easysoft Oracle ODBC Driver. ODBC does not
       define any standard way of supporting TAF and so different drivers may use different
       connection attributes to set it up or may even pass the callback different arguments.
       Unfortunately, I don't have access to any other ODBC driver which supports TAF. Until I
       see others I cannot create a generic interface. I'll happily accept patches for any other
       driver or if you send me a working copy of the driver and the documentation I will add
       support for it.

       odbc_trace_file

       Specify the name and path to a file you want ODBC API trace information to be written to.
       See "odbc_trace".

       odbc_trace

       Enable or disable ODBC API tracing. Set to 1 to enable and 0 to disable.

       This calls SQLSetConnectAttr for SQL_ATTR_TRACE and either sets SQL_OPT_TRACE_ON or
       SQL_OPT_TRACE_OFF. Enabling tracing will tell the ODBC driver manager to write and ODBC
       API trace to the file named with "odbc_trace_file".

       NOTE: If you don't set odbc_trace_file most ODBC Driver Managers write to a file called
       SQL.LOG in the root directory (but this depends on the driver manager used).

       NOTE: This tracing is produced by the ODBC Driver Manager and has nothing to do with
       DBD::ODBC other than it should trace the ODBC calls DBD::ODBC makes i.e., DBD::ODBC is not
       responsible for the tracing mechanism itself.

       NOTE: Enabling tracing will probably slow your application down a lot.  I'd definitely
       think twice about it if in a production environment unless you are desperate as it tends
       to produce very large trace files for short periods of ODBC activity.

   Private statement attributes
       odbc_more_results

       Use this attribute to determine if there are more result sets available.

       Any ODBC Driver which batches results or counts of inserts/updates will need you to loop
       on odbc_more_results until there are no more results. e.g., if you are performing multiple
       selects in a procedure or multiple inserts/updates/deletes then you will probably need to
       loop on odbc_more_results.

       Use odbc_more_results as follows:

         do {
            my @row;
            while (@row = $sth->fetchrow_array()) {
               # do stuff here
            }
         } while ($sth->{odbc_more_results});

       Note that with multiple result sets and output parameters (i.e,. using bind_param_inout),
       don't expect output parameters to written to until ALL result sets have been retrieved.

       Under the hood this attribute causes a call to the ODBC API SQLMoreResults and then any
       result set, insert/update/delete or output parameters are described by DBD::ODBC and the
       statement handle will be ready for processing the new result.

   Private statement methods
       odbc_rows

       This method was added in 1.42_1.

       In 64 bit ODBC SQLRowCount can return a 64bit value for the number of rows affected.
       Unfortunately, the DBI DBD interface currently (at least until 1.622) defines execute as
       returning an int so values which cannot fit in an int are truncated. See RT 81911.

       From DBD::ODBC 1.42_1 DBD::ODBC

       o defines this method which will return the affected rows in an IV (and IVs are guaranteed
       to be able to hold a pointer) so you can get the real affected rows without truncation.

       o if it detects an overflow in the execute method it will issue a warning (if Warn is on
       which it is by default) and return INT_MAX.

       At some stage DBI may change to fix the issue this works around.

       NOTE: the return from odbc_rows is not the raw value returned by SQLRowCount. It is the
       same as execute normally returns e.g., 0E0 (for 0), -1 for unknown and N for N rows
       affected where N > 0.

       odbc_lob_read

         $chrs_or_bytes_read = $sth->odbc_lob_read($column_no, \$lob, $length, \%attr);

       Reads $length bytes from the lob at column $column_no returning the lob into $lob and the
       number of bytes or characters read into $chrs_or_bytes_read. If an error occurs undef will
       be returned.  When there is no more data to be read 0 is returned.

       NOTE: This is currently an experimental method and may change in the future e.g., it may
       support automatic concatenation of the lob parts onto the end of the $lob with the
       addition of an extra flag or destination offset as in DBI's undocumented blob_read.

       The type the lob is retrieved as may be overridden in %attr using "TYPE => sql_type".
       %attr is optional and if omitted defaults to SQL_C_BINARY for binary columns and
       SQL_C_CHAR/SQL_C_WCHAR for other column types depending on whether DBD::ODBC is built with
       unicode support. $chrs_or_bytes_read will by the bytes read when the column types
       SQL_C_CHAR or SQL_C_BINARY are used and characters read if the column type is SQL_C_WCHAR.

       When built with unicode support $length specifies the amount of buffer space to be used
       when retrieving the lob data but as it is returned as SQLWCHAR characters this means you
       at most retrieve "$length/2" characters. When those retrieved characters are encoded in
       UTF-8 for Perl, the $lob scalar may need to be larger than $length so DBD::ODBC grows it
       appropriately.

       You can retrieve a lob in chunks like this:

         $sth->bind_col($column, undef, {TreatAsLOB=>1});
         while(my $retrieved = $sth->odbc_lob_read($column, \my $data, $length)) {
             print "retrieved=$retrieved lob_data=$data\n";
         }

       NOTE: to retrieve a lob like this you must first bind the lob column specifying BindAsLOB
       or DBD::ODBC will 1) bind the column as normal and it will be subject to LongReadLen and
       b) fail odbc_lob_read.

       NOTE: Some database engines and ODBC drivers do not allow you to retrieve columns out of
       order (e.g., MS SQL Server unless you are using cursors).  In those cases you must ensure
       the lob retrieved is the last (or only) column in your select list.

       NOTE: You can retrieve only part of a lob but you will probably have to call finish on the
       statement handle before you do anything else with that statement. When only retrieving
       part of a large lob you could see a small delay when you call finish as some protocols
       used by ODBC drivers send the lob down the socket synchronously and there is no way to
       stop it (this means the ODBC driver needs to read all the lob from the socket even though
       you never retrieved it all yourself).

       NOTE: If your select contains multiple lobs you cannot read part of the first lob, the
       second lob then return to the first lob. You must read all lobs in order and completely or
       read part of a lob and then do no further calls to odbc_lob_read.

   Private DBD::ODBC Functions
       You use DBD::ODBC private functions like this:

         $dbh->func(arg, private_function_name, @args);

       GetInfo

       This private function is now superseded by DBI's get_info method.

       This function maps to the ODBC SQLGetInfo call and the argument should be a valid ODBC
       information type (see ODBC specification).  e.g.

         $value = $dbh->func(6, 'GetInfo');

       which returns the "SQL_DRIVER_NAME".

       This function returns a scalar value, which can be a numeric or string value depending on
       the information value requested.

       GetTypeInfo

       This private function is now superseded by DBI's type_info and type_info_all methods
       however as it is used by those methods it still exists.

       This function maps to the ODBC SQLGetTypeInfo API and the argument should be a SQL type
       number (e.g. SQL_VARCHAR) or SQL_ALL_TYPES. SQLGetTypeInfo returns information about a
       data type supported by the data source.

       e.g.

         use DBI qw(:sql_types);

         $sth = $dbh->func(SQL_ALL_TYPES, GetTypeInfo);
         DBI::dump_results($sth);

       This function returns a DBI statement handle for the SQLGetTypeInfo result-set containing
       many columns of type attributes (see ODBC specification).

       NOTE: It is VERY important that the "use DBI" includes the "qw(:sql_types)" so that values
       like SQL_VARCHAR are correctly interpreted.  This "imports" the sql type names into the
       program's name space.  A very common mistake is to forget the "qw(:sql_types)" and obtain
       strange results.

       GetFunctions

       This function maps to the ODBC SQLGetFunctions API which returns information on whether a
       function is supported by the ODBC driver.

       The argument should be "SQL_API_ALL_FUNCTIONS" (0) for all functions or a valid ODBC
       function number (e.g. "SQL_API_SQLDESCRIBEPARAM" which is 58). See ODBC specification or
       examine your sqlext.h and sql.h header files for all the SQL_API_XXX macros.

       If called with "SQL_API_ALL_FUNCTIONS" (0), then a 100 element array is returned where
       each element will contain a '1' if the ODBC function with that SQL_API_XXX index is
       supported or '' if it is not.

       If called with a specific SQL_API_XXX value for a single function it will return true if
       the ODBC driver supports that function, otherwise false.

       e.g.

           my @x = $dbh->func(0,"GetFunctions");
           print "SQLDescribeParam is supported\n" if ($x[58]);

       or

           print "SQLDescribeParam is supported\n"
               if $dbh->func(58, "GetFunctions");

       GetStatistics

       This private function is now superseded by DBI's statistics_info method.

       See the ODBC specification for the SQLStatistics API.  You call SQLStatistics like this:

         $dbh->func($catalog, $schema, $table, $unique, 'GetStatistics');

       Prior to DBD::ODBC 1.16 $unique was not defined as being true/false or
       SQL_INDEX_UNIQUE/SQL_INDEX_ALL. In fact, whatever value you provided for $unique was
       passed through to the ODBC API SQLStatistics call unchanged. This changed in 1.16, where
       $unique became a true/false value which is interpreted into SQL_INDEX_UNIQUE for true and
       SQL_INDEX_ALL for false.

       GetForeignKeys

       This private function is now superseded by DBI's foreign_key_info method.

       See the ODBC specification for the SQLForeignKeys API.  You call SQLForeignKeys like this:

         $dbh->func($pcatalog, $pschema, $ptable,
                    $fcatalog, $fschema, $ftable,
                    "GetForeignKeys");

       GetPrimaryKeys

       This private function is now superseded by DBI's primary_key_info method.

       See the ODBC specification for the SQLPrimaryKeys API.  You call SQLPrimaryKeys like this:

         $dbh->func($catalog, $schema, $table, "GetPrimaryKeys");

       data_sources

       This private function is now superseded by DBI's data_sources method and was finally
       removed in 1.49_1

       GetSpecialColumns

       See the ODBC specification for the SQLSpecialColumns API.  You call SQLSpecialColumns like
       this:

         $dbh->func($identifier, $catalog, $schema, $table, $scope,
                    $nullable, 'GetSpecialColumns');

       Handled as of version 0.28

       ColAttributes

       This private function is now superseded by DBI's statement attributes NAME, TYPE,
       PRECISION, SCALE, NULLABLE etc).

       See the ODBC specification for the SQLColAttributes API.  You call SQLColAttributes like
       this:

         $sth->func($column, $ftype, "ColAttributes");

         SQL_COLUMN_COUNT = 0
         SQL_COLUMN_NAME = 1
         SQL_COLUMN_TYPE = 2
         SQL_COLUMN_LENGTH = 3
         SQL_COLUMN_PRECISION = 4
         SQL_COLUMN_SCALE = 5
         SQL_COLUMN_DISPLAY_SIZE = 6
         SQL_COLUMN_NULLABLE = 7
         SQL_COLUMN_UNSIGNED = 8
         SQL_COLUMN_MONEY = 9
         SQL_COLUMN_UPDATABLE = 10
         SQL_COLUMN_AUTO_INCREMENT = 11
         SQL_COLUMN_CASE_SENSITIVE = 12
         SQL_COLUMN_SEARCHABLE = 13
         SQL_COLUMN_TYPE_NAME = 14
         SQL_COLUMN_TABLE_NAME = 15
         SQL_COLUMN_OWNER_NAME = 16
         SQL_COLUMN_QUALIFIER_NAME = 17
         SQL_COLUMN_LABEL = 18

       Note:Oracle's ODBC driver for linux in instant client 11r1 often returns strange values
       for column name e.g., '20291'. It is wiser to use DBI's NAME and NAME_xx attributes for
       portability.

       DescribeCol

       Removed in DBD::ODBC 1.40_3

       Use the DBI's statement attributes NAME, TYPE, PRECISION, SCALE, NULLABLE etc instead.

   Additional bind_col attributes
       DBD::ODBC supports a few additional attributes which may be passed to the bind_col method
       in the attributes.

       DiscardString

       See DBI's sql_type_cast utility function.

       If you bind a column as a specific type (SQL_INTEGER, SQL_DOUBLE and SQL_NUMERIC are the
       only ones supported currently) and you add DiscardString to the prepare attributes then if
       the returned bound data is capable of being converted to that type the scalar's pv (the
       string portion of a scalar) is cleared.

       NOTE: post DBD::ODBC 1.37, DBD::ODBC binds all SQL_INTEGER columns as SQL_C_LONG and
       DiscardString is irrelevant.

       This is especially useful if you are using a module which uses a scalar's flags and/or pv
       to decide if a scalar is a number. JSON::XS does this and without this flag you have to
       add 0 to all bound column data returning numbers to get JSON::XS to encode it is N instead
       of "N".

       NOTE: For DiscardString you need at least DBI 1.611.

       StrictlyTyped

       See DBI's sql_type_cast utility function.

       See "DiscardString" above.

       Specifies that when DBI's sql_type_cast function is called on returned data where a bind
       type is specified that if the conversion cannot be performed an error will be raised.

       This is probably not a lot of use with DBD::ODBC as if you ask for say an SQL_INTEGER and
       the data is not able to be converted to an integer the ODBC driver will probably return
       "Invalid character value for cast specification (SQL-22018)".

       NOTE: For StrictlyTyped you need at least DBI 1.611.

       TreatAsLOB

       See "odbc_lob_read".

   Tracing
       DBD::ODBC now supports the parse_trace_flag and parse_trace_flags methods introduced in
       DBI 1.42 (see DBI for a full description).  As of DBI 1.604, the only trace flag defined
       which is relevant to DBD::ODBC is 'SQL' which DBD::ODBC supports by outputting the SQL
       strings (after modification) passed to the prepare and do methods.

       From DBI 1.617 DBI also defines ENC (encoding), CON (connection) TXN (transaction) and DBD
       (DBD only) trace flags. DBI's ENC and CON trace flags are synonymous with DBD::ODBC's
       odbcunicode and odbcconnection trace flags though I may remove the DBD::ODBC ones in the
       future. DBI's DBD trace flag allows output of only DBD::ODBC trace messages without DBI's
       trace messages.

       Currently DBD::ODBC supports two private trace flags. The 'odbcunicode' flag traces some
       unicode operations and the odbcconnection traces the connect process.

       To enable tracing of particular flags you use:

         $h->trace($h->parse_trace_flags('SQL|odbcconnection'));
         $h->trace($h->parse_trace_flags('1|odbcunicode'));

       In the first case 'SQL' and 'odbcconnection' tracing is enabled on $h. In the second case
       trace level 1 is set and 'odbcunicode' tracing is enabled.

       If you want to enable a DBD::ODBC private trace flag before connecting you need to do
       something like:

         use DBD::ODBC;
         DBI->trace(DBD::ODBC->parse_trace_flag('odbcconnection'));

       or

         use DBD::ODBC;
         DBI->trace(DBD::ODBC->parse_trace_flags('odbcconnection|odbcunicode'));

       or

         DBI_TRACE=odbcconnection|odbcunicode perl myscript.pl

       From DBI 1.617 you can output only DBD::ODBC trace messages using

         DBI_TRACE=DBD perl myscript.pl

       DBD::ODBC outputs tracing at levels 3 and above (as levels 1 and 2 are reserved for DBI).

       For comprehensive tracing of DBI method calls without all the DBI internals see
       DBIx::Log4perl.

   Deviations from the DBI specification
       last_insert_id

       DBD::ODBC does not support DBI's last_insert_id. There is no ODBC defined way of obtaining
       this information. Generally the mechanism (and it differs vastly between databases and
       ODBC drivers) it to issue a select of some form (e.g., select @@identity or select
       sequence.currval from dual, etc).

       There are literally dozens of databases and ODBC drivers supported by DBD::ODBC and I
       cannot have them all. If you know how to retrieve the information for last_insert_id and
       you mail me the ODBC Driver name/version and database name/version with a small working
       example I will collect examples and document them here.

       Microsoft Access. Recent versions of MS Access support select @@identity to retrieve the
       last insert ID.  See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/815629. Information provided by
       Robert Freimuth.

       Comments in SQL

       DBI does not say anything in particular about comments in SQL.  DBD::ODBC looks for
       placeholders in the SQL string and until 1.24_2 it did not recognise comments in SQL
       strings so could find what it believes to be a placeholder in a comment e.g.,

         select '1' /* placeholder ? in comment */
         select -- named placeholder :named in comment
           '1'

       I cannot be exact about support for ignoring placeholders in literals but it has existed
       for a long time in DBD::ODBC. Support for ignoring placeholders in comments was added in
       1.24_2. If you find a case where a named placeholder is not ignored and should be, see
       "odbc_ignore_named_placeholders" for a workaround and mail me an example along with your
       ODBC driver name.

       do

       This is not really a deviation from the DBI specification since DBI allows a driver to
       avoid the overhead of creating an DBI statement handle for do().

       DBD::ODBC implements "do" by calling SQLExecDirect in ODBC and not SQLPrepare followed by
       SQLExecute so "do" is not the same as:

         $dbh->prepare($sql)->execute()

       It does this to avoid a round-trip to the server so it is faster.  Normally this is good
       but some people fall foul of this with MS SQL Server if they call a procedure which
       outputs print statements (e.g., backup) as the procedure may not complete. See the
       DBD::ODBC FAQ and in general you are better to use prepare/execute when calling
       procedures.

       In addition, you should realise that since DBD::ODBC does not create a DBI statement for
       do calls, if you set up an error handler the handle passed in when a do fails will be the
       database handle and not a statement handle.

       Mixed placeholder types

       There are 3 conventions for place holders in DBI. These are '?', ':N' and ':name' (where
       'N' is a number and 'name' is an alpha numeric string not beginning with a number).
       DBD::ODBC supports all these methods for naming placeholders but you must only use one
       method throughout a particular SQL string. If you mix placeholder methods you will get an
       error like:

         Can't mix placeholder styles (1/2)

       Using the same placeholder more than once

       DBD::ODBC does not support (currently) the use of one named placeholder more than once in
       a single SQL string. i.e.,

         insert into foo values (:bar, :p1, :p2, :bar);

       is not supported because 'bar' is used more than once but:

         insert into foo values(:bar, :p1, :p2)

       is ok. If you do the former you will get an error like:

         DBD::ODBC does not yet support binding a named parameter more than once

       Binding named placeholders

       Although the DBI documentation (as of 1.604) does not say how named parameters are bound
       Tim Bunce has said that in Oracle they are bound with the leading ':' as part of the name
       and that has always been the case. i.e.,

         prepare("insert into mytable values (:fred)");
         bind_param(":foo", 1);

       DBD::ODBC does not support binding named parameters with the ':' introducer.  In the above
       example you must use:

         bind_param("foo", 1);

       In discussion on the dbi-dev list is was suggested that the ':' could be made optional and
       there were no basic objections but it has not made it's way into the pod yet.

       Sticky Parameter Types

       The DBI specification post 1.608 says in bind_param:

         The data type is 'sticky' in that bind values passed to execute()
         are bound with the data type specified by earlier bind_param()
         calls, if any.  Portable applications should not rely on being able
         to change the data type after the first bind_param call.

       DBD::ODBC does allow a parameter to be rebound with another data type as ODBC inherently
       allows this. Therefore you can do:

         # parameter 1 set as a SQL_LONGVARCHAR
         $sth->bind_param(1, $data, DBI::SQL_LONGVARCHAR);
         # without the bind above the $data parameter would be either a DBD::ODBC
         # internal default or whatever the ODBC driver said it was but because
         # parameter types are sticky, the type is still SQL_LONGVARCHAR.
         $sth->execute($data);
         # change the bound type to SQL_VARCHAR
         # some DBDs will ignore the type in the following, DBD::ODBC does not
         $sth->bind_param(1, $data, DBI::SQL_VARCHAR);

       disconnect and transactions

       DBI does not define whether a driver commits or rolls back any outstanding transaction
       when disconnect is called. As such DBD::ODBC cannot deviate from the specification but you
       should know it rolls back an uncommitted transaction when disconnect is called if
       SQLDisconnect returns state 25000 (transaction in progress).

       execute_for_fetch and execute_array

       From version 1.34_1 DBD::ODBC implements its own execute_for_fetch which binds arrays of
       parameters and can send multiple rows ("odbc_batch_size") of parameters through the ODBC
       driver in one go (this overrides DBI's default execute_for_fetch). This is much faster
       when inserting, updating or deleting many rows in one go. Note, execute_array uses
       execute_for_fetch when the parameters are passed for column-wise binding.

       NOTE: DBD::ODBC 1.34_1 to DBD::ODBC 1.36_1 set the default to use DBD::ODBC's own
       execute_for_fetch but quite a few ODBC drivers just cannot handle it. As such, from
       DBD::ODBC 1.36_2 the default was changed to not use DBD::ODBC's execute_for_fetch (i.e.,
       you need to enable it with "odbc_array_operations").

       NOTE: Some ODBC drivers don't support setting SQL_ATTR_PARAMSET_SIZE > 1, and hence cannot
       support binding arrays of parameters. The only way to detect this is to attempt to set
       SQL_ATTR_PARAMSET_SIZE to a value greater than 1 and it is too late once someone has
       called execute_for_fetch. I don't want to add test code on each connect to test for this
       as it will affect everyone, even those not using the native execute_for_fetch so for now
       it is a suck it and see. For your information MS Access which does not support arrays of
       parameters errors with HY092, "Invalid attribute/option identifier".

       However, there are a small number of differences between using DBD::ODBC's
       execute_for_fetch compared with using DBI's default implementation (which simply calls
       execute repeatedly once per row).  The differences you may see are:

       o as DBI's execute_for_fetch does one row at a time the result from execute is for one row
       and just about all ODBC drivers can report the number of affected rows when SQLRowCount is
       called per execute. When batches of parameters are sent the driver can still return the
       number of affected rows but it is usually per batch rather than per row. As a result, the
       tuple_status array you may pass to execute_for_fetch (or execute_array) usually shows -1
       (unknown) for each row although the total affected returned in array context is a correct
       total affected.

       o not all ODBC drivers have sufficient ODBC support (arguably a bug) for correct
       diagnostics support when using arrays. DBI dictates that if a row in the batch is in error
       the tuple_status will contain the state, native and error message text. However the batch
       may generate multiple errors per row (which DBI says nothing about) and more than one row
       may error. In ODBC we get a list of errors but to associate each one with a particular row
       we need to call SQLGetDiagField for SQL_DIAG_ROW_NUMBER and it should say which row in the
       batch the diagnostic is associated with. Some ODBC drivers do not support
       SQL_DIAG_ROW_NUMBER properly and then DBD::ODBC cannot know which row in the batch an
       error refers to. In this case DBD::ODBC will report an error saying "failed to retrieve
       diags", state of HY000 and a native of 1 so you'll still see an error but not necessarily
       the exact one. Also, when more than one diagnostic is found for a row DBD::ODBC picks the
       first one (which is usually most relevant) as there is no way to report more than one
       diagnostic per row in the tuple_status. If the first problem of SQL_DIAG_ROW_NUMBER proves
       to be a problem for you the DBD::ODBC tracing will show all errors and you can also use
       "odbc_getdiagrec" yourself.

       o Binding parameters with execute_array and execute_for_fetch does not allow the parameter
       types to be set. However, as parameter types are sticky you can call bind_param(param_num,
       undef, {TYPE => sql_type}) before calling execute_for_fetch/execute_array and the TYPE
       should be sticky when the batch of parameters is bound.

       o Although you can insert very large columns execute_for_fetch will need "odbc_batch_size"
       * max length of parameter per parameter so you may hit memory limits. If you use DBI's
       execute_for_fetch DBD::ODBC uses the ODBC API SQLPutData (see "odbc_putdata_start") which
       does not require large amounts of memory as large columns are sent in pieces.

       o A lot of drivers have bugs with arrays of parameters (see the ODBC FAQ). e.g., as of
       18-MAR-2012 I've seen the latest SQLite ODBC driver seg fault and freeTDS 8/0.91 returns
       the wrong row count for batches.

       o DO NOT attempt to do an insert/update/delete and a select in the same SQL with
       execute_array e.g.,

         SET IDENTITY_INSERT mytable ON
         insert into mytable (id, name) values (?,?)
         SET IDENTITY_INSERT mytable OFF
         SELECT SCOPE_IDENTITY()

       It just won't/can't work although you may not have noticed when using DBI's inbuilt
       execute_* methods. See rt 75687.

       type_info_all

       Many ODBC drivers now return 20 columns in type_info_all rather than the 19 DBI documents.
       The 20th column is usually called "USERTYPE".  Recent MS SQL Server ODBC drivers do this.
       Fortunately this should not adversely affect you so long as you are using the keys
       provided at the start of type_info_all.

       Binding Columns

       The DBI specification allows a column type to be overridden in the call to the bind_col
       method. Mostly, DBD::ODBC ignores this type as it binds integers (SQL_INTEGER) as a
       SQL_C_LONG (since DBD::ODBC 1.38_1) and all other columns as SQL_C_CHAR or SQL_C_WCHAR and
       it is too late to change the bind type after the result-set has been described anyway. The
       only time when the TYPE passed to bind_col is used in DBD::ODBC is when it is SQL_NUMERIC
       or SQL_DOUBLE in which case DBD::ODBC will call DBI's sql_type_cast method.

       Since DBD::ODBC 1.38_1 if you attempt to change the bind type after the column has already
       bound DBD::ODBC will issue a warning and ignore your column type change e.g.,

         my $s = $h->prepare(q/select a from mytable);
         $s->execute;  # The column type was determined here
         my $r;
         $s->bind_col(1, \$r); # and bound as the right type here
         $s->execute;
         $s->bind_col(1, \$r, {TYPE => SQL_XXX}); # warning, type changed

       Basically, if you are passing a TYPE to bind_col with DBD::ODBC (other than SQL_NUMERIC or
       SQL_DOUBLE) your code is probably wrong.

       Significant changes occurred in DBD::ODBC at 1.38_1 for binding columns. Please see the
       Changes file.

       bind_param

       DBD::ODBC follows the DBI specification for bind_param however the third argument (a type
       or a hashref containing a type) is loosely defined by DBI. From the DBI pod:

       The \%attr parameter can be used to hint at the data type the placeholder should have.
       This is rarely needed.

       As a general rule, don't specify a type when calling bind_param. If you stick to inserting
       appropriate data into the appropriate column DBD::ODBC will mostly do the right thing
       especially if the ODBC driver supports SQLDescribeParam.

       In particular don't just add a type of SQL_DATE because you are inserting a date (it will
       not work). The correct syntax in ODBC for inserting dates, times and timestamps is:

       insert into mytable (mydate, mttime, mytimestamp) values(?,?,?); bind_param(1, "{d
       'YYYY-MM-DD'}"); bind_param(2, "{t 'HH:MM:SS.MM'}"); # :MM can be omitted and some dbs
       support :MMM bind_param(3, "{ts 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS'}");

       See http://technet.microsoft.com/en-US/library/ms190234%28v=SQL.90%29.aspx

       The only times when you might want to add a type are:

       1. If your ODBC driver does not support SQLDescribeParam (or if you told DBD::ODBC not to
       use it) then DBD::ODBC will default to inserting each parameter as a string (which is
       usually the right thing anyway). This is ok, most of the time, but is probably not what
       you want when inserting a binary (use TYPE => SQL_BINARY).

       2. If for some reason your driver describes the parameter incorrectly. It is difficult to
       describe an example of this.

       3. If SQLDescribeParam is supported but fails e.g., MS SQL Server has problems with SQL
       like "select myfunc(?) where 1 = 1".

       Also, DBI exports some types which are not available in ODBC e.g., SQL_BLOB. If you are
       unsure about ODBC types look at your ODBC header files or look up valid types in the ODBC
       specification.

       tables and table_info

       These are not really deviations from the DBI specification but a clarification of a DBI
       optional feature.

       DBD::ODBC supports wildcards (% and _) in the catalog, schema and type arguments. However,
       you should be aware that if the statement attribute SQL_ATTR_METADATA_ID is SQL_TRUE the
       values are interpreted as identifiers and the case is ignored. SQL_ATTR_METADATA_ID
       defaults to SQL_FALSE so normally the values are treated as patterns and the case is
       significant.

       SQLGetInfo for SQL_ACCESSIBLE_TABLES can affect what tables you can list.

       All the special cases listed by DBI (empty strings for all arguments but one which is '%')
       for catalog, schema and table type are supported by DBD::ODBC. However, using '%' for
       table type in a call to the tables method does not currently work with DBI up to 1.631 due
       to an issue in DBI.

       Although DBD::ODBC supports all the usage cases listed by DBI, your ODBC driver may not.

   Unicode
       The ODBC specification supports wide character versions (a postfix of 'W') of some of the
       normal ODBC APIs e.g., SQLDriverConnectW is a wide character version of SQLDriverConnect.

       In ODBC on Windows the wide characters are defined as SQLWCHARs (2 bytes) and are UCS-2
       (but UTF-16 is accepted by some drivers now e.g., MS SQL Server 2012 and the new collation
       suffix _SC which stands for Supplementary Character Support). On non-Windows, the main
       driver managers I know of have implemented the wide character APIs differently:

       unixODBC
           unixODBC mimics the Windows ODBC API precisely meaning the wide character versions
           expect and return 2-byte characters in UCS-2 or UTF-16.

           unixODBC will happily recognise ODBC drivers which only have the ANSI versions of the
           ODBC API and those that have the wide versions too.

           unixODBC will allow an ANSI application to work with a unicode ODBC driver and vice
           versa (although in the latter case you obviously cannot actually use unicode).

           unixODBC does not prevent you sending UTF-8 in the ANSI versions of the ODBC APIs but
           whether that is understood by your ODBC driver is another matter.

           unixODBC differs in only one way from the Microsoft ODBC driver in terms of unicode
           support in that it avoids unnecessary translations between single byte and double byte
           characters when an ANSI application is using a unicode-aware ODBC driver by requiring
           unicode applications to signal their intent by calling SQLDriverConnectW first. On
           Windows, the ODBC driver manager always uses the wide versions of the ODBC API in ODBC
           drivers which provide the wide versions regardless of what the application really
           needs and this results in a lot of unnecessary character translations when you have an
           ANSI application and a unicode ODBC driver.

       iODBC
           The wide character versions expect and return wchar_t types.

       DBD::ODBC has gone with unixODBC so you cannot use iODBC with a unicode build of
       DBD::ODBC. However, some ODBC drivers support UTF-8 (although how they do this with
       SQLGetData reliably I don't know) and so you should be able to use those with DBD::ODBC
       not built for unicode.

       Enabling and Disabling Unicode support

       On Windows Unicode support is enabled by default and to disable it you will need to
       specify "-nou" to Makefile.PL to get back to the original behavior of DBD::ODBC before any
       Unicode support was added.

       e.g.,

         perl Makfile.PL -nou

       On non-Windows platforms Unicode support is disabled by default. To enable it specify "-u"
       to Makefile.PL when you configure DBD::ODBC.

       e.g.,

         perl Makefile.PL -u

       Unicode - What is supported?

       As of version 1.17 DBD::ODBC has the following unicode support:

       SQL (introduced in 1.16_2)
           Unicode strings in calls to the "prepare" and "do" methods are supported so long as
           the "odbc_execdirect" attribute is not used.

       unicode connection strings (introduced in 1.16_2)
           Unicode connection strings are supported but you will need a DBI post 1.607 for that.

       column names
           Unicode column names are returned.

       bound columns (introduced in 1.15)
           If the DBMS reports the column as being a wide character (SQL_Wxxx) it will be bound
           as a wide character and any returned data will be converted from UTF-16 to UTF-8 and
           the UTF-8 flag will then be set on the data.

       bound parameters
           If the perl scalars you bind to parameters are marked UTF-8 and the DBMS reports the
           type as being a wide type or you bind the parameter as a wide type they will be
           converted to wide characters and bound as such.

       metadata calls like table_info, column_info
           As of DBD::ODBC 1.32_3 meta data calls accept Unicode strings.

       Since version 1.16_4, the default parameter bind type is SQL_WVARCHAR for unicode builds
       of DBD::ODBC. This only affects ODBC drivers which do not support SQLDescribeParam and
       only then if you do not specifically set a SQL type on the bind_param method call.

       The above Unicode support has been tested with the SQL Server, Oracle 9.2+ and Postgres
       drivers on Windows and various Easysoft ODBC drivers on UNIX.

       Unicode - What is not supported?

       You cannot use unicode parameter names e.g.,

         select * from table where column = :unicode_param_name

       You cannot use unicode strings in calls to prepare if you set the odbc_execdirect
       attribute.

       You cannot use the iODBC driver manager with DBD::ODBC built for unicode.

       Unicode - Caveats

       For Unicode support on any platform in Perl you will need at least Perl 5.8.1 - sorry but
       this is the way it is with Perl.

       The Unicode support in DBD::ODBC expects a WCHAR to be 2 bytes (as it is on Windows and as
       the ODBC specification suggests it is). Until ODBC specifies any other Unicode support it
       is not envisioned this will change.  On UNIX there are a few different ODBC driver
       managers. I have only tested the unixODBC driver manager (http://www.unixodbc.org) with
       Unicode support and it was built with defaults which set WCHAR as 2 bytes.

       I believe that the iODBC driver manager expects wide characters to be wchar_t types (which
       are usually 4 bytes) and hence DBD::ODBC will not work iODBC when built for unicode.

       The ODBC Driver must expect Unicode data specified in SQLBindParameter and SQLBindCol to
       be UTF-16 in local endianness. Similarly, in calls to SQLPrepareW, SQLDescribeColW and
       SQLDriverConnectW.

       You should be aware that once Unicode support is enabled it affects a number of DBI
       methods (some of which you might not expect). For instance, when listing tables, columns
       etc some drivers (e.g. Microsoft SQL Server) will report the column types as wide types
       even if the strings actually fit in 7-bit ASCII. As a result, there is an overhead for
       retrieving this column data as 2 bytes per character will be transmitted (compared with 1
       when Unicode support is not enabled) and these strings will be converted into UTF-8 but
       will end up fitting (in most cases) into 7bit ASCII so a lot of conversion work has been
       performed for nothing. If you don't have Unicode table and column names or Unicode column
       data in your tables you are best disabling Unicode support.

       I am at present unsure if ChopBlanks processing on Unicode strings is working correctly on
       UNIX. If nothing else the construct L' ' in dbdimp.c might not work with all UNIX
       compilers. Reports of issues and patches welcome.

       Unicode implementation in DBD::ODBC

       DBD::ODBC uses the wide character versions of the ODBC API and the SQL_WCHAR ODBC type to
       support unicode in Perl.

       Wide characters returned from the ODBC driver will be converted to UTF-8 and the perl
       scalars will have the utf8 flag set (by using sv_utf8_decode).

       IMPORTANT

       Perl scalars which are UTF-8 and are sent through the ODBC API will be converted to UTF-16
       and passed to the ODBC wide APIs or signalled as SQL_WCHARs (e.g., in the case of bound
       columns). Retrieved data which are wide characters are converted from UTF-16 to UTF-8.
       However, you should realise most ODBC drivers do not support UTF-16, ODBC only talks about
       wide characters being 2 bytes and UCS-2 and UCS-2 and UTF-16 are not the same. UCS-2 only
       supports Unicode characters in the first plane (the Basic Multilangual Plane or BMP) (code
       points U+0000 to U+FFFF), the most frequently used characters. So why does DBD::ODBC
       currently encode in UTF-16? For around 97% of Unicode characters in the range 0-0xFFFF
       UCS-2 and UTF-16 are exactly the same (and where they differ there is no valid Unicode
       character as the range U+D800 to U+DFFF is reserved from use only as surrogate pairs). As
       the ODBC API currently uses UCS-2 it does not support Unicode characters with code points
       above 0xFFFF (if you know better I'd like to hear from you). However, because DBD::ODBC
       uses UTF-16 encoding you can still insert Unicode characters above 0xFFFF into your
       database and retrieve them back correctly but they may not being treated as a single
       Unicode character in your database e.g., a "select length(a_column) from table" with a
       single Unicode character above 0xFFFF may return 2 and not 1 so you cannot use database
       functions on that data like upper/lower/length etc but you can at least save the data in
       your database and get it back.

       When built for unicode, DBD::ODBC will always call SQLDriverConnectW (and not
       SQLDriverConnect) even if a) your connection string is not unicode b) you have not got a
       DBI later than 1.607, because unixODBC requires SQLDriverConnectW to be called if you want
       to call other unicode ODBC APIs later. As a result, if you build for unicode and pass
       ASCII strings to the connect method they will be converted to UTF-16 and passed to
       SQLDriverConnectW. This should make no real difference to perl not using unicode
       connection strings.

       You will need a DBI later than 1.607 to support unicode connection strings because until
       post 1.607 there was no way for DBI to pass unicode strings to the DBD.

       Unicode and Oracle

       You have to set the environment variables "NLS_NCHAR=AL32UTF8" and
       "NLS_LANG=AMERICAN_AMERICA.AL32UTF8" (or any other language setting ending with
       ".AL32UTF8") before loading DBD::ODBC to make Oracle return Unicode data. (See also
       "Oracle and Unicode" in the POD of DBD::Oracle.)

       On Windows, using the Oracle ODBC Driver you have to enable the Force SQL_WCHAR support
       Workaround in the data source configuration to make Oracle return Unicode to a non-Unicode
       application. Alternatively, you can include "FWC=T" in your connect string.

       Unless you need to use ODBC, if you want Unicode support with Oracle you are better off
       using DBD::Oracle.

       Unicode and PostgreSQL

       See the odbc_utf8_on parameter to treat all strings as utf8.

       Some tests from the original DBD::ODBC 1.13 fail with PostgreSQL 8.0.3, so you may not
       want to use DBD::ODBC to connect to PostgreSQL 8.0.3.

       Unicode tests fail because PostgreSQL seems not to give any hints about Unicode, so all
       data is treated as non-Unicode.

       Unless you need to use ODBC, if you want Unicode support with Postgres you are better off
       with DBD::Pg as it has a specific attribute named "pg_enable_utf8" to enable Unicode
       support.

       Unicode and Easysoft ODBC Drivers

       We have tested the Easysoft SQL Server, Oracle and ODBC Bridge drivers with DBD::ODBC
       built for Unicode. All work as described without modification except for the Oracle driver
       you will need to set you NLS_LANG as mentioned above.

       Unicode and other ODBC drivers

       If you have a unicode-enabled ODBC driver and it works with DBD::ODBC let me know and I
       will include it here.

   ODBC Support in ODBC Drivers
       Drivers without SQLDescribeParam

       Some drivers do not support the "SQLDescribeParam" ODBC API (e.g., Microsoft Access,
       FreeTDS).

       DBD::ODBC uses the "SQLDescribeParam" API when parameters are bound to your SQL to find
       the types of the parameters. If the ODBC driver does not support "SQLDescribeParam",
       DBD::ODBC assumes the parameters are "SQL_VARCHAR" or "SQL_WVARCHAR" types (depending on
       whether DBD::ODBC is built for unicode or not and whether your parameter is unicode data).
       In any case, if you bind a parameter and specify a SQL type this overrides any type
       DBD::ODBC would choose.

       For ODBC drivers which do not support "SQLDescribeParam" the default behavior in DBD::ODBC
       may not be what you want. To change the default parameter bind type set
       "odbc_default_bind_type". If, after that you have some SQL where you need to vary the
       parameter types used add the SQL type to the end of the "bind_param" method.

         use DBI qw(:sql_types);
         $h = DBI->connect;
         # set the default bound parameter type
         $h->{odbc_default_bind_type} = SQL_VARCHAR;
         # bind a parameter with a specific type
         $s = $h->prepare(q/insert into mytable values(?)/);
         $s->bind_param(1, "\x{263a}", SQL_WVARCHAR);

   MS SQL Server Query Notification
       Query notifications were introduced in SQL Server 2005 and SQL Server Native Client.
       Query notifications allow applications to be notified when data has changed.

       DBD::ODBC supports query notification with MS SQL Server using the additional prepare
       attributes odbc_qn_msgtxt, odbc_qn_options and odbc_qn_timeout. When you pass suitable
       values for these attributes to the prepare method, DBD::ODBC will make the appropriate
       SQLSetStmtAttr calls after the statement has been allocated.

       It is beyond the scope of this document to provide a tutorial on doing this but here are
       some notes that might help you get started.

       On SQL Server

         create database MyDatabase
         ALTER DATABASE MyDatabase SET ENABLE_BROKER
         use MyDatabase
         CREATE TABLE QNtest (a int NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
                              b nchar(5) NOT NULL,
                              c datetime NOT NULL)
         INSERT QNtest (a, b, c) SELECT 1, 'ALFKI', '19991212'
         CREATE QUEUE myQueue
         CREATE SERVICE myService ON QUEUE myQueue
         See L<http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms175110%28v=SQL.105%29.aspx>

       You need to set these SQL Server permissions unless the subscriber is a sysadmin:

         GRANT RECEIVE ON QueryNotificationErrorsQueue TO "<login-for-subscriber>"
         GRANT SUBSCRIBE QUERY NOTIFICATIONS TO "<login-for-subscriber>"

       To subscribe to query notification for this example:

         # Prepare the statement.
         # This is the SQL you want to know if the result changes later
         my $sth = $dbh->prepare(q/SELECT a, b, c FROM dbo.QNtest WHERE a = 1/,
                                 {odbc_qn_msgtxt => 'Message text',
                                  odbc_qn_options => 'service=myService',
                                  odbc_qn_timeout=> 430000});
         # Fetch and display the result set value.
         while ( my @row = $sth->fetchrow_array ) {
            print "@row\n";
         }
         # select * from sys.dm_qn_subscriptions will return a record now you are subscribed

       To wait for notification:

         # Avoid "String data, right truncation" error when retrieving
         # the message.
         $dbh->{LongReadLen} = 800;

         # This query generates a result telling you which query has changed
         # It will block until the timeout or the query changes
         my $sth = $dbh->prepare(q/WAITFOR (RECEIVE * FROM MyQueue)/);
         $sth->execute();

         # in the mean time someone does UPDATE dbo.QNtest SET c = '19981212' WHERE a = 1

         # Fetch and display the result set value.
         while ( my @row = $sth->fetchrow_array ) {
            print "@row\n";
         }
         # You now need to understand the result and look to decide which query has changed

   Version Control
       DBD::ODBC source code was under version control at svn.perl.org until April 2013 when
       svn.perl.org was closed down and it is now on github at
       https://github.com/perl5-dbi/DBD-ODBC.git.

   Contributing
       There are a number of ways you may help with the development and maintenance of this
       module:

       Submitting patches
           Please send me a git pull request or email a unified diff.

           Please try and include a test which demonstrates the fix/change working.

       Reporting installs
           Install CPAN::Reporter and report you installations. This is easy to do - see "CPAN
           Testers Reporting".

       Report bugs
           If you find what you believe is a bug then enter it into the
           <http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Name=DBD-ODBC> system. Where possible include
           code which reproduces the problem including any schema required and the versions of
           software you are using.

           If you are unsure whether you have found a bug report it anyway or post it to the dbi-
           users mailing list.

       pod comments and corrections
           If you find inaccuracies in the DBD::ODBC pod or have a comment which you think should
           be added then go to <http://annocpan.org> and submit them there. I get an email for
           every comment added and will review each one and apply any changes to the
           documentation.

       Review DBD::ODBC
           Add your review of DBD::ODBC on <http://cpanratings.perl.org>.

           If you are a member on ohloh then add your review or register your use of DBD::ODBC at
           <http://www.ohloh.net/projects/perl_dbd_odbc>.

       submit test cases
           Most DBDs are built against a single client library for the database.

           Unlike other DBDs, DBD::ODBC works with many different ODBC drivers.  Although they
           all should be written with regard to the ODBC specification drivers have bugs and in
           some places the specification is open to interpretation. As a result, when changes are
           applied to DBD::ODBC it is very easy to break something in one ODBC driver.

           What helps enormously to identify problems in the many combinations of DBD::ODBC and
           ODBC drivers is a large test suite. I would greatly appreciate any test cases and in
           particular any new test cases for databases other than MS SQL Server.

       Test DBD::ODBC
           I have a lot of problems deciding when to move a development release to an official
           release since I get few test reports for development releases. What often happens is I
           call for testers on various lists, get a few and then get inundated with requests to
           do an official release. Then I do an official release and loads of rts appear out of
           nowhere and the cycle starts again.

           DBD::ODBC by its very nature works with many ODBC Drivers and it is impossible for me
           to have and test them all (this differs from other DBDs). If you depend on DBD::ODBC
           you should be interested in new releases and if you send me your email address
           suggesting you are prepared to be part of the DBD::ODBC testing network I will credit
           you in the Changes file and perhaps the main DBD::ODBC file.

   CPAN Testers Reporting
       Please, please, please (is that enough), consider installing CPAN::Reporter so that when
       you install perl modules a report of the installation success or failure can be sent to
       cpan testers. In this way module authors 1) get feedback on the fact that a module is
       being installed 2) get to know if there are any installation problems. Also other people
       like you may look at the test reports to see how successful they are before choosing the
       version of a module to install.

       See this guide on how to get started with sending test reports:
       <http://wiki.cpantesters.org/wiki/QuickStart>.

   Others/todo?
       Level 2

           SQLColumnPrivileges
           SQLProcedureColumns
           SQLProcedures
           SQLTablePrivileges
           SQLDrivers
           SQLNativeSql

   Random Links
       These are in need of sorting and annotating. Some are relevant only to ODBC developers.

       You can find DBD::ODBC on ohloh now at:

       <http://www.ohloh.net/projects/perl_dbd_odbc>

       If you use ohloh and DBD::ODBC please say you use it and rate it.

       There is a good search engine for the various Perl DBI lists at the following URLS:

       <http://perl.markmail.org/search/list:org.perl.dbi-users>

       <http://perl.markmail.org/search/list:org.perl.dbi-dev>

       <http://perl.markmail.org/search/list:org.perl.dbi-announce>

       <http://www.syware.com>

       <http://www.microsoft.com/odbc>

       For Linux/Unix folks, compatible ODBC driver managers can be found at:

       <http://www.unixodbc.org> (unixODBC source and rpms)

       <http://www.iodbc.org> (iODBC driver manager source)

       For Linux/Unix folks, you can checkout the following for ODBC Drivers and Bridges:

       <http://www.easysoft.com>

       <http://www.openlinksw.com>

       <http://www.datadirect.com>

       <http://www.atinet.com>

   Some useful tutorials:
       Debugging Perl DBI:

       <http://www.easysoft.com/developer/languages/perl/dbi-debugging.html>

       Enabling ODBC support in Perl with Perl DBI and DBD::ODBC:

       <http://www.easysoft.com/developer/languages/perl/dbi_dbd_odbc.html>

       Perl DBI/DBD::ODBC Tutorial Part 1 - Drivers, Data Sources and Connection:

       <http://www.easysoft.com/developer/languages/perl/dbd_odbc_tutorial_part_1.html>

       Perl DBI/DBD::ODBC Tutorial Part 2 - Introduction to retrieving data from your database:

       <http://www.easysoft.com/developer/languages/perl/dbd_odbc_tutorial_part_2.html>

       Perl DBI/DBD::ODBC Tutorial Part 3 - Connecting Perl on UNIX or Linux to Microsoft SQL
       Server:

       <http://www.easysoft.com/developer/languages/perl/sql_server_unix_tutorial.html>

       Perl DBI - Put Your Data On The Web:

       <http://www.easysoft.com/developer/languages/perl/tutorial_data_web.html>

       Multiple Active Statements (MAS) and DBD::ODBC

       <http://www.easysoft.com/developer/languages/perl/multiple-active-statements.html>

       64-bit ODBC

       <http://www.easysoft.com/developer/interfaces/odbc/64-bit.html>

       How do I insert Unicode supplementary characters into SQL Server from Perl?

       <http://www.easysoft.com/support/kb/kb01043.html>

       Some Common Unicode Problems and Solutions using Perl DBD::ODBC and MS SQL Server

       <http://www.easysoft.com/developer/languages/perl/sql-server-unicode.html>

       and a version possibly kept more up to date:

       <https://github.com/mjegh/dbd_odbc_sql_server_unicode/blob/master/common_problems.pod>

       How do I use SQL Server Query Notifications from Linux and UNIX?

       <http://www.easysoft.com/support/kb/kb01069.html>

   Frequently Asked Questions
       Frequently asked questions are now in DBD::ODBC::FAQ. Run "perldoc DBD::ODBC::FAQ" to view
       them.

CONFIGURATION AND ENVIRONMENT

       You should consult the documentation for the ODBC Driver Manager you are using.

DEPENDENCIES

       DBI

       Test::Simple

INCOMPATIBILITIES

       None known.

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

       None known other than the deviations from the DBI specification mentioned above in
       "Deviations from the DBI specification".

       Please report any to me via the CPAN RT system. See <http://rt.cpan.org/> for more
       details.

AUTHOR

       Tim Bunce

       Jeff Urlwin

       Thomas K. Wenrich

       Martin J. Evans

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic. This program is distributed in the hope that it
       will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

       Portions of this software are Copyright Tim Bunce, Thomas K. Wenrich, Jeff Urlwin and
       Martin J. Evans - see the source.

SEE ALSO

       DBI

       DBD::ODBC can be used with many ODBC drivers to many different databases.  If you want a
       generic DBD for multiple databases DBD::ODBC is probably for you.  If you are only
       accessing a single database then you might want to look for DBD::my_database (e.g.
       DBD::Oracle) as database specific DBDs often have more functionality.

       DBIx::LogAny or DBIx::Log4perl for logging DBI method calls, SQL, parameters and results.