So I’m posting this on my blog to make this info easier to find for me as well as you. I wrote up a document for this a while back for a client, but I can never remember where I put it. Note: A helpful commenter has informed me that for Access 2016 the switch is /quiet rather than /passive.
![ms access runtime engine ms access runtime engine](https://img.wonderhowto.com/img/53/98/63475323859496/0/navigate-use-query-by-example-qbe-interface-microsoft-access-2007.1280x600.jpg)
#Ms access runtime engine install#
![ms access runtime engine ms access runtime engine](https://www.apesoftware.com/content/pages/images/odbc-data-source-admin-access.png)
Option B: Install from the Command Line and Use the Passive Switch It doesn’t have the check to see what other products are on your machine and can co-exist peacefully with the 64-bit 2010 Access engine. The 2007 Access database engine can read the same format, but didn’t have a 64-bit install. Option A: Install the 2007 Office System Driver: Data Connectivity Components There are two options for getting the other version installed. Microsoft Active Directory, or PingFederate to manage developer access and. If you try, you will get an error message. Your apps run inside smart containers in a fully managed runtime environment. You cannot install the 2010 Access database engine with a different processing architecture (bittedness) from your Office install (or install both versions of the 2010 Access database engine) without a workaround. If you have ever attempted this, you know there is a secret.
![ms access runtime engine ms access runtime engine](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/2wwTThCHp0E/maxresdefault.jpg)
I started by installing the 64-bit Microsoft Access Database Engine 2010 Redistributable. I needed both the 32-bit and the 64-bit adapters to cover my various use cases. The ‘.12.0’ provider is not registered on the local machine.
#Ms access runtime engine full version#
It is a program that can enable you to distribute Access applications to users who do not have the full version of Access installed on their computers. If you try to do either of those things without the ACE OLE DB provider you will get a message like the one below. This program is called 'Microsoft Access Runtime'. I sometimes work with SSIS locally to import data from Excel and occasionally do demos with Power BI where I read from an Access database so I needed to install the ACE OLE DB provider. I recently got a new laptop and had to go through the ritual of reinstalling all my programs and drivers.