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RazorSQL, a database query tool, SQL editor, and database browser, can be used to open and edit MS Acess databases on macOS / Mac OS X by using MS Access JDBC drivers. Three JDBC driver options are discussed below.

Mac the ripper pro. Note: Other than the UCanAccess driver, the trial / free versions of the drivers mentioned below may have limitations such as maximum row limits. Please see the driver documentation for more details.

UCanAccess JDBC Driver

The UCanAccess open source driver is included with RazorSQL and can be used to read and write to recent versions of MS Access, and provides read-only support for MS Access 97. More information on the UCanAccess driver can be found at the following link:
http://ucanaccess.sourceforge.net/site.html

The UCanAccess driver is included in RazorSQL. To make a connection to an Access database from RazorSQL with the UCanAccess driver, go to the Connections -> Add Connection Profile menu option. Then, select Microsoft Access as the database type. The UCanAccess driver is the first option in the 'Connection Type' list on the next screen.

HXTT MS Access JDBC Driver

The MS Access JDBC driver from HXTT can be used with RazorSQL to read from and write to MS Access files on Mac OS X. More information on the HXTT Access driver can be found at the following link:
https://www.hxtt.com/access.html

To get the HXTT Access driver working with RazorSQL, you first need to download the driver zip file from the HXTT site, and then extract the zip file.
The next step is to open the RazorSQL connection wizard by selecting the Connections - Add Connection Profile menu option.
Select Microsoft Access as the database type and JDBC as the connection type.
Enter a profile name in the profile name field.
In the Driver Location field, browse to the location of the of the Access_JDBC30.jar file which should be under the access/lib directory where you just extracted the access.zip file that you downloaded.
In the Driver Class field, enter com.hxtt.sql.access.AccessDriver
In the JDBC URL field, enter something similar to the following. The following assumes an Access mdb file called fountainhead.mdb located in the /Users/user/Desktop directory.
jdbc:Access:////Users/user/Desktop/fountainhead.mdb
Hit connect to make a connection to the MS Access database. You can now query and browse the database using the database browser and SQL editor included in RazorSQL and edit table data using the table editor.

StelsMDB MS Access JDBC Driver

The MS Access JDBC driver from Stels can be used with RazorSQL to read from and write to MS Access files on Mac OS X. More information on the Stels Access driver can be found at the following link:
http://www.csv-jdbc.com/stels_mdb_jdbc.htm

To get the StelsMDB Access driver working with RazorSQL, you first need to download the driver zip file from the StelsMDB site, and then extract the zip file.
The next step is to open the RazorSQL connection wizard by selecting the Connections - Add Connection Profile menu option.
Select Microsoft Access as the database type and JDBC as the connection type.
Enter a profile name in the profile name field.
Multiple jar files need to be entered into the Driver Location field for the StelsMDB driver. They are the following and can be found under the mdbdriver folder in the zip file that was downloaded and extracted:
mdbdriver.jar
log4j.jar
commons_lang.jar
commons_logging.jar
The paths to all of the above files should be entered in the location field. The files can be added one at a time using the Browse button.
In the Driver Class field, there are two options depending on which version of the StelsMDB driver you are using. For new versions of the driver, enter the following: jstels.jdbc.mdb.MDBDriver2
For older versions, enter jstels.jdbc.mdb.MDBDriver
In the JDBC URL field, enter something similar to the following. The following assumes an Access mdb file called fountainhead.mdb located in the /Users/user/Desktop directory.
jdbc:jstels:mdb:/Users/user/Desktop/fountainhead.mdb
Hit connect to make a connection to the MS Access database. You can now query and browse the database using the database browser and SQL editor included in RazorSQL and edit table data using the table editor.

Here I’ll show you how to get SQL Server up and running on your Mac in less than half an hour. And the best part is, you’ll have SQL Server running locally without needing any virtualization software.

Prior to SQL Server 2017, if you wanted to run SQL Server on your Mac, you first had to create a virtual machine (using VirtualBox, Parallels Desktop, VMware Fusion, or Bootcamp), then install Windows onto that VM, then finally SQL Server. This is still a valid option depending on your requirements (here’s how to install SQL Server on a Mac with VirtualBox if you’d like to try that method).

Starting with SQL Server 2017, you can now install SQL Server directly on to a Linux machine. And because macOS is Unix based (and Linux is Unix based), you can run SQL Server for Linux on your Mac. The way to do this is to run SQL Server on Docker.

So let’s go ahead and install Docker. Then we’ll download and install SQL Server.

  1. Install Docker

    Download the (free) Docker Community Edition for Mac (unless you’ve already got it installed on your system). This will enable you to run SQL Server from within a Docker container.

    To download, visit the Docker CE for Mac download page and click Get Docker.

    To install, double-click on the .dmg file and then drag the Docker.app icon to your Application folder.

    What is Docker?

    Docker is a platform that enables software to run in its own isolated environment. SQL Server (from 2017) can be run on Docker in its own isolated container. Once Docker is installed, you simply download — or “pull” — the SQL Server on Linux Docker Image to your Mac, then run it as a Docker container. This container is an isolated environment that contains everything SQL Server needs to run. Games for mac os.

  2. Launch Docker

    Launch Docker the same way you’d launch any other application (eg, via the Applications folder, the Launchpad, etc).

    When you open Docker, you might be prompted for your password so that Docker can install its networking components and links to the Docker apps. Go ahead and provide your password, as Docker needs this to run.

  3. Increase the Memory

    By default, Docker will have 2GB of memory allocated to it. SQL Server needs at least 3.25GB. To be safe, increase it to 4GB if you can.

    To do this:

    1. Select Preferences from the little Docker icon in the top menu
    2. Slide the memory slider up to at least 4GB
    3. Click Apply & Restart
  4. Download SQL Server

    Now that Docker is installed and its memory has been increased, we can download and install SQL Server for Linux.

    Open a Terminal window and run the following command.

    This downloads the latest SQL Server 2019 for Linux Docker image to your computer.

    You can also check for the latest container version on the Docker website if you wish.

    Update: When I first wrote this article, I used the following image:

    Which downloaded SQL Server 2017. Therefore, the examples below reflect that version.

  5. Launch the Docker Image

    Run the following command to launch an instance of the Docker image you just downloaded:

    But of course, use your own name and password. Also, if you downloaded a different Docker image, replace microsoft/mssql-server-linux with the one you downloaded.

    Here’s an explanation of the parameters:

    -d
    This optional parameter launches the Docker container in daemon mode. This means that it runs in the background and doesn’t need its own Terminal window open. You can omit this parameter to have the container run in its own Terminal window.
    --name sql_server_demo
    Another optional parameter. This parameter allows you to name the container. This can be handy when stopping and starting your container from the Terminal.
    -e 'ACCEPT_EULA=Y'
    The Y shows that you agree with the EULA (End User Licence Agreement). This is required in order to have SQL Server for Linux run on your Mac.
    -e 'SA_PASSWORD=reallyStrongPwd123'
    Required parameter that sets the sa database password.
    -p 1433:1433
    This maps the local port 1433 to port 1433 on the container. This is the default TCP port that SQL Server uses to listen for connections.
    microsoft/mssql-server-linux
    This tells Docker which image to use. If you downloaded a different one, use it instead.

    Password Strength

    If you get the following error at this step, try again, but with a stronger password.

    I received this error when using reallyStrongPwd as the password (but of course, it’s not a really strong password!). I was able to overcome this by adding some numbers to the end. However, if it wasn’t just a demo I’d definitely make it stronger than a few dictionary words and numbers.

  6. Check the Docker container (optional)

    You can type the following command to check that the Docker container is running.

    If it’s up and running, it should return something like this:

  7. Install sql-cli (unless already installed)

    Run the following command to install the sql-cli command line tool. This tool allows you to run queries and other commands against your SQL Server instance.

    This assumes you have NodeJs installed. If you don’t, download it from Nodejs.org first. Installing NodeJs will automatically install npm which is what we use in this command to install sql-cli.

    Permissions Error?

    If you get an error, and part of it reads something like Please try running this command again as root/Administrator, try again, but this time prepend sudo to your command:

  8. Connect to SQL Server

    Now that sql-cli is installed, we can start working with SQL Server via the Terminal window on our Mac.

    Connect to SQL Server using the mssql command, followed by the username and password parameters.

    You should see something like this:

    This means you’ve successfully connected to your instance of SQL Server.

  9. Run a Quick Test

    Run a quick test to check that SQL Server is up and running and you can query it.

    For example, you can run the following command to see which version of SQL Server your running:

    If it’s running, you should see something like this (but of course, this will depend on which version you’re running):

    If you see a message like this, congratulations — SQL Server is now up and running on your Mac!

A SQL Server GUI for your Mac – Azure Data Studio

Azure Data Studio (formerly SQL Operations Studio) is a free GUI management tool that you can use to manage SQL Server on your Mac. You can use it to create and manage databases, write queries, backup and restore databases, and more.

Azure Data Studio is available on Windows, Mac and Linux.

Here are some articles/tutorials I’ve written for Azure Data Studio:

Another Free SQL Server GUI – DBeaver

Another SQL Server GUI tool that you can use on your Mac (and Windows/Linux/Solaris) is DBeaver.

DBeaver is a free, open source database management tool that can be used on most database management systems (such as MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, SQLite, Oracle, DB2, SQL Server, Sybase, Microsoft Access, Teradata, Firebird, Derby, and more).

DBeaver using the “Dark” theme.

I wrote a little introduction to DBeaver, or you can go straight to the DBeaver download page and try it out with your new SQL Server installation.

Limitations of SQL Server for Linux/Mac

SQL Server 2017 for Linux does have some limitations (at least, in its initial release). The Linux release doesn’t include many of the extra services that are available in the Windows release, such as Analysis Services, Reporting Services, etc. Here’s a list of what’s available and what’s not on SQL Server 2017 for Linux.

Another limitation is that SQL Server Management Studio is not available on Mac or Linux. SSMS a full-blown GUI management for SQL Server, and it provides many more features than Azure Data Studio and DBeaver (at least at the time of writing). You can still use SSMS on a Windows machine to connect to SQL Server on a Linux or Mac machine, but you just can’t install it locally on the Linux or Mac machine.

If you need any of the features not supported in SQL Server for Linux, you’ll need SQL Server for Windows. However, you can still run SQL Server for Windows on your Mac by using virtualization software. Here’s how to install SQL Server for Windows on a Mac using VirtualBox.