Hello Vishal,
As far as I know the Java version of the Werner javasqlite
driver does not use a port and the odbc may not also.
I have use this Java driver, but a more current active
driver project for Java is at GitHub:
https://github.com/xerial/sqlite-jdbc/
As indicated SQLite is local file sy
On 7/10/17, Rob Willett wrote:
>
> A good rule of thumb is to avoid using SQLite in situations where the
> same database will be accessed directly (without an intervening
> application server) and simultaneously from many computers over a
> network."
>
Another way to express this rule-of-thumb:
It depends on what you mean remotely.
By itself SQLite doesn't have any networking library built in. It's an
embedded database.
You can put application wrappers around the database, I believe that
wrappers exist to make SQLIte into a true client/server but thats
additional code. Also there i
Rob,
On Mon, Jul 10, 2017 at 7:06 AM, Rob Willett
wrote:
> Vishal,
>
> SQLite isn't a traditional client/server relational database, therefore
> there isn't a port to open up. It runs on a local machine.
I believe SQLite can successfully be run remotely.
Thank you.
>
> Now there are wrappers a
Vishal,
SQLite isn't a traditional client/server relational database, therefore
there isn't a port to open up. It runs on a local machine.
Now there are wrappers around SQLite to extend it, I assume this ODBC
driver is one of them.
I suspect people here *may* know the answer regarding any p
Hi,
Am trying to open a firewall to the machine having sqlite database. Does the
SQLite database use a specific port number ? If not, then does the ODBC
connection to SQLite using ODBC driver use a port ?
Any help will be greatly appreciated.
SQLite ODBC Driver:
http://www.ch-werner.de/sqliteod
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