My client uses Crystal reports 6.0. It is installed on only one Windows '98 network attached PC. The report definitions are stored on a server. (Novell Netware network.) The reports pull data from an Access Database which contains 35 tables. This database is also stored on a network server. The customer's IT department came in and did a server migration. After the migration, most of the reports print normally. However, reports that try to access data in the "promo/cust" table or the "sites" table in their Access database fail. Reports accessing any other tables in the same DB work just fine.
The actual error message is:
Seagate Crystal Reports
Database Error
Error Opening File
File could not be opened: "sites". Please check its location.
This repeats for file "promo/cust".
Then we get a message "file not found".
The customer is not using compiled reports.
Users who access the database using the Microsoft Access front end forms, queries, and reports have no trouble accessing the Sites or the Promo/Cust tables, so it appears that Access knows where these table are. Crystal Reports knows where 33 of the 35 tables in that database are - it just can't find two of them. Does Crystal Reports have it's own index into the Access Database that could be corrupt and in need of repair? If so, how does one do this? I've never actually used Crystal reports, I was just brought in on this because their IT department gave up.
Any thoughts?
Thanks in advance,
nowickil
The actual error message is:
Seagate Crystal Reports
Database Error
Error Opening File
File could not be opened: "sites". Please check its location.
This repeats for file "promo/cust".
Then we get a message "file not found".
The customer is not using compiled reports.
Users who access the database using the Microsoft Access front end forms, queries, and reports have no trouble accessing the Sites or the Promo/Cust tables, so it appears that Access knows where these table are. Crystal Reports knows where 33 of the 35 tables in that database are - it just can't find two of them. Does Crystal Reports have it's own index into the Access Database that could be corrupt and in need of repair? If so, how does one do this? I've never actually used Crystal reports, I was just brought in on this because their IT department gave up.
Any thoughts?
Thanks in advance,
nowickil