Anybody seen this behavior with Sql Server Reporting Services, a 64bit OS and an Oracle datasource?
I'm working on a Sql Server Reporting Services solution that queries across both a Sql Server data source and an Oracle 10g data source. My dev box is Windows 7 64bit with Sql Server 2008R2 and I'm hosting IIS7 and SSRS on that system for deve开发者_运维知识库lopment; using VS.NET for designing the reports.
I have been having errors when running the report where SSRS complains about loading the 32 bit Oracle client in a 64bit process. There a number of threads out there about how to solve that. The thing is, they all come down to making sure you have the 64bit Oracle, client which I do. The weird chain of events I have goes like this:
- Create initial Oracle datasource and wire up report (it works)
- Edit Oracle datasource connection (it stops working with BadImageFormatException 32bit/64bit error message)
- uninstall and reinstall Oracle client (it works)
- Edit Oracle connection again (it stops working with BadImageFormatException 32bit/64bit error message)
So short of reinstalling the client every time I change the connection string I am at a complete loss. Has anybody seen this sort of behavior? And if so what the heck am I doing wrong?
Originally answered here: SSRS report with 32-bit Oracle Client Not working in 64-Bit Environment
This is the second time I configure a similar server, and the second time I spend hours figuring this one out. If for nobody else, I am writing this for the future me. This is for a Windows Server 2012 R2 64bit, 8GB RAM, 300+GB HDD, Intel Xeon CPU E5620 @ 2.40GHz, that is running Microsoft SQL Server Reporting Services 2012 64bit and IIS 7.0 with web applications that use the Oracle Client 32bit connection System.Data.OracleClient
- Install the 64bit client
- Change the name of the Oracle inventory directory @ "C:\Program Files\Oracle" to "C:\Program Files\Oracle64"
- Restart computer and test for connection from SSRS to Oracle
- Install the 32bit client and specify a different location for its home directory
- Restart computer and test connection from SSRS to Oracle and from Web Applications to Oracle
I hope this helps my future self and others :)
You need to install 64 bit Oracle Client. Beware, i had bad experience on having both oracle 32 bit and 64 bit client. I ended up uninstalling 64 bit oracle client and trying to figure out installing SSRS in 32 bit mode on 64bit win7.
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