Configure Error Need At Least Php 4.0.0
already seen, in previous articles, just how easy it is to read and write Microsoft Excel spreadsheets with PHP and PEAR. But spreadsheets are just one way of representing structured data - the other, of course, is to use a database. Well, guess what? If your database happens to be Microsoft Access, PHP has you covered there as well! In this article, I'll introduce you to PHP's MDBTools extension, which provides an API to programmatically read data from Microsoft Access database files. If your project involves working with such files, extracting database records either for calculations or for conversion to other formats, you'll find this extension invaluable. Come on in, and see how it works! Laying The Foundation Microsoft Access support in PHP comes through PECL's ext/mdbtools extension, which is maintained by Hartmut Holzgraefe. This extension is itself a wrapper around the MDBTools package (http://mdbtools.sourceforge.net/), which provides a set of tools to read Access database schema and records. This MDBTools package also provides a simple ODBC-compliant driver that can be used to read data from Access databases using standard SELECT queries. To use PECL's ext/mdbtools extension, first download, install and compile the MDBTools package (v0.6pre1) for your platform - you'll find detailed instructions on the MDBTools Web site. Once this is done, proceed to install the PECL MDBTools extension using the pecl command. Note that at the current time, a Windows version of ext/mdbtools is not available; the following steps assume a *NIX system. shell# pecl install mdbtools 1 shell# pecl install mdbtools The PECL installer will now download the source code, compile it and install it to the appropriate location on your system. Alternatively, manually download the source code archive (v1.0.0 at this time) from http://pecl.php.net/package/mdbtools and compile it into a loadable PHP module with phpize: shell# cd mdbtools-1.0.0 shell# phpize shell# ./configure shell# make shell# make install 12345 shell# cd mdbtools-1.0.0shell# phpizeshell# ./configureshell# makeshell# make install This procedure should create a loadable PHP module named mdbtools.so in your PHP extension directo
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each https://devzone.zend.com/1315/reading-access-databases-with-php-and-pecl/ other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up configure: error: C compiler cannot create executables up vote 105 down vote favorite 23 I've checked a number of similar questions on stackoverflow but haven't found an answer yet. I'm trying to install memcached on Lion OSX as shown here. Here's what I'm getting: j-court-demones-macbook-pro:libevent-1.4.12-stable jcourtdemone$ ./configure; make checking http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10357804/configure-error-c-compiler-cannot-create-executables for a BSD-compatible install... /usr/bin/install -c checking whether build environment is sane... yes checking for a thread-safe mkdir -p... ./install-sh -c -d checking for gawk... no checking for mawk... no checking for nawk... no checking for awk... awk checking whether make sets $(MAKE)... yes checking for gcc... gcc checking for C compiler default output file name... configure: error: in `/tmp/libevent-1.4.12-stable': configure: error: C compiler cannot create executables See `config.log' for more details. make: *** No targets specified and no makefile found. Stop. I've reinstalled Xcode as was recommended in a couple places, but no dice. Here's my config.log: This file contains any messages produced by compilers while running configure, to aid debugging if configure makes a mistake. It was created by configure, which was generated by GNU Autoconf 2.63. Invocation command line was $ ./configure ## --------- ## ## Platform. ## ## --------- ## hostname = j-court-demones-macbook-pro.local uname -m = x86_64 uname -r = 11.3.0 uname -s = Darwin uname -v = Darwin Kernel Version 11.3.0: Thu Jan 12 18:47:41 PST 2012; root:xnu-1699.24.23~1/RELEA
Configure DNS 6.1 Configure /etc/resolv.conf 6.2 Testing DNS 7 Configure Kerberos 7.1 Configure /etc/krb5.conf 7.2 Testing Kerberos 8 Configure NTP 9 Using a DC as a fileserver 10 Troubleshooting https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Setup_a_Samba_Active_Directory_Domain_Controller 11 Further documentation 12 Report your success/failure! Introduction Since version 4.0, Samba can, additionally to a NT4 PDC, act as a Domain Controller that is compatible with Microsoft Active Directory. In the following, we explain how to set up Samba as an Active Directory Domain Controller from scratch. In addition, this documentation is the start for upgrading an existing Samba NT4-style domain configure error to a Samba AD. Whilst the Domain Controller seems capable of running as a full file server, it is suggested that organisations run a distinct file server to allow upgrades of each without disrupting the other. It is also suggested that medium-sized sites should run more than one DC. It also makes sense to have the DC's distinct from any file servers that configure error need may use the Domain Controllers. Additionally using distinct file servers avoids the idiosyncrasies in the winbindd configuration on the Active Directory Domain Controller. The Samba team does not recommend using a Samba-based Domain Controller as a file server, and recommend that users run a separate Domain Member with file shares. If you are looking for documentation about updating the Samba version of an existing Samba Active Directory Domain Controller, please consult your distribution upgrade procedure or see: Updating Samba. Samba as an AD DC requires at least version 4.0.0, but it's always recommended to use the latest stable version of Samba. It will contain fixes for bugs from previous releases and may contain improved Microsoft Active Directory compatibility and additional features. See the Samba release plan for more details about the latest maintained versions and their release notes. Please note that you do not need to install or configure a separate Kerberos KDC for Samba to work. Samba includes an AD compatible KDC, currently based on an included copy of the Heimdal project. Likewise Samba ships its own LDAP implementation for AD backends. OpenLDAP or other LDAP