Hi:
As it says on page 1 of the document, you need SAS/ACCESS to OLEDB (not ODBC). Quote directly from page 1:
"Before you begin using
SAS/ACCESS Interface to OLE DB there are system requirements that will need to be met prior to its use.
They include the following:
Products Required:
• Base SAS software
•
SAS/ACCESS Interface to OLE DB
DBMS Products Required:
• An OLE DB provider needs to be installed on the same machine that SAS will be running on. The OLE DB
provider is obtained from a third party (other than SAS) vendor.
• Any additional DBMS client software may need to be installed and configured on the same machine as the OLE DB provider. Many OLE DB providers communicate with the DBMS server using the DBMS client. Once the client software is installed and configured to communicate with the server in question, the OLE DB provider should be able to also communicate with the DBMS server.
• Microsoft Data Access Components (MDAC), Version 2.7 or higher
Note: The SAS System will automatically install Microsoft Data Access Components (MDAC) when you install SAS/ACCESS Interface to OLE DB software.
Once the above software has been installed and any additional client software has been installed and configured, SAS/ACCESS Interface to OLE DB is ready to be used."
In order to get SAS/ACCESS to OLE DB, you should contact your internal SAS software representative or SAS Sales Rep. Pricing depends on the site license that your company has. It's possible that your company already has a SAS/ACCESS to OLE DB license and you have to ask for it to be installed on your system. What you show may only be what's physically installed, not what has actually been licensed.
If your SQL server is ODBC-compliant and you wish to access it via ODBC, then you will need to follow other directions for ODBC access to your database.
http://support.sas.com/documentation/cdl/en/acreldb/63023/HTML/default/a001353892.htm
http://support.sas.com/documentation/cdl/en/acreldb/63023/HTML/default/a001355231.htm
ODBC and OLE-DB are two different methods of connecting to various data sources and each method has a separate SAS/ACCESS product (just as Oracle and DB2 are two different data bases, each with their own SAS/ACCESS product):
Definition of ODBC:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Database_Connectivity
Definition of OLE-DB:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OLE-DB
cynthia