Greetings,
My understanding is that registry items are case sensitive. Please confirm.
If registry entries are case sensitive and I want to use manually disable ad
hoc
access then which key should I use (I've seen both forms on MS and in
e-mails)?
DisallowAdhocAccess or DisallowAdHocAccess
Thanks,
StanI don't think it matters - I've seen it both ways as well.
The Knowledge Base article for the addressing ad hoc issues
has it listed as DisallowAdHocAccess:
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=327489
One easy way to deal with the issue is to make sure you are
on SP3 for SQL Server 2000. With that service pack, the
absence of the key would mean that ad hoc access is not
allowed. Consequently, you don't need to create the key to
disallow ad hoc access if you are running SQL 2000 SP3. If
one exists, you need to make sure it's set to 0.
-Sue
On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 08:03:00 -0500, "Stan Kasper"
<kasper@.wharton.upenn.edu> wrote:
>Greetings,
>My understanding is that registry items are case sensitive. Please confirm
.
>If registry entries are case sensitive and I want to use manually disable a
d
>hoc
>access then which key should I use (I've seen both forms on MS and in
>e-mails)?
>DisallowAdhocAccess or DisallowAdHocAccess
>
>Thanks,
>Stan
>
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