ID: Q117717
The information in this article applies to:
When you run a workstation installation of one of the above applications on a computer running Microsoft Windows from a server, the Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) files are installed to your personal Windows directory, even if the Server option was selected as the location for shared applications during the administrative installation.
This behavior is caused by the way the ODBC files are installed. The ODBC driver files are always installed to your user directory when you run a workstation installation and are running Microsoft Windows from a server.
To prevent the ODBC files from being installed in your personal Windows directory, you can edit the SETUP.STF file. Note that if you make these changes to the SETUP.STF file, ODBC functionality is NOT installed and is not available on the workstation.
NOTE: Each application that uses ODBC installs the ODBC files if they are not already on your computer. Therefore, to prevent installation of these files, you must edit the SETUP.STF file for each application you install that uses ODBC. For example, if you modify the SETUP.STF file for Microsoft Word for Windows and then perform a workstation installation of Microsoft Excel for Windows, the ODBC files are installed.
WARNING: This modification is not supported by Microsoft Product Support Services (PSS). Although PSS will support some modifications to a BACKUP copy of the SETUP.STF file and will help customers modify specific lines of an STF, we will not rewrite the entire file in order to achieve a desired configuration. As a general rule, support is limited to options that can normally be changed by a user during a standard installation of the application.
1. Make a backup copy of your SETUP.STF file.
2. Open SETUP.STF in Microsoft Excel (or another suitable text editor).
NOTE: If you open SETUP.STF in Microsoft Excel 5.0, complete the
following additional steps before continuing:
a. In the Text Import Wizard dialog box, choose Next until Step 3
Of 3 appears.
b. In the Text Import Wizard - Step 3 Of 3 dialog box, under Data
Preview, click the second column to select it. Under Column Data
Format, select the Text option, and choose Finish.
3. Make the changes outlined below (that is, find each object ID listed in
the Object ID column and change the corresponding "Install During Batch
Mode" entry in the .STF file to match the value in the appropriate table
below). If the entry in the table is "(blank)," clear whatever text is
in the cell and leave it blank.
NOTES:
quiet and mode and components and excel
Object ID Install During Batch Mode Title
(Column A) (Column B) (Column C)
---------------------------------------------------------
33 no &Typical
36 yes &Workstation
57 no Data Access
91 (blank) XL5Workstation_shared
96 no Data Access
108 no Data Access
1608 no Microsoft PowerPoint
1609 no Microsoft PowerPoint
1610 no Microsoft PowerPoint
1611 yes Microsoft PowerPoint
1618 yes PPWorkstation_Local_Files1
1619 (blank) PPWorkstation_Local_Files2
1620 yes PPWorkstation_Local_Files3
1621 (blank) PPWorkstation_Local_Files4
3209 no Microsoft Word
3210 no Microsoft Word
3211 no Microsoft Word
3212 yes Microsoft Word
3267 no Data Access (ODBC)
4262 yes Workstation
Microsoft Office Version 4.3:
Object ID Install During Batch Mode Title
(Column A) (Column B) (Column C)
---------------------------------------------------------
62 no Data Access
96 (blank) XL5Workstation_shared
101 no Data Access
113 no Data Access
1589 no Microsoft PowerPoint
1590 no Microsoft PowerPoint
1591 no Microsoft PowerPoint
1592 yes Microsoft PowerPoint
1599 yes PPWorkstation_Local_Files1
1600 (blank) PPWorkstation_Local_Files2
1601 yes PPWorkstation_Local_Files3
1602 (blank) PPWorkstation_Local_Files4
3157 no Microsoft Word
3158 no Microsoft Word
3159 no Microsoft Word
3160 yes Microsoft Word
3215 no Data Access (ODBC)
4184 yes Workstation
4249 no Microsoft Access
4250 no Microsoft Access
4251 no Microsoft Access
4252 yes Microsoft Access
Microsoft Word Version 6.0a:
Object ID Install During Batch Mode Title
(Column A) (Column B) (Column C)
-----------------------------------------------------------
76 no Data Access (ODBC)
Microsoft Excel Version 5.0:
Object ID Install During Batch Mode Title
(Column A) (Column B) (Column C)
-----------------------------------------------------------
22 no Data Access
34 no Data Access
Microsoft has confirmed this to be a problem in the Microsoft products listed at the beginning of this article. We are researching this problem and will post new information here in the Microsoft Knowledge Base as it becomes available.
The following is a list of the ODBC files (approximately 2 megabytes) that are installed to your personal Windows directory:
DRVACCSS.HLP
DRVDBASE.HLP
DRVFOX.HLP
DRVPARDX.HLP
DRVSSRVR.HLP
MSJETDSP.DLL
ODBC.DLL
ODBCADM.EXE
ODBCINST.DLL
ODBCINST.HLP
ODBC.INI
ODBCINST.INI
ODBCISAM.INI
PDX110.DLL
RED110.DLL
SIMADMIN.DLL
SIMBA.DLL
SQLSVR.DLL
XBS110.DLL
For more information about extra system files being installed to your
Windows directory, see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge
Base:
ARTICLE-ID: Q115594
TITLE : Office: Extra Files in User Directory with Shared Windows
KBCategory: kbsetup kbnetwork
KBSubcategory:
Additional reference words: 1.00 2.00 4.00 4.20 4.30 5.00 6.00 6.00a kbsetup acme
Last Reviewed: September 10, 1996