Reputation: 4359
I have a VB6/Access application that occasionally encounters a problem with wrong autonumber field seed.
Lets say there is a table MYTABLE with an autonumber field ID (that is also the primary key). Lets say at the moment the maximum value of ID is 1000. When the application inserts a new record (ID value is not provided explicitly), for some reason it decides that the next autonumber field value is 950 (and not 1001 as it should be) - so a primary key violation error occurs.
I found a KB article that describes my symptoms: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/884185 . In short, they suggest to run a query:
ALTER TABLE MYTABLE ALTER COLUMN ID COUNTER(1001,1)
When I try to do this, it fails with "Invalid field data type"
The problem gets fixed if I open the database in Access and do compact/repair, but I need to be able to fix such problems inside the application: it is installed on a couple of thousands of PCs around the world, and asking people to compact/repair with Access is not an option.
I use DAO DBEngine.CompactDatabase
to perform compact/repair inside the application, but it doesn't fix the seed problem, and some additional tricks are needed.
Any ideas for a solution?
Upvotes: 7
Views: 11791
Reputation: 3288
You may be able to solve the problem with a compact/repair:
In Access 2010: Compact and Repair Database on the Database Tools ribbon.
In Access 2007: Office Button | Manage.
In earlier versions: Tools | Database Utilities.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 86
You may also need to make sure that your database is set up to use ANSI 92 so that COUNTER is recognized as a legitimate data type.
In Access 2007 go to Access Options, Object Designers, SQL Server compatability syntax (ANSI 92) to set this.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1302
Please reference the following article, it contains a method you may add to your access project to execute to reset seeding. It has been a saver for me several occasions in the past:
http://allenbrowne.com/ser-40.html
In addition to this it gives explanation and insight into causes and potential resolution for such problems.
Upvotes: 4