. . . "\n 1. Insure that the JDBC connection URL connects to the target database.\n 2. Insure that OpenLink's Single-Tier client components or Multi-Tier server components are installed on the machine that contains the JDBC connection URL.\n 3. Multi-Tier users insure that oplrqb and a JDBC Bridge Agent (jdbc13_mv, jdbc14_mv, etc.) appear in the /bin sub-directory of the OpenLink server components installation.\n 4. Multi-Tier users insure that oplrqb and the JDBC Bridge Agent (jdbc13_mv, jdbc14_mv, etc.) return version and usage information. For example:\n\n > jdbc14_mv -?\n JDBC Database Agent (JDK 1.4)(multi threaded)\n Version 1.2 as of Thu Sep 04 2003 (Release 5.1 cvsid 00068).\n Compiled for Linux 2.2.25 (i686-pc-linux-glibc2.1)\n Copyright (C) OpenLink Software\n\n 5. Insure that you pass the exact JDBC driver name string and JDBC connection URL in your OpenLink Data Sources. You can test the driver name string with the java command. It should return version and release information. For example:\n\n > java openlink.jdbc3.Driver\n OpenLink Generic Driver for JDBC(TM) 3.0 Version 04.19 (Release 5.1)\n\n 6. Multi-Tier users insure that JDBC 1.1, JDBC 1.2, JDBC 1.3, or JDBC 1.4 appears in the Domain or Server Type field of the Multi-Tier Data Source Name. (Case and spacing matter!)\n 7. Unix Single-Tier users insure that JDBC 1.1, JDBC 1.2, JDBC 1.3, or JDBC 1.4 appears in the Existing Environment field of the Single-Tier Data Source Name. (Case and spacing matter!)\n\nIf the problem persists, complete a troubleshooting worksheet. Post the results into an online support case." .