How to use Django with Sql Server

Will.Beasley picture Will.Beasley · Sep 24, 2015 · Viewed 14.6k times · Source

I normally use Postgres for my database needs with Django but I recently started at a company which use MSSQL on a Windows environment. Long story short I had to rewrite the database properties in settings.py. Unfortunately, I have NO idea how to connect to a SQL Server using Pyodbc and they're running Python 3.x so I can't use Django-Pyodbc. While trying to run it I'm getting a: "Data source name not found and no default driver specified (0) (SQLDriverConnect)')"

Here is my current db config as it stands. I'm probably doing something wrong but it is very difficult to find resources since most Django+Sql Server results either use FreeTDS or Django-Pyodbc (neither are options).

'default': {
    'ENGINE': 'sql_server.pyodbc',
    'NAME': 'db_name_on_server',
    'USER': 'my_acct',
    'PASSWORD': 'nope',
    'HOST': 'x.x.x.x',
    'PORT': '1433',
    'OPTIONS': {  # Options are not edited
        'driver': 'SQL Server',  # What it displays as on odbc admin   
        'dsn': 'System DSN',  # What it displays as on odbc admin
        'use_legacy_datetime': False
    }

Answer

Diego Jancic picture Diego Jancic · Oct 18, 2016

Old question, but it might help someone. These are the settings I use in Windows to connect to a SQL Server. As @flipperpa said, I also use django-pyodbc-azure

pyodbc==3.0.10
django-pyodbc-azure==1.10.0.1

However, the pyodbc that pip will download doesn't work for me. As suggested in this answer, go this site http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#pyodbc and download either depending on the version of Python 3.5 you have installed:

  • pyodbc‑3.0.10‑cp35‑none‑win32.whl if you have a 32-bit Python 3.5 install
  • pyodbc‑3.0.10‑cp35‑none‑win_amd64.whl if you have a 64-bit Python 3.5 install

Then use these settings to connect:

'default': {
 'ENGINE': 'sql_server.pyodbc',
 'HOST': "localhost",
 'USER': "--user name--",
 'PASSWORD': "--password--",
 'NAME': "--database name--",
 'PORT': 1433,
 'OPTIONS': {
      'driver' : 'SQL Server Native Client 11.0',
      'MARS_Connection' : True,
      'driver_supports_utf8' : True,
 },
}

For anyone that is using linux, MS has now released official odbc drivers for SQL server and is officially (if more than a little tacitly) supporting the django-pyodbc-azure project. I highly recommend using it and also the native linux SQL Server ODBC driver over FreeTDS.