Windows DSN Configuration
Using the Microsoft ODBC Data Source Administrator
You can use the Microsoft ODBC Data Source Administrator to edit the DSN configuration. Note that the DSN is created during the installation process.
Complete the following steps to edit the DSN configuration:
- Select Start > Search, and enter ODBC Data Sources in the Search box.
- Choose the version of the ODBC Administrator that corresponds to the bitness of your application (32-bit or 64-bit).
- Click the System DSN tab.
- Select the system data source and click Configure.
- Edit the information on the Connection tab and click OK.
Note: For .NET Framework 4.0, the driver distributes Microsoft Visual C++ 2015-2022 Redistributable. For .NET Framework 3.5, the driver distributes Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 Redistributable.
Ensuring Registry Access
The driver stores connection information in the Windows registry. To ensure that the driver can write to the registry, perform either of the following actions:
- Run the calling application as an administrator.
- Connect via a User DSN instead of a System DSN.
Connecting to Redis
Set the Server connection property to the name or address of the server your Redis instance is running on.
If your Redis server is running on a port other than the default (6379), you can specify your port in the Port property.
Authenticating to Redis
The driver supports Password and ACL authentication. Connections to Redis instances that aren't password protected are supported as well.
No Authentication
Set the AuthScheme property to None. This indicates the Redis instance is not password protected (using the requirepass directive in the configuration file).
Password
Set the AuthScheme property to Password and set the Password property to the password used to authenticate with a password protected Redis instance using the Redis AUTH command.
ACL (Access Control List)
Set the following to connect:
- AuthScheme: Set this to ACL.
- User: Set this to the username you use to authenticate with Redis ACL.
- Password: Set this to the password you use to authenticate with Redis ACL.
Securing Redis Connections
You can set UseSSL to negotiate SSL/TLS encryption when you connect.