Archived Forum PostQuestion:
I have been unsuccessful at getting past sp_OACreate under SqlServer 2012. The same sproc works on a SqlServer 2008 box.
EXEC @hr = sp_OACreate 'Chilkat.Crypt2', @crypt OUT results in -2147221005 for @hr.
Callig get error: EXEC @HR = sp_OAGetErrorInfo @crypt, @Source OUT, @Description OUT;
results in @Description being "Invalid class string".
I have checked the registry, the clsids are there. I even edited permission on crypt2 and crypt2.1 adding full control to everyone. I also verified the DLL's folder has everyone read/exec permissions.
I am at a loss here.
See the online reference documentation for the correct strings to pass to sp_OACreate. See http://www.chilkatsoft.com/refdoc/xChilkatCrypt2Ref.html
Whether you are trying to unlock your bootloader, sideload an update, or dive into ADB scripting, you need the Android SDK Platform-Tools. Specifically, revision 28.0.1 was a notable stable release that many developers and power users still reference for compatibility with older devices or specific workflows.
If you are looking to get this specific version up and running on your machine, you have come to the right place. In this guide, we will walk through how to download and install Android SDK Platform-Tools Revision 28.0.1 on Windows, macOS, and Linux. install android sdk platformtools revision 2801
The official URL for revision 28.0.1 follows this pattern:
https://dl.google.com/android/repository/platform-tools_r28.0.1-[platform].zip How to Install Android SDK Platform-Tools Revision 28
Replace [platform] with:
windows (for Windows)darwin (for macOS)linux (for Linux)If you already have Android Studio installed, you can force it to download revision 28.0.1, though the GUI prefers the latest version. Here is the workaround: Step 1: Locate the Official Source The official
Google distributes platform-tools through the Android SDK manager and as direct ZIP downloads from developer.android.com. For historical revisions, official archived downloads may not always be clearly linked; many developers obtain older releases from:
It is so that a future version of the ActiveX can co-exist with older versions. You've heard of DLL hell, right? The current naming of "Chilkat_9_5_0." has not changed for several YEARS. Eventually, Chilkat will do a major update to rid itself of all deprecated methods and make long-needed changes which break backward compatibility. When doing so, the name will change -- this will make it so that new programs can use the new version WITHOUT breaking existing older applications.
What about 9.4.x? Did it use the Chilkat.Crypt2 naming? If so, is there a download for it?