It's uncommon for an application running on Linux to access an MS Access database or use ODBC. ODBC is a windows technology. There are some options for linux, but it's not a common scenario.
As you've discovered, there are no Access ODBC drivers on your linux machine, so the JDBC-ODBC bridge fails. You might be able to install a suitable ODBC driver, but I don't know of any that are free or open-source. The defacto ODBC option for linux is:
A commercial driver for Access based on UnixODBC:
A type 4 JDBC driver that can supposedly connect to Access databases:
I don't have personal experience with any of these. The type 4 JDBC driver would be ideal, but I'd be skeptical that it works as perfectly as advertised.
(I am sure you have reasons, but I have to wonder why you are using an Access database if you plan on deploying to Linux machines. I believe the only good reason to have a Java application use an Access database is if it's an existing Access application with custom programming used for purposes beyond the Java application. Otherwise, there are a number of better options. Also consider that if your main reason for using Access is just so you can use Access as a user-friendly GUI tool for forms & reporting, you could still store the data in less restrictive database (Derby, SQLLite, MySQL, PostgreSQL, MS SQL Server, etc) and then connect via ODBC from Access to the database.) This would allow you to deploy your Java application on linux, your database wherever makes most sense, and still use Access to connect to the database from windows. I've done this a number of times.)
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