I need a pet opensource database to learn the principle of database design, can you suggest one for me.
6 Answers
How about SQLite? They don't get much smaller than this.
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+1 Being in the public domain, it also doesn't get more open source than this.– balpha ♦Aug 3, 2009 at 11:30
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4For teaching I would prefer a DBMS that enforces foreign keys. SQLite does not.– finnwAug 3, 2009 at 12:22
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2if you're DB can't do FKs, you can't "learn the principle of database design"– KM.Aug 3, 2009 at 13:35
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@Manni: RMS has no objection whatsoever to public domain or BSD software. He has what I consider an irrational objection to software he considers non-free, and he would prefer it if all software developers released under GPLv3. Heck, I don't know if public domain software is Open Source according to the OSI, but if not you can always slap an OSI-compliant license on it and it will be. Aug 3, 2009 at 15:21
Not really pet but: PostgeSQL
- Not hard to install (at least at Windows)
- Feature reach
- Not too quirky
- Bundled with documentation (including tutorial and SQL reference) and tools (at least Windows version)
I also would recommend SQLite, since you could do "EXPLAIN" on any statement and get the internal Pseudo-Code that implements the functionality.
The Pseudo-Code itself is documented and gives great example how a database could work internally. I myself learned a lot by looking at the explained statements.
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1Every SQL database I've ever used has this feature, in one form or another.– anonAug 3, 2009 at 12:35
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As Neil says, they all do this - search for "query execution plan". And it's not pseudo-code! Aug 3, 2009 at 13:04
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@Peter + Neil: Yes, all databases have "EXPLAIN", I know. What I wanted to tell is, that the Pseudo-Code (yes, I insist, it is in SQLite!) of SQLite translates so easily to what is going on under the hood, that it can be used for understanding how the DB works. I don't think, that an abstract "query execution plan" of an oracle db could tell you the same.– JuergenAug 3, 2009 at 13:59
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Addon: I am sorry, when I hurt some of the db folks out there by badly explaining what I really mean. I try to do better next time ...– JuergenAug 3, 2009 at 14:00
SQLite, as mentioned above. All the alternatives are a PITA to install (relatively). And if you're in a corporate setting, some uptight sysadmins frown on client/server packages. SQLite is a stand-alone program, one file per database, nice command line tools, fast. And price can't be beat. Lot's of big companies use it.
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aptitude install postgresql-8.4
is pretty darn easy (which, yes, will get you a working database). Suggest a new distro if its hard to install on yours.– derobertAug 3, 2009 at 15:29
Apache Derby implemented in Java
CouchDB written in Erlang. It is document-oriented rather then rational.
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