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I'm trying to figure out if I require a MySQL commercial license. After reading from their site, it was still confusing to me. I have a phone call set up with them tomorrow, but I want the community's knowledge as well.

I'm creating an ERP desktop application for my company. We will probably end up using the .NET framework to produce it since we are all using Windows machines. This software will be used internally with up to 50 users (13 right now).

If I were to open source the project (put it on GitHub), can I use the free version of MySQL?

If not, we probably would just stick to our original plan and purchase SQL Server (US$8,000, ouch) since it appears the commercial license for MySQL is US$5,000.

I don't have any experience with PostgreSQL. Would you recommend that or another database that are completely free to use, and able to work in a production environment?

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    The first part of this question will be answered for you by a rep in less than a day and the 2nd part is off topic. There is also extensive online content on pricing models if you google it.
    – dfundako
    Apr 17, 2018 at 21:55
  • If you want open source with no strings attached, use Postgres, not MySQL. It's superior in most other aspects, too. Apr 18, 2018 at 1:16
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    It doesn't help to tag a bunch of unrelated products.
    – SMor
    Apr 18, 2018 at 12:29
  • 1
    @SMor Every tag that I mentioned is mentioned in the question which is why I did it. Apr 18, 2018 at 22:28

1 Answer 1

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Here's what I understand:

  • If you distribute MySQL with a non-open-source project, you would need to pay for the commercial license.

  • If you want Oracle support for MySQL, you would need to pay for the commercial license.

  • If you want to use some MySQL tools that are licensed only to Oracle support customers, such as the MySQL Enterprise Monitor, Enterprise backup, various plugins, etc. then you would need to get an Oracle support contract, and that requires you to pay for commercial licenses.

  • If you want to modify MySQL source code and distribute your modifications as a non-open-source offering, you would need to pay for the commercial license.

Note that you can still charge money for open-source modifications. This has nothing to do with being gratis. It has to do with whether you offer your modifications under a GPL-compatible license, which would allow your customers to further modify and redistribute.

In most other cases, you can use the Community Edition. For example:

  • You can install MySQL Community Edition at your site and use it, or even modify it, whether your product is open-source or not. Also whether you charge for your product or not.
  • You can make and distribute a non-open-source product that uses MySQL, as long as you don't distribute MySQL Community Edition with it. You would require your customers install MySQL themselves. They could then use your product to connect to the instance of MySQL Community Edition that they installed.
  • You can distribute your product and include MySQL Community Edition with it, if you offer your product under a GPL-compatible license.

I do know at least one business that switched from MySQL to PostgreSQL specifically because they wanted to distribute the RDBMS software with their non-open-source product. PostgreSQL uses a non-viral open-source license similar to BSD or MIT licenses.

The usual disclaimers apply: I'm not a lawyer and this is not legal advice; I do not claim that the above is accurate; don't make any business decisions based on stuff you read from strangers on the internet, including me.

See also:

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