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Re: postgre vs MySQL

by Russell Smith :: Rate this Message:

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Dave Page wrote:

> On Fri, Mar 14, 2008 at 5:07 PM, David Wall <d.wall@...> wrote:
>  
>>  > I imagine you can get round the second one by building your software
>>  > so it supports PostgreSQL as well - that way you don't 'require
>>  > customes to install MySQL'.
>>  >
>>  Well, I'm not sure how they'd even know you were doing this, but as a
>>  commercial company, I'd suggest you not follow that advice since the
>>  code would not work without install MySQL.  Yes, they could install PG
>>  instead, and if they did, MySQL would have no problem.  But if you use
>>  MySQL, then clearly it's required and a commercial license would be
>>  required (though perhaps at least you'd put the legal obligation on the
>>  end customer).
>>    
>
> Huh? I'm suggesting that you write your code to be
> database-independent such that it is the user's choice what DBMS he
> uses. That way you aren't 'requiring them to install MySQL'. MySQL
> cannot hold you liable if a customer chooses to use your closed source
> Java/JDBC app with their DBMS if you didn't require it.
>
>  
Yes, that is MySQL's licensing angle.  I have spoken numerous times to
MySQL staff about it.  So what ended up happening for my software
development was it became a waste of time to support MySQL and
PostgreSQL, I moved to PostgreSQL solely which didn't have any of those
restrictions associated with it.  Which is how I got into PostgreSQL in
the first place.  And now I use MySQL when I have to because PostgreSQL
does the job for me and I'm used to writing SQL, plpgsql and the like
for it.

Russell Smith

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