On 2/15/06, Kieran Lal <kieran@civicspacelabs.org> wrote:
On Feb 14, 2006, at 7:32 PM, Khalid B wrote:
Oracle bought SleepyCat, the makers of the Berkeley DB that powers MySQL's BDB tables.
http://developers.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/02/15/0018241
If you look at the MySQL documentation there have been hints about not using BDB for a while. Nobody that I know uses it.
Yes. But it was the only transactional engine left after Oracle grabbed Inno. Now, even that is gone.
Previously, they bought InnoBase, makers of InnoDB.
I spoke with the chief architect of MySQL a few weeks ago after Oracle purchased InnoDB. He assured me that that serious InnoDB commits were on track and things seemed to be business as usual.
For the time being? Maybe. Going forward? They control MySQL AB's bread and butter which is providing commerically licensed transactional products (i.e. MySQL + Inno). They will eventually choke that revenue stream. If that happens it will be hard for the community to pick up the GPL version and keep running with it. Not impossible, but hard ...
I am much more hopeful about MySQL MaxDB, http://www.mysql.com/ products/maxdb/, which is used to run some of the largest enterprise databases for SAP.
Seems to have referential integrity.Not clear to me if it has transactions or not (doesn't say). http://www.mysql.com/products/maxdb/features.html Regardless, will it be enough to sustain MySQL AB's revenue stream from commercial licensing?
Who cares, we are all going to be writing everything in the Drupal javascript framework soon enough anyway :-)
Javascript? Where was that rope ... ah there it is .... <clicks Log out, and then hangs himself>