Re: [Fwd: PostGreSQL information]
От | Richard Huxton |
---|---|
Тема | Re: [Fwd: PostGreSQL information] |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 200306191820.27403.dev@archonet.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | [Fwd: PostGreSQL information] (Justin Clift <justin@postgresql.org>) |
Список | pgsql-general |
Hello Bradley, I'm a subscriber to the PostgreSQL General mailing list and your query was passed here. What with time-zones etc. you may get several responses to your query, I hope mine is useful. I've taken the liberty of CCing this reply back to the list, in case anyone else has useful comments. Bear in mind I am just a user of PG, although one with some experience. 1. Licencing PostgreSQL is open-source and there are no licencing costs. Under the BSD licence you are given a great deal of freedom to install, modify and distribute the system. General info on PG: http://advocacy.postgresql.org/ Details on open-source licencing: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ 2. Maintenance The PostgreSQL mailing lists are (in my opinion) excellent, and there are a number covering different topics. You can find more at: http://www.postgresql.org/lists.html http://archives.postgresql.org/ There is also paid support available from a number of companies and independent consultants: http://techdocs.postgresql.org/companies.php 3. Platform - Tru64 Unix It appears your platform is supported: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/view.php?version=7.3&idoc=0&file=supported-platforms.html I'm afraid I can't comment in detail on the 64-bit usage, you might have success searching the mailing list archives at the link in section 2. 5. Connectivity PostgreSQL supports both ODBC and JDBC. http://gborg.postgresql.org/project/psqlodbc/projdisplay.php http://jdbc.postgresql.org/ I use the ODBC driver regularly to access PG from Windows machines (an Access or VB front-end). 6. Performance Benchmarking is a tricky subject. Not only does the choice of test make a big difference, most commercial databases don't allow comparative benchmarks to be published. My very unscientific feeling is that PostgreSQL is comparable to Oracle in most cases. Where Oracle does win is that it offers more "special case" tunings for specific application types and situations. Where PostgreSQL wins is that you can spend some of the money saved on Oracle licences on more hardware, which can make a huge difference, depending on the size of your database. Probably the best I can recommend is that you download and install PostgreSQL and run some tests against it - nothing can beat real-world testing. If you find some problems, there is a "performance" mailing list where you can find help. If you have an existing Oracle database you are trying to convert from you may find some of the articles below useful: http://techdocs.postgresql.org/#convertfrom I hope this addresses your questions. If you want to know any more, I can recommend the pgsql-general mailing list, or feel free to contact me directly. -- Richard Huxton
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