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Databases Programming Software IT

Postgres Engine for MySQL Released 78

SlashRating©
11.9
slashdottit! tm
krow writes "One of the unique qualities of the MySQL server is its ability to have multiple storage engine operate concurrently. Companies like Oracle and Solid have contributed their own storage engines to the open source project. With 5.1 MySQL has added the ability to now do this in a loadable fashion, allowing dynamic engines in the same manner as Apache with its modules. Now PostgreSQL can add its self to the list of databases who have contributed a storage engine to MySQL. I'm releasing today a plugin so that you can now plugin the Postgres database engine into MySQL and have it work natively along side other engines."
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Postgres Engine for MySQL Released

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  • BUT... (Score:5, Funny)

    by dark_15 ( 962590 ) on Sunday April 01, 2007 @12:25PM (#18567169)
    Will it blend?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 01, 2007 @12:28PM (#18567185)
    One of the problems with Postgresql versus MySQL is that it is typically much, much slower and less capable. THis should address those problems.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by metamatic ( 202216 )
      Actually, it's a useful idea. MySQL is only faster than PostgreSQL for "toy" databases [tweakers.net] (low concurrency, few transactions needed per second), or if you throw away ACID capabilities.

      However, a lot of open source projects use non-portable MySQL "SQL", and hence don't work if you try to use PostgreSQL as your back end. A hack like this that actually worked would let you run crappy open source code on a more scalable database back end.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by jadavis ( 473492 )
        A hack like this that actually worked would let you run crappy open source code on a more scalable database back end.

        A lot of PostgreSQL's performance comes from it's cost-based optimizer that chooses the correct plan based on statistically sampling your real data periodically. In other words, as your data changes, your plans change accordingly without administrator intervention. MySQL's optimizer is much more primitive.

        Also, PostgreSQL has much more sophisticated options when planning, like bitmap index sc
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      PostgreSQL is LESS capable than MySQL? (Slower at some things, maybe, but LESS CAPABLE?)

      Leave the crack pipe at home next time.

    • by clambake ( 37702 )
      One of the problems with Postgresql versus MySQL is that it is typically much, much slower and less capable. THis should address those problems.

      Yes yes, this is true, PostgreSQL *IS* so much faster than MySQL, that's well understood... But that's just a small drop in the ocean compared to the much LARGER problem about comparing the two which is that PostgreSQL is a relational database while MySQL is a fancy way to access flat files.
  • by fruey ( 563914 )
    If you're going to get Slashdotted, posting a link to a 13MB file is a bit risky, no?

    Anyone manage to dl it? I gave up a few minutes ago.
    • Forget putting your own rear end on the line with deploying botnets to DDoS public sites, simply post a link to a large downloadable on a slashdot article and you get a very similar, yet much more legal effect :D
    • I downloaded about ~ 300 kb (very slow) and did a zcat on the tar. So far it looks like automake stuff, so it looks like source code.

      13 MB is quite a lot if you compare it to 22 MB for the source of MySQL itself. I also wondered that he took "create table april "... as example. That points toward a prank...

    • by krow ( 129804 ) *
      Turns out I had not done a "make clean" in the PG directory, so it was a lot larger then what it needed to be. I've updated the tgz with a smaller file.
  • Eh (Score:3, Funny)

    by Spazntwich ( 208070 ) on Sunday April 01, 2007 @12:43PM (#18567279)
    5.1 is old. Wake me up when they've got a true 7.1 setup available.
  • by Epaminondas Pantulis ( 926394 ) on Sunday April 01, 2007 @12:46PM (#18567297) Homepage
    till they release a DBase III engine...
    • by xarak ( 458209 )

      When I were young, we 'ad a DL/I and a beating a day we considered ourselves LUCKY.
  • SQL Server Engine? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Zebra1024 ( 726970 )
    This would have been a better joke if it was Microsoft adding a SQL Server engine.
  • MySQL teh suck? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Urusai ( 865560 ) on Sunday April 01, 2007 @12:56PM (#18567343)
    I thought with MySQL going all corporate and proprietary-like, the bandwagon was jumping ship. MySQL always sucked anyway, unless you were operating a flat file type database. In conclusion, quit swinging on MySQL's nuts. Thank you.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by isorox ( 205688 )
      The only ways mysql gets into corporate machine are
      1) Grass roots simply installing it
      2) Snr Mgmt being dazzled by golf and wine weekends

      I can get my techliterate boss to point to a costly Mysql enterprise support package in those high up meetings where nothing really gets decided, but decisions float down from, and we are fine to dump Oracle for the latest 2000 queries/day intranet site.

      In reality the support will be mostly Usenet, but it keeps the suits happy knowing that it must be good because it has a
  • This sounds like the ideal database backend for Parrot [slashdot.org].

    That's the original combined Perl/Python scripting language, BTW, not the Perl 6 virtual machine that ripped off the name.

  • laugh if you like... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by doom ( 14564 ) <doom@kzsu.stanford.edu> on Sunday April 01, 2007 @01:21PM (#18567513) Homepage Journal
    Laugh if you like, but you can actually do this trick the other way around, if you like:

    There's a project called "dbilink" that uses the fact that you can run perl inside of postgresql to use DBI to talk to other databases. You can use tables from a mysql database inside of a postgres database...

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by dfetter ( 2035 )
      Pardon the self-promotion, but you can find DBI-Link at http://pgfoundry.org/projects/dbi-link/ [pgfoundry.org] and on EPEL for RHEL/CentOS. Oh, and it's not restricted to MySQL. You can use any DBD with a certain minimal feature set, and I'm trying to reduce that minimum.
      • by conchur ( 907178 )
        Surely reducing the minimal feature-set isn't a step forward?
        • by dfetter ( 2035 )
          > Surely reducing the minimal feature-set isn't a step forward?

          DBI-Link adds on the ability to access external data sources for read and write. It doesn't reduce any of PostgreSQL's capabilities :)
        • Badly worded, of course, but what he meant was that the number of features the TARGET database needed to be usable with DBI-Link was being reduced.

          In other words, he's trying to get DBI-Link to work with MORE databases in the future.

          Oh, wait, were you being funny?

          Never mind.

  • Thank goodness this was just a joke! For a second I thought we wouldn't be able to have flame wars over which one was better!

    The only thing worse would be a linux plugin for windows.
  • by ballmerfud ( 1031602 ) * on Sunday April 01, 2007 @01:41PM (#18567619) Journal

    I compiled and installed the plugin and every time I try it, get the following:

    mysql> INSTALL PLUGIN postgres SONAME 'libpostgres_engine.so';
    ... where am I? Oh God no. No. NO!
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)
    kill(getpid(), 9)

    ERROR 2013: Lost connection to MySQL server during query
  • dept.? (Score:2, Interesting)

    Is it notable that this story doesn't have a "from the ... dept." line? How common is that?
  • are we going to have to start using VACUUM on MySQL now?
    • I suspect that it would be automatically configured to use autovacuum.
    • by suggsjc ( 726146 )
      Probably, but luckily Dyson is working on a Roomba killer. At least this way will have some competition in the automated database garbage collection tools.
  • story? That was much funnier than this one.

    The only funnier one would be "Richard Stallman hired as Microsoft open source evangelist."

    (Now I wait for the FSF fanatics to tell me the difference between "open source" and "free" software - because they can't take a joke either...)

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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