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The following tables compare general and technical information for a number of relational database management systems.Please see the individual products' articles for further information.
SQLite (/ ˌ ɛ s ˌ k juː ˌ ɛ l ˈ aɪ t /, [4] [5] / ˈ s iː k w ə ˌ l aɪ t / [6]) is a free and open-source relational database engine written in the C programming language.It is not a standalone app; rather, it is a library that software developers embed in their apps.
wxSQLite3 is a C++ wrapper around the public domain SQLite 3.x database and is specifically designed for use in programs based on the wxWidgets library.. wxSQLite3 does not try to hide the underlying database, in contrary almost all special features of the current SQLite version 3.47.2 are supported, like for example the creation of user defined scalar or aggregate functions.
7.3 [14] Proprietary: Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes IBM Db2, MS Access, Sybase: Delphi: TOra: Community 2017-07-04 3.2 GPL: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Teradata: C++–Qt: Product Creator Latest stable release date Latest stable release License Runs on Windows Runs on macOS Runs on Linux Oracle MySQL PostgreSQL MS SQL Server ODBC JDBC SQLite Other ...
phpLiteAdmin is an open-source tool written in PHP intended to handle the administration of SQLite over the World Wide Web. Its feature set, interface, and overall user experience is comparable to that of phpMyAdmin for MySQL.
SpatiaLite is a spatial extension to SQLite, providing vector geodatabase functionality. It is similar to PostGIS, Oracle Spatial, and SQL Server with spatial extensions, although SQLite/SpatiaLite aren't based on client-server architecture: they adopt a simpler personal architecture. i.e. the whole SQL engine is directly embedded within the application itself: a complete database simply is an ...
LevelDB outperforms both SQLite and Kyoto Cabinet in write operations and sequential-order read operations. LevelDB also excels at batch writes, but is slower than SQLite when dealing with large values. The currently published benchmarks were updated after SQLite configuration mistakes were noted in an earlier version of the results. [12]
Java 1.5 + one of: Windows Server 2003 SP2, Linux (2.6 Kernel), Solaris 10 Tomcat, WebLogic, WebSphere MS SQL, Postgres, MySQL or Oracle JotSpot: Linux, Unix, Windows, others None (built-in) VMware Player MediaWiki: Linux, Unix, Windows, others Any web server that supports PHP 7.4.3+ PHP; one of MariaDB, MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite [100] Yes ...