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MariaDB is a community-developed, commercially supported fork of the MySQL relational database management system (RDBMS), intended to remain free and open-source software under the GNU General Public License.
MySQL Workbench now uses ANTLR4 as backend parser and has a new auto-completion engine that works with object editors (triggers, views, stored procedures, and functions) in the visual SQL editor and in models. The new versions add support for new language features in MySQL 8.0, such as common-table expressions and roles.
MySQL Utilities is a set of utilities designed to perform common maintenance and administrative tasks. Originally included as part of the MySQL Workbench, the utilities are a stand-alone download available from Oracle. Percona Toolkit is a cross-platform toolkit for MySQL, developed in Perl. [125]
Database Workbench: Upscene Productions 2024-05-14 6.5.0 Proprietary: Yes needs Wine: needs Wine: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes InterBase, Firebird, NexusDB, MariaDB: Delphi: DataGrip: JetBrains 2023-08-17 2023.2.1 Proprietary: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes
Name Vendor License Transactional Under active development MySQL versions MariaDB versions [1]; Archive: Oracle: GPL: No: Yes: 5.0 - present: 5.1 - present Aria: MariaDB
XtraDB – storage engine for the MariaDB and Percona Server databases, and is intended as a drop-in replacement to InnoDB, which is one of the default engines available on the MySQL database. Comparison of MySQL database engines – comparison between the available database engines for the MySQL database management system (DBMS). A database ...
Database Workbench: Upscene Productions SMBs and enterprises Proprietary: MS SQL Server, MySQL, Oracle, Firebird, InterBase, SQL Anywhere, NexusDB, MariaDB: Windows, Linux and FreeBSD (both through Wine) Standalone 2001 DbSchema: Wise Coders GmbH: SMBs and enterprises Proprietary
Note (2): MariaDB and MySQL provide ACID compliance through the default InnoDB storage engine. [71] [72] Note (3): "For other than InnoDB storage engines, MySQL Server parses and ignores the FOREIGN KEY and REFERENCES syntax in CREATE TABLE statements. The CHECK clause is parsed but ignored by all storage engines." [73]