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By Martin LaMonica
Posted on ZDNet News: Jan 12, 2004 3:29:00 PM

Open-source database company MySQL continues to add capabilities common to commercial database software as it tries to shake up the multibillion-dollar market.

MySQL on Monday introduced an early version of its software, which adds support for "stored procedures," a capability widely used in corporate databases for reusing database queries across different applications.


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Developers and testers can now download MySQL 5.0, which the company said will be generally available in several months.

The early, or "alpha development," release is intended to get programmers familiar with the features in the final version and to spot bugs in the existing code, the company said.

MySQL is a commercial open-source company that offers its namesake software--which volunteer open-source programmers help to develop and test--under two licenses. Customers can either download the software for free, as with other open-source products, or purchase a commercial license that includes fees to MySQL for support.

Open-source databases in the past year have experienced a spike in interest among corporate customers, according to a recent survey published by developer research company Evans Data.

Open-source databases are seen as a viable alternative to commercial databases. They are gaining many of the features important to businesses, are cheaper to purchase, and the code is generally reliable, according to Evans. MySQL and PostgreSQL are two popular open-source database products.

The addition of stored procedures to MySQL 5.0 is designed to make the database more attractive to corporate customers. But even as the company includes more high-end functions, MySQL software is considered to be best suited for relatively simple tasks.

"While it is designed to support more enterprise applications, 5.0 retains the MySQL hallmarks of high performance and stability, so it continues to be ideal for Web sites, packaged applications and other database deployments," Michael Widenius, MySQL co-founder and chief technology officer, said in a statement.

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  • Most Recent of 26 Talkback(s)
Think Outside the Box of Stored Procedures
Stored procedures is no panacea of determining if a product such as MySQL lives up to other proprietary Databases.

I use Oracle (Stored Procedures) and JSP at work. But on special project util... (Read the rest)
Posted by: RoyRez Posted on: 03/09/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Risky proposal  Mike Cox | 01/12/04
How true!  Yen_z | 01/12/04
Risky proposal  SC-man | 01/12/04
Awesome post!  coffeenite | 01/12/04
You never heard of LAMP  jerry@... | 01/12/04
your business  JWatson77 | 01/12/04
thats funny  Roadling | 01/12/04
wow!!!  dg mh | 01/12/04
Well...  simon_hibbs | 01/12/04
It;s 2004, and now they've got stored procedures. Wow!  Heatlesssun | 01/12/04
Cutting edge?  NemesisNL | 01/12/04
Not needed by everyone...  Mike (not Cox) | 01/12/04
This has been out for a while  Chad_z | 01/12/04
Stored Procedures  hal9000mx | 01/12/04
RE: Stored Procedures  JakAttak | 01/12/04
Good to see them catching up a little.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/12/04
You must judge databases by # of features and how much it costs.  Taz_z | 01/12/04
Very nice flame!  Damon K | 01/12/04
Obviously it was needed to compete right?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/12/04
It's not an alternative  voska | 01/12/04
Then why was it added?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/12/04
re : Then why was it added?  JWatson77 | 01/12/04
The right tool for the right job... MySQL now ready for more jobs.  Plain Logic | 01/12/04
mssql and oracle gonna be hurting (NT)  JWatson77 | 01/12/04
Just a guess  IT_User | 01/13/04
Think Outside the Box of Stored Procedures  RoyRez | 03/09/04

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