haskell sqlite
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SQLitepp
SQLitepp is a multilanguage object oriented wrapper to the sqlite library. more>>
SQLitepp is a C/C++/Python wrapper to sqlite library for database management. It implements an object oriented way to manipulate the database in every supported language.
SQLitepp supports selfupdatable queries and a straight SQL code query system without using strange things for querying the database, letting you manipulate it directly in SQL but also exposing simple object oriented methods to manipulate the result of the queries and updating them.
Python EXAMPLE:
db = SQLDatabase("database.db")
q = db.query("Tablename", "SELECT Name,Id FROM %t")
if len(q):
tuple1 = q[0]
tuple1["Name"] = "Foobar"
tuple1.commit()
del db
C++ EXAMPLE:
SQLDatabase db("database.db");
SQLQuery *q = db.query("Tablename", "SELECT Name,Id FROM %t");
if(q->numberOfTuples()) {
SQLRow *tuple1 = q->getRow(0);
tuple1->set("Name", "Foobar");
tuple1->commit();
}
delete q;
C EXAMPLE:
void *db = new_SQLDatabase("database.db");
void *q = SQLDatabase_query(db, "Tablename", "SELECT Name,Id FROM %t");
if(SQLQuery_numberOfTuples(q)) {
void *tuple1 = SQLQuery_getRow(q, 0);
SQLRow_set(tuple1, "Name", "Foobar");
SQLRow_commit(tuple1);
}
delete_SQLQuery(q);
delete_SQLDatabase(db);
<<lessSQLitepp supports selfupdatable queries and a straight SQL code query system without using strange things for querying the database, letting you manipulate it directly in SQL but also exposing simple object oriented methods to manipulate the result of the queries and updating them.
Python EXAMPLE:
db = SQLDatabase("database.db")
q = db.query("Tablename", "SELECT Name,Id FROM %t")
if len(q):
tuple1 = q[0]
tuple1["Name"] = "Foobar"
tuple1.commit()
del db
C++ EXAMPLE:
SQLDatabase db("database.db");
SQLQuery *q = db.query("Tablename", "SELECT Name,Id FROM %t");
if(q->numberOfTuples()) {
SQLRow *tuple1 = q->getRow(0);
tuple1->set("Name", "Foobar");
tuple1->commit();
}
delete q;
C EXAMPLE:
void *db = new_SQLDatabase("database.db");
void *q = SQLDatabase_query(db, "Tablename", "SELECT Name,Id FROM %t");
if(SQLQuery_numberOfTuples(q)) {
void *tuple1 = SQLQuery_getRow(q, 0);
SQLRow_set(tuple1, "Name", "Foobar");
SQLRow_commit(tuple1);
}
delete_SQLQuery(q);
delete_SQLDatabase(db);
Download (0.019MB)
Added: 2005-09-26 License: LGPL (GNU Lesser General Public License) Price:
1489 downloads
RSA-Haskell 2.0.1
RSA-Haskell is a collection of command-line cryptography tools and a cryptography library written in Haskell. more>>
RSA-Haskell is a collection of command-line cryptography tools and a cryptography library written in Haskell. The project is intended to be useful to anyone who wants to secure files or communications or who wants to incorporate cryptography in their Haskell application.
The libraries include Haskell implementations of SHA1, EME-OAEP, EMSA-PSS, MGF, RSAES-OAEP, and RSA-PSS. These standards implement signature/verification, strong cryptography, and hashing.
Enhancements:
- Documentation is now available for the command line utilities.
- An easy-to-use Windows binary release is available.
<<lessThe libraries include Haskell implementations of SHA1, EME-OAEP, EMSA-PSS, MGF, RSAES-OAEP, and RSA-PSS. These standards implement signature/verification, strong cryptography, and hashing.
Enhancements:
- Documentation is now available for the command line utilities.
- An easy-to-use Windows binary release is available.
Download (0.37MB)
Added: 2007-05-03 License: Public Domain Price:
904 downloads
Hashell 0.013a
Hashell is a shell written in Haskell. more>>
Hashell project is a shell that is written in Haskell language and which it is intended to provide a set of abstractions that allows you to use Haskell as a shell programming language.
So that way you can use haskell for your daily administration tasks. Hashell uses hs-plugins to interact with the Glasgow Haskell Compiler.
Hashell is still very alpha and buggy, *do not* assume that is stable at any level, and probably it will be so for quite a time.
Though it has been pretty stable for me lately (applications are usually very stable for authors first than for anybody else anyway) , at the moment it is more targetted to people who would like to debug, fix, and chase bugs , and if possible, adding and extending the shell itself, so please, bear in mind that while using it.
Enhancements:
- Part of the parsing is now done with Parsec.
- A new exception handler was added for Haskell expression evaluation, fixing a bug that aborted the program.
- Redirection of standard error was added.
- A bug with the quit built-in command was fixed.
- Number identifiers were added to the redirection operators.
- Preliminary support for environment variables was added.
- Some small bugs were fixed.
<<lessSo that way you can use haskell for your daily administration tasks. Hashell uses hs-plugins to interact with the Glasgow Haskell Compiler.
Hashell is still very alpha and buggy, *do not* assume that is stable at any level, and probably it will be so for quite a time.
Though it has been pretty stable for me lately (applications are usually very stable for authors first than for anybody else anyway) , at the moment it is more targetted to people who would like to debug, fix, and chase bugs , and if possible, adding and extending the shell itself, so please, bear in mind that while using it.
Enhancements:
- Part of the parsing is now done with Parsec.
- A new exception handler was added for Haskell expression evaluation, fixing a bug that aborted the program.
- Redirection of standard error was added.
- A bug with the quit built-in command was fixed.
- Number identifiers were added to the redirection operators.
- Preliminary support for environment variables was added.
- Some small bugs were fixed.
Download (0.015MB)
Added: 2006-01-08 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1384 downloads
SQLite 3.4.2
SQLite is an embeddable SQL engine in a C library. more>>
SQLite is a small C library that implements a self-contained, embeddable, zero-configuration SQL database engine.
Main features:
- Transactions are atomic, consistent, isolated, and durable (ACID) even after system crashes and power failures.
- Zero-configuration - no setup or administration needed.
- Implements most of SQL92. (Features not supported)
- A complete database is stored in a single disk file.
- Database files can be freely shared between machines with different byte orders.
- Supports databases up to 2 terabytes (241 bytes) in size.
- Sizes of strings and BLOBs limited only by available memory.
- Small code footprint: less than 30K lines of C code, less than 250KB code space (gcc on 486)
- Faster than popular client/server database engines for most common operations.
- Simple, easy to use API.
- TCL bindings included. Bindings for many other languages available separately.
- Well-commented source code with over 95% test coverage.
- Self-contained: no external dependencies.
- Sources are in the public domain. Use for any purpose.
The SQLite distribution comes with a standalone command-line access program (sqlite) that can be used to administer an SQLite database and which serves as an example of how to use the SQLite library.
Create A New Database:
- At a shell or DOS prompt, enter: "sqlite3 test.db". This will create a new database named "test.db". (You can use a different name if you like.)
- Enter SQL commands at the prompt to create and populate the new database.
Write Programs That Use SQLite
Below is a simple TCL program that demonstrates how to use the TCL interface to SQLite. The program executes the SQL statements given as the second argument on the database defined by the first argument. The commands to watch for are the sqlite3 command on line 7 which opens an SQLite database and creates a new TCL command named "db" to access that database, the invocation of the db command on line 8 to execute SQL commands against the database, and the closing of the database connection on the last line of the script.
#!/usr/bin/tclsh
if {$argc!=2} {
puts stderr "Usage: %s DATABASE SQL-STATEMENT"
exit 1
}
load /usr/lib/tclsqlite3.so Sqlite3
sqlite3 db [lindex $argv 0]
db eval [lindex $argv 1] x {
foreach v $x(*) {
puts "$v = $x($v)"
}
puts ""
}
db close
<<lessMain features:
- Transactions are atomic, consistent, isolated, and durable (ACID) even after system crashes and power failures.
- Zero-configuration - no setup or administration needed.
- Implements most of SQL92. (Features not supported)
- A complete database is stored in a single disk file.
- Database files can be freely shared between machines with different byte orders.
- Supports databases up to 2 terabytes (241 bytes) in size.
- Sizes of strings and BLOBs limited only by available memory.
- Small code footprint: less than 30K lines of C code, less than 250KB code space (gcc on 486)
- Faster than popular client/server database engines for most common operations.
- Simple, easy to use API.
- TCL bindings included. Bindings for many other languages available separately.
- Well-commented source code with over 95% test coverage.
- Self-contained: no external dependencies.
- Sources are in the public domain. Use for any purpose.
The SQLite distribution comes with a standalone command-line access program (sqlite) that can be used to administer an SQLite database and which serves as an example of how to use the SQLite library.
Create A New Database:
- At a shell or DOS prompt, enter: "sqlite3 test.db". This will create a new database named "test.db". (You can use a different name if you like.)
- Enter SQL commands at the prompt to create and populate the new database.
Write Programs That Use SQLite
Below is a simple TCL program that demonstrates how to use the TCL interface to SQLite. The program executes the SQL statements given as the second argument on the database defined by the first argument. The commands to watch for are the sqlite3 command on line 7 which opens an SQLite database and creates a new TCL command named "db" to access that database, the invocation of the db command on line 8 to execute SQL commands against the database, and the closing of the database connection on the last line of the script.
#!/usr/bin/tclsh
if {$argc!=2} {
puts stderr "Usage: %s DATABASE SQL-STATEMENT"
exit 1
}
load /usr/lib/tclsqlite3.so Sqlite3
sqlite3 db [lindex $argv 0]
db eval [lindex $argv 1] x {
foreach v $x(*) {
puts "$v = $x($v)"
}
puts ""
}
db close
Download (2.1MB)
Added: 2007-08-14 License: Public Domain Price:
551 downloads
LDAP for Haskell 0.6.1
LDAP for Haskell package contains a LDAP binding for Haskell. more>>
LDAP for Haskell package contains a LDAP binding for Haskell. This package provides read and write support for LDAP directories.
Haskell is a standardized purely functional programming language with non-strict semantics, named after the logician Haskell Curry. It is one of the more popular functional languages, and the lazy functional language on which the most research is being performed.
Characteristic features of Haskell include pattern matching, currying, list comprehensions, guards, definable operators, and single assignment. The language also supports recursive functions and algebraic data types, as well as lazy evaluation. Unique concepts include monads, and type classes. The combination of such features can make functions which would be difficult to write in a procedural programming language almost trivial to implement in Haskell.
Several variants have been developed: parallelizable versions from MIT and Glasgow, both called Parallel Haskell; more parallel and distributed versions called Distributed Haskell (formerly Goffin) and Eden; a speculatively evaluating version called Eager Haskell and several object oriented versions: Haskell++, OHaskell and Mondrian.
There is also a Haskell-like language that offers a new method of support for GUI development called Concurrent Clean. Its biggest deviations from Haskell are use of uniqueness types for input instead of monads.
<<lessHaskell is a standardized purely functional programming language with non-strict semantics, named after the logician Haskell Curry. It is one of the more popular functional languages, and the lazy functional language on which the most research is being performed.
Characteristic features of Haskell include pattern matching, currying, list comprehensions, guards, definable operators, and single assignment. The language also supports recursive functions and algebraic data types, as well as lazy evaluation. Unique concepts include monads, and type classes. The combination of such features can make functions which would be difficult to write in a procedural programming language almost trivial to implement in Haskell.
Several variants have been developed: parallelizable versions from MIT and Glasgow, both called Parallel Haskell; more parallel and distributed versions called Distributed Haskell (formerly Goffin) and Eden; a speculatively evaluating version called Eager Haskell and several object oriented versions: Haskell++, OHaskell and Mondrian.
There is also a Haskell-like language that offers a new method of support for GUI development called Concurrent Clean. Its biggest deviations from Haskell are use of uniqueness types for input instead of monads.
Download (0.017MB)
Added: 2007-03-09 License: LGPL (GNU Lesser General Public License) Price:
959 downloads
VSQLite++ 0.3
VSQLite++ is a portable SQLite wrapper library for C++. more>>
VSQLite++ is a portable SQLite wrapper library for C++.
Supported Compilers
- GCC and G++ 4.x (maybe 3.4.x too, but it wasnt tested until now)
- Visual C++ 8/2005 (Visual C++ 7.1/2003 wasnt tested, maybe will be added later)
<<lessSupported Compilers
- GCC and G++ 4.x (maybe 3.4.x too, but it wasnt tested until now)
- Visual C++ 8/2005 (Visual C++ 7.1/2003 wasnt tested, maybe will be added later)
Download (0.92MB)
Added: 2006-10-23 License: BSD License Price:
1096 downloads
phpSQLiteAdm 0.1.0
phpSQLiteAdm is an application to provide Web based management and administration for SQLite databases. more>>
phpSQLiteAdm is an application to provide Web based management and administration for SQLite databases.
phpSQLiteAdm project is meant to be similar to phpMyAdmin. It provides functionality to view data, to add and drop tables, views, and indexes, to export data, to add and delete rows, and to query the database.
Enhancements:
- This is the initial release.
- Code cleanup and bugfixes were done.
<<lessphpSQLiteAdm project is meant to be similar to phpMyAdmin. It provides functionality to view data, to add and drop tables, views, and indexes, to export data, to add and delete rows, and to query the database.
Enhancements:
- This is the initial release.
- Code cleanup and bugfixes were done.
Download (0.066MB)
Added: 2006-12-19 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1039 downloads
The Glasgow Haskell Compiler 6.6
The Glasgow Haskell Compiler is a compiler for Haskell 98. more>>
The Glasgow Haskell Compiler is a state-of-the-art, open source, compiler and interactive environment for the functional language Haskell.
Main features:
- GHC supports the entire Haskell 98 language plus a wide variety of extensions.
- GHC works on several platforms including Windows and most varieties of Unix, and several different processor architectures. There are detailed instructions for porting GHC to a new platform.
- GHC has extensive optimisation capabilities, including inter-module optimisation.
- GHC compiles Haskell code either by using an intermediate C compiler (GCC), or by generating native code on some platforms. The interactive environment compiles Haskell to bytecode, and supports execution of mixed bytecode/compiled programs.
- Profiling is supported, both by time/allocation and various kinds of heap profiling.
- GHC comes with a wide range of libraries.
GHC is heavily dependent on its users and contributors. Please come and join the mailing lists and send us your comments, suggestions, bug reports and contributions!
Enhancements:
- SMP support and impredicative polymorphism were added.
- The libraries were split into core and extra.
- Many more changes were made.
<<lessMain features:
- GHC supports the entire Haskell 98 language plus a wide variety of extensions.
- GHC works on several platforms including Windows and most varieties of Unix, and several different processor architectures. There are detailed instructions for porting GHC to a new platform.
- GHC has extensive optimisation capabilities, including inter-module optimisation.
- GHC compiles Haskell code either by using an intermediate C compiler (GCC), or by generating native code on some platforms. The interactive environment compiles Haskell to bytecode, and supports execution of mixed bytecode/compiled programs.
- Profiling is supported, both by time/allocation and various kinds of heap profiling.
- GHC comes with a wide range of libraries.
GHC is heavily dependent on its users and contributors. Please come and join the mailing lists and send us your comments, suggestions, bug reports and contributions!
Enhancements:
- SMP support and impredicative polymorphism were added.
- The libraries were split into core and extra.
- Many more changes were made.
Download (6.7MB)
Added: 2006-10-15 License: BSD License Price:
1105 downloads
Haskell Database Connectivity 1.1.2.0
Haskell Database Connectivity project provides an abstraction layer between Haskell programs and SQL relational databases. more>>
Haskell Database Connectivity project provides an abstraction layer between Haskell programs and SQL relational databases. This lets you write database code once, in Haskell, and have it work with any number of backend SQL databases (MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, ODBC-compliant databases, etc.)
HDBC is modeled loosely on Perls DBI interface http://search.cpan.org/~timb/DBI/DBI.pm, though it has also been influenced by Pythons DB-API v2, JDBC in Java, and HSQL in Haskell.
HDBC is a from-scratch effort. It is not a reimplementation of HSQL, though its purpose is the same.
Main features:
- Ability to use replacable parameters to let one query be executed multiple times (eliminates the need for an escape function)
- Ability to access returned rows by column number
- Ability to read data from the SQL server on-demand rather than reading the entire result set up front
- HUnit testsuite for each backend driver
- Well-defined standard API and easy backend driver implementation
- Lazy reading of the entire result set (think hGetContents, but for the results of SELECT) (see sFetchAllRows)
- Support for translation between Haskell and SQL types
- Support for querying database server properties
- Add-on package (hdbc-missingh) to integrate with MissingH, providing a database backend for AnyDBM.
- Support for querying metadata such as column names.
- Support for querying additional metadata (column types, etc.)
<<lessHDBC is modeled loosely on Perls DBI interface http://search.cpan.org/~timb/DBI/DBI.pm, though it has also been influenced by Pythons DB-API v2, JDBC in Java, and HSQL in Haskell.
HDBC is a from-scratch effort. It is not a reimplementation of HSQL, though its purpose is the same.
Main features:
- Ability to use replacable parameters to let one query be executed multiple times (eliminates the need for an escape function)
- Ability to access returned rows by column number
- Ability to read data from the SQL server on-demand rather than reading the entire result set up front
- HUnit testsuite for each backend driver
- Well-defined standard API and easy backend driver implementation
- Lazy reading of the entire result set (think hGetContents, but for the results of SELECT) (see sFetchAllRows)
- Support for translation between Haskell and SQL types
- Support for querying database server properties
- Add-on package (hdbc-missingh) to integrate with MissingH, providing a database backend for AnyDBM.
- Support for querying metadata such as column names.
- Support for querying additional metadata (column types, etc.)
Download (0.056MB)
Added: 2007-05-04 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
907 downloads
PySQLite 2.3.5
pysqlite is a Python DB-API 2.0 interface for the SQLite embedded relational database engine. more>>
pysqlite is a Python DB-API 2.0 interface for the SQLite embedded relational database engine.
Enhancements:
- pysqlite is now 2.5 times faster for DML statements.
- This pays off especially for bulk-loading data.
- pysqlite now recognizes if the database engine has done an implicit ROLLBACK and acts accordingly.
- Using custom mapping and sequence types in parameters works now.
<<lessEnhancements:
- pysqlite is now 2.5 times faster for DML statements.
- This pays off especially for bulk-loading data.
- pysqlite now recognizes if the database engine has done an implicit ROLLBACK and acts accordingly.
- Using custom mapping and sequence types in parameters works now.
Download (0.083MB)
Added: 2007-07-18 License: zlib/libpng License Price:
517 downloads
SQLiteJDBC 034
SQLiteJDBC supports the most commonly used features of JDBC that can be efficiently implemented on top of SQLite. more>>
SQLiteJDBC is a JDBC driver for SQLite which is written as a Java JNI layer over the SQLite 3.3.x API.
SQLiteJDBC supports the most commonly used features of JDBC that can be efficiently implemented on top of SQLite. Only a single native JNI library is required, and SQLite is compiled in.
Binaries are provided for Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows.
<<lessSQLiteJDBC supports the most commonly used features of JDBC that can be efficiently implemented on top of SQLite. Only a single native JNI library is required, and SQLite is compiled in.
Binaries are provided for Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows.
Download (0.13MB)
Added: 2007-06-19 License: BSD License Price:
521 downloads
HDBC Sqlite3 Driver 1.0.1.0
HDBC Sqlite3 Driver is the Haskell Sqlite v3 backend driver for HDBC. more>>
HDBC Sqlite3 Driver is the Haskell Sqlite v3 backend driver for HDBC.
Please see HDBC itself for documentation on use. If you dont already
have it, you can browse this documentation at
http://darcs.complete.org/hdbc/doc/index.html.
This package provides one function in module Database.HDBC.Sqlite3:
{- | Connect to an Sqlite version 3 database. The only parameter needed is
the filename of the database to connect to.
All database accessor functions are provided in the main HDBC module. -}
connectSqlite3 :: FilePath -> IO Connection
<<lessPlease see HDBC itself for documentation on use. If you dont already
have it, you can browse this documentation at
http://darcs.complete.org/hdbc/doc/index.html.
This package provides one function in module Database.HDBC.Sqlite3:
{- | Connect to an Sqlite version 3 database. The only parameter needed is
the filename of the database to connect to.
All database accessor functions are provided in the main HDBC module. -}
connectSqlite3 :: FilePath -> IO Connection
Download (0.023MB)
Added: 2007-03-09 License: LGPL (GNU Lesser General Public License) Price:
961 downloads
JDBC Driver for SQLite 006
JDBC Driver for SQLite is a thin layer on top of the SQLite 3.3.x C API. more>>
JDBC Driver for SQLite is a thin layer on top of the SQLite 3.3.x C API. The native JNI library has SQLite compiled into it so all you need to do is include the two files packaged above in your project.
Usage:
Download the binary for the platform you are developing on. Open the tarball and copy the two files into your application directory:
sqlitejdbc.jar
[lib]sqlitejdbc.[dll, so, jnilib]
Reference the driver in your code:
Class.forName("org.sqlite.JDBC");
Connection conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:sqlite:filename");
// ... use the database ...
conn.close();
And call your program with the drivers JAR file in the classpath and the C library in the librarypath. E.g.
java -cp lib/yourprog.jar:lib/sqlitejdbc.jar
-Djava.library.path=lib
yourprog.Main
Enhancements:
- The driver is now thread-safe and fully supports UTF-16.
- There are binaries for Mac OS, Linux, and Windows, and instructions for compiling with MSVC.
<<lessUsage:
Download the binary for the platform you are developing on. Open the tarball and copy the two files into your application directory:
sqlitejdbc.jar
[lib]sqlitejdbc.[dll, so, jnilib]
Reference the driver in your code:
Class.forName("org.sqlite.JDBC");
Connection conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:sqlite:filename");
// ... use the database ...
conn.close();
And call your program with the drivers JAR file in the classpath and the C library in the librarypath. E.g.
java -cp lib/yourprog.jar:lib/sqlitejdbc.jar
-Djava.library.path=lib
yourprog.Main
Enhancements:
- The driver is now thread-safe and fully supports UTF-16.
- There are binaries for Mac OS, Linux, and Windows, and instructions for compiling with MSVC.
Download (0.016MB)
Added: 2006-08-05 License: BSD License Price:
705 downloads
DBD::SQLite 1.12
DBD::SQLite is a Self Contained RDBMS in a DBI Driver. more>>
DBD::SQLite is a Self Contained RDBMS in a DBI Driver.
SYNOPSIS
use DBI;
my $dbh = DBI->connect("dbi:SQLite:dbname=dbfile","","");
SQLite is a public domain RDBMS database engine that you can find at http://www.hwaci.com/sw/sqlite/.
Rather than ask you to install SQLite first, because SQLite is public domain, DBD::SQLite includes the entire thing in the distribution. So in order to get a fast transaction capable RDBMS working for your perl project you simply have to install this module, and nothing else.
SQLite supports the following features:
- Implements a large subset of SQL92
See http://www.hwaci.com/sw/sqlite/lang.html for details.
- A complete DB in a single disk file
Everything for your database is stored in a single disk file, making it easier to move things around than with DBD::CSV.
- Atomic commit and rollback
Yes, DBD::SQLite is small and light, but it supports full transactions!
- Extensible
User-defined aggregate or regular functions can be registered with the SQL parser.
Theres lots more to it, so please refer to the docs on the SQLite web page, listed above, for SQL details. Also refer to DBI for details on how to use DBI itself.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use DBI;
my $dbh = DBI->connect("dbi:SQLite:dbname=dbfile","","");
SQLite is a public domain RDBMS database engine that you can find at http://www.hwaci.com/sw/sqlite/.
Rather than ask you to install SQLite first, because SQLite is public domain, DBD::SQLite includes the entire thing in the distribution. So in order to get a fast transaction capable RDBMS working for your perl project you simply have to install this module, and nothing else.
SQLite supports the following features:
- Implements a large subset of SQL92
See http://www.hwaci.com/sw/sqlite/lang.html for details.
- A complete DB in a single disk file
Everything for your database is stored in a single disk file, making it easier to move things around than with DBD::CSV.
- Atomic commit and rollback
Yes, DBD::SQLite is small and light, but it supports full transactions!
- Extensible
User-defined aggregate or regular functions can be registered with the SQL parser.
Theres lots more to it, so please refer to the docs on the SQLite web page, listed above, for SQL details. Also refer to DBI for details on how to use DBI itself.
Download (0.53MB)
Added: 2006-06-12 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1244 downloads
SQLiteDBMS 0.5.1
SQLiteDBMS is a database management server for SQLite. more>>
SQLiteDBMS is a database management server for SQLite. SQLiteDBMS project allows an sqlite3 process to be accessed via a TCP/IP network.
It provides Extended SQL, basic authentication, and access control. It includes a simple Web server that takes HTTP requests and sends XML responses.
To compile the project, first create a directory in which to place the build products. It is recommended, but not required, that the build directory be separate from the source directory. Cd into the build directory and then from the build directory run the configure script found at the root of the source tree. Then run "make".
For example:
tar xzf sqlitedbms-x.y.z.tar.gz ;# Unpack the source tree into "sqlitedbms"
cd sqlitedbms-x.y.z ;# Move into directory
./configure --with-sqlite3=DIR ;# Run the configure script
make ;# Run the makefile.
Enhancements:
- Some bugs were fixed.
- Stability was improved.
<<lessIt provides Extended SQL, basic authentication, and access control. It includes a simple Web server that takes HTTP requests and sends XML responses.
To compile the project, first create a directory in which to place the build products. It is recommended, but not required, that the build directory be separate from the source directory. Cd into the build directory and then from the build directory run the configure script found at the root of the source tree. Then run "make".
For example:
tar xzf sqlitedbms-x.y.z.tar.gz ;# Unpack the source tree into "sqlitedbms"
cd sqlitedbms-x.y.z ;# Move into directory
./configure --with-sqlite3=DIR ;# Run the configure script
make ;# Run the makefile.
Enhancements:
- Some bugs were fixed.
- Stability was improved.
Download (0.44MB)
Added: 2006-11-15 License: BSD License Price:
1075 downloads
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