Sadly, Mr. Saran wasted a lot of time writing a pluggable backend db layer,
as one is built into PHP now, PDO: http://us2.php.net/pdo
Sybase / MsSQL: http://www.php.net/manual/en/ref.pdo-dblib.php
Postgres: http://us2.php.net/manual/en/ref.pdo-pgsql.php
Oracle: http://us2.php.net/manual/en/ref.pdo
From: Sancar Saran
> And if you so much thinking about future DB change. Just wrote
compatible sql
> and use multi drive layer (phpADO db).
>
> And you are problem free
I have some questions about this suggestion. We currently have
production systems using Postgres, Sybase ASA, Oracle and MS SQ
On Tuesday 02 June 2009 11:36:28 pm optoma...@rogers.com wrote:
> Everybody has given Angus really great advice in this previous thread
> and I have learned a lot too. I hope no one mines the fork but I am in
> the exact same situation as Angus. If anyone could spare a bit of time
> regarding appli
High-performance builds of mysql are still faster. And with 5.4 integrating
a lot of performance boosts, I'd expect MySQL to retain that lead for a lot
longer. There's also a lot more guides / support for MySQL around, as well
as having a more robust choosing of UDF's, if you were to need them.
On Tue, Jun 02, 2009 at 04:36:28PM -0400, optoma...@rogers.com wrote:
> Everybody has given Angus really great advice in this previous thread
> and I have learned a lot too. I hope no one mines the fork but I am in
> the exact same situation as Angus. If anyone could spare a bit of time
> regardin
Everybody has given Angus really great advice in this previous thread
and I have learned a lot too. I hope no one mines the fork but I am in
the exact same situation as Angus. If anyone could spare a bit of time
regarding application infrastructure I would really appreciate it.
I know there ar
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