Sujet : Re: cpu-x
De : bowman (at) *nospam* montana.com (rbowman)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.advocacyDate : 19. May 2024, 00:53:47
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <lasprqF908dU1@mid.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
User-Agent : Pan/0.149 (Bellevue; 4c157ba)
On Sat, 18 May 2024 15:08:32 -0400, DFS wrote:
I knew the SQL Server engine had been ported to Linux, but what about
all the related tools and features: full-text search, replication, Mgmt
Studio, Stretch DB, Polybase, always on availability groups, Active
Directory authentication, SQL Server Agent, SQL Server R Services,
Analysis Services, Reporting Services, Integration Services, Data
Quality Services, Master Data Services, T-SQL and CLR (.NET Runtime)
stored procedures?
Most of those suck anyway. SSRS is a real bag. Power BI pretty much
supercedes it and there are Linux equivalents. I won't go through the
whole list, but Stretch DB is deprecated in Server 2022 and will be
removed in the future.
https://alternativeto.net/software/sql-server-management-studio/?platform=linux
I prefer DBeaver since it works with SQLite, PostgreSQL, etc as well. It's
cross platform of course.
SQL Server on Linux is a bit of an oddity. We looked at it briefly to make
sure it would work. Postgres has come a long way and the price is right.
SQL Express is free but is limited. For full SQL Server you'll be paying
per core. Running SS on AWS really kicks up the hourly costs.
SQL Server has come a long way too. It wasn't that great in the earlier
incarnations, back when you were doing Access.
But you don't care anyway.