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ADS vs PG
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2025 5:24 am
by unixkd
Hi all
A lot have been said about ads and postgresql most especially on this vibrant forum.
I am just been curious, are there comparable reason for want to choose one over the other for a large enterprise projects.
Thanks
Joe
Re: ADS vs PG
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2025 5:55 am
by Tom
Hi, Joe.
ADS has reached EoL twelve (!) years ago. Meanwhile, it's hard to buy licenses, and this may get harder. Modern operating systems are not officially supported, since they were not known when the development stopped. On the technology side, ADS is more than just outdated. It's technology from the nineties. In shorter words: Bad idea. Don't use the ADS.
PG is a robust, fast, very good and extremely cheap (costs: zero) modern SQL-server. The question is not whether to use it or not, but how to use it. You have a wide range of models, starting at the ISAM-emulation with the PGDBE and ending at direct, native use of SQL. You may begin with PGDBE and end with native use.
Re: ADS vs PG
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2025 6:24 am
by rdonnay
ADS is a very reliable solution for both ISAM and SQL, however Tom is right that there will be no support in the future.
If you are interested in updating an existing application to Client/Server, with SQL and ISAM capabilities, PostGreSql via PGDBE is finally ready for prime time.
This has been a Hurculean effort by the Alaska team over many years of development and was much more difficult to develop than ADSDBE.
The ADS database server was always ISAM where the PostGreSql database server was always SQL, so implementing ISAM in PGDBE was not easy to do, yet Alaska did it.
Re: ADS vs PG
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2025 10:32 pm
by Auge_Ohr
hi,
Tom wrote: ↑Thu Apr 24, 2025 5:55 am
PG is a robust, fast, very good and extremely cheap (costs: zero) modern SQL-server.
You may begin with PGDBE and end with native use.
to use PGDBE you have to pay extra Lizence so it is NOT "free".
Only when use Postgre "native" it is "free"
Re: ADS vs PG
Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2025 11:12 pm
by Tom
The PostGreSQL server is for free.