Re: Triggers, Stored Procedures, PHP. was: Re: PostgreSQL Advocacy, Thoughts and Comments - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Rod K
Subject Re: Triggers, Stored Procedures, PHP. was: Re: PostgreSQL Advocacy, Thoughts and Comments
Date
Msg-id KNEPILBLIADCDMMPIKIKOEJDDJAA.rod@23net.net
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Triggers, Stored Procedures, PHP. was: Re: PostgreSQL Advocacy, Thoughts and Comments  (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>)
List pgsql-general

Tom,
>
>
> "Rod K" <rod@23net.net> writes:
> > Paul Thomas wrote:
> >> Much of the populatity of MySQL seems to stem from PHPs out-of-the-box
> >> support for it.
>
> > This is incorrect.  The embedded mysql client library was not
> added until
> > PHP4.0 RC1.  PHP's popularity existed long before this.  The
> real culprit
> > causing the popularity of MySQL was it's ubiquity among hosting
> providers
> > and the virtual non-existence of PG in that arena.  If PG had been more
> > friendly to shared hosting environments, perhaps this situation wouldn't
> > have arisen.
>
> You are both engaging in the most blatant form of historical
> revisionism.

I am?  I mis-spoke (see below) but my point was clear and you stated the
same.

Of course PHP's support for MySQL didn't drive MySQL
> adoption --- it was the other way around, PHP adapted to MySQL because
> that was what was out there.

My point.

 I think "friendly to shared hosting
> environments" is a made-up reason as well.  The real reason PG lost
> mindshare to MySQL in the early web days is that at the time, PG was
> hard to install, somewhat buggy, and poorly documented.

"...friendly to shared hosting environments" was not exactly what I meant to
say. It WAS a PITA for HOSTING PROVIDERS for exactly the reasons you state,
which is why MySQL was usually chosen.

  (Which was not
> surprising considering that none of these mattered much in its original
> academic environment.)  MySQL didn't do much, maybe, but what it could
> do it did pretty well and without install/learning curve hassles.  We
> had mostly caught up on those criteria by perhaps 7.1 or 7.2, but the
> mindshare gap remains.
>
Agreed



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