Question

I want our team to develop against local instances of an Oracle database. With MS SQL, I can use SQL Express Edition. What are my options?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Oracle has an express edition as well. I believe it is more limited though (IIRC, you can only have one database on an instance)

Oracle XE

OTHER TIPS

I have had a lot of success using Oracle 10g Express Edition. It comes with Oracle Aplication Express which allows the simple admin and creation of software via a web interface. It is limited to 4Gb of Disk Space, 1Gb of Ram and will only use 1 processor.

It's free and in my experience has been 100% reliable. It can easily be hosted within a Virtual machine.

Also Oracle SQL Developer is a cross platform application that can be used with any version of Oracle and is also free. Oracle 10g is superb. Go for it :-)

I'm happy with Oracle XE for development purposes.

I do have this piece of wisdow to share; if you're having problems like ORA-12519: TNS:no appropriate service handler found or ORA-12560: TNS:protocol adapter error from time to time then try to change your PROCESSES parameter, logon to Oracle using sys as sysdba and execute the following:

ALTER SYSTEM SET PROCESSES=150 SCOPE=SPFILE;

After changing the PROCESSES parameter restart your Oracle service.

Oracle allows developers to download and use Oracle for free for the purpose of developing software (at least for the initial prototype, best to read the license terms). Downloads here.

We ended up using Oracle XE. Install client, install express, reboot, it just works.

I don't recommend Oracle XE. My co-workers and I have been doing a project in Oracle and got severely tripped up after trying to use XE for our local development instances. The database worked fine until we started running local stress tests, at which point it started dropping connections.

I don't know whether this is an intentional, documented limitation or if perhaps we each just hit a weird bug, but I strongly recommend that you stay away from XE. When we both switched over to the full version, our problems immediately went away.

Also, Oracle doesn't require any kind of licensing confirmation for the full server; you have to click something to say that you have indeed acquired a license, but it doesn't make you prove it. So if you indeed have a license to use Oracle, there's no reason why you can't just install the full version on your development machines.

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