Pricing: DBeaver has a free and open source community version (DBeaver CE). The enterprise adds support for non-JDBC datasources (WMI, MongoDB, Cassandra, Redis). Supported Drivers: DBeaver community version supports any databases that use JDBC driver (which means a lot of databases): MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, SQLite, Oracle, to DB2, SQL Server, Sybase, MS Access, Teradata, Firebird, Derby, etc. Starting from version 4.2, it limited its support to Windows, MacOS and Linux only. Supported Platforms: DBeaver used to work on all platforms supported by Eclipse framework (Windows, Linux, MacOS, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX). The development is stopped now.ĭBeaver provides a powerful database client for multiple drivers, but it’s a little bit overwhelming. This is a big problem in the current (2016 to present) version of Sequel Pro. Filtering/Sorting data based on single constraint including equal to/in/like/between etc.Full user management, credentials, and roles.Pricing: Sequel Pro is free and open source. Since the recent MySQL 8.0 came out, it’s reported that Sequel Pro can’t connect to MySQL 8.0, it’s not working properly or just crashing. Supported Drivers: Sequel Pro only supports MySQL. Supported Platforms: Sequel Pro is available on macOS only. Sequel Pro had been long known for being one of the best GUI tools for MySQL, only until recently when it has compatibility issues with MySQL 8 and macOS Mojave. In this post, we are going to have a quick review of three database tools: Sequel Pro, DBeaver, and TablePlus along with pros and cons of each tool to see which is the one that matches your needs for database management tasks. Having a good GUI client would save us a lot of time working with databases.
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