Software:SQuirreL SQL Client

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Short description: Database administration tool
SQuirreL SQL Client
Developer(s)Colin Bell, Gerd Wagner, Rob Manning and others
Stable release
Preview release
20231120_2225[1] / November 20, 2023; 7 months ago (2023-11-20)[1]
Operating systemCross-platform
PlatformJava
TypeDatabase administration tool
LicenseLGPL
Websitewww.squirrelsql.org

The SQuirreL SQL Client is a database administration tool. It uses JDBC to allow users to explore and interact with databases via a JDBC driver. It provides an editor that offers code completion and syntax highlighting for standard SQL. It also provides a plugin architecture that allows plugin writers to modify much of the application's behavior to provide database-specific functionality or features that are database-independent. As this desktop application is written entirely in Java with Swing UI components, it should run on any platform that has a JVM.[2]

SQuirreL SQL Client is free as open source software that is distributed under the GNU Lesser General Public License.

Feature summary

  • Object Tree allows for browsing database objects such as catalogs, schemas, tables, triggers, views, sequences, procedures, UDTs, etc.
  • The SQL Editor, based on RSyntaxTextArea by fifesoft.com, provides syntax highlighting. It can open, create, save and execute files containing SQL statements.
  • SQuirreL supports simultaneous sessions with multiple databases. This allows comparing data and sharing SQL statements between databases.[3]
  • SQuirreL runs on any platform that has a JVM.
  • A plugin architecture facilitates database vendor-specific extensions (information or actions not available using standard JDBC)
  • Translations for the user interface exist in: (Bulgarian, Brazilian Portuguese, Chinese, Czech, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Spanish, Russian).
  • Graph capabilities can generate charts showing table relationships.[4]
  • Bookmarks - user-defined code templates. SQuirreL comes with predefined example bookmarks for the most common SQL and DDL statements.[4]

History

The SQuirreL SQL project was developed by a team of Java developers around the world and led by Colin Bell. It has been hosted as a SourceForge project since 2001, and was still under active development in 2020.[5]

Supported databases

See also

References

External links