JasperReports is a powerful open source Java reporting tool that has the
ability to deliver rich content onto the screen, to the printer or into
PDF, HTML, XLS, CSV and XML files.
It is entirely written in Java and can be used in a variety of Java enabled
applications, including J2EE or Web applications, to generate dynamic content.
Its main purpose is to help creating page oriented, ready to print documents in
a simple and flexible manner.
If you need a GUI, please see the port devel/ireport.
SHA1, SHA256, SHA512, MD5 & CRC32 data types for PostgreSQL
A fork of the shatypes extension which adds additional
data types along with some fixes.
The libdbi-drivers project maintains drivers for libdbi. Drivers are
distributed separately from the library itself.
BeansDB is a major amount of data for large, high-availability storage
systems distributed KeyValue using HashTree and simplified version
number to quickly synchronize to ensure consistency in the final (weak),
a simplified version of the Dynamo.
cegobridge is a tool to import/export database dumps into Cego, a
Relational Database Management System (RDBMS). Currently it supports
MySQL, other database systems to import/export can be added.
Many more details are available at:
This port contains the programming reference for databases/libgda4.
METAKIT is a curious mix of flatfile, relational and OODBMS features with a
small footprint, and a big following. For those who don't need a heavy-duty
SQL solution, it is tight and fast for <100,000 items, with a snazzy ability
to dynamically change data structures on the fly. Interfaces are available
for Tcl and Python, with Perl support promised soon.
pgFouine is a PostgreSQL log analyzer used to generate detailed reports
from a PostgreSQL log file. pgFouine can help you to determine which
queries you should optimize to speed up your PostgreSQL based
application.
Flixible tool for inserting data from DBF into MySQL.
Q4M (Queue for MySQL) is a message queue licensed under GPL that works
as a pluggable storage engine of MySQL 5.1, designed to be robust,
fast, flexible. The development started in late December of 2007, and
although it is very primitive, operates quite swiftly.