PgWorksheet is a simple GUI frontend to PostgreSQL for executing
SQL queries, and psql commands without the need for the psql
command line tools.
Originally Developed by Henri Michelon, and now currently
Maintained and Developed by Chris Hutchinson.
This extension is a PHP binding for Google LevelDB
A PECL extension to provide read access to MDB data files as used by Microsoft
Access and its underlying JetEngine. It is based on libmdb from the mdbtools
package.
pecl-mongo provides an interface for communicating with the
Mongo database in PHP.
[ excerpt from developer's www site ]
The Power*Architect is a user-friendly data modeling tool created by data
warehouse designers, and has many unique features geared specifically for the
data warehouse architect. It allows users to reverse-engineer existing
databases, perform data profiling on source databases, and auto-generate ETL
metadata.
Plus, the Power*Architect has the ability to take snapshots of database
structures, allowing users to design DW data models while working offline.
The official ODBC driver for connecting to PostgreSQL Database; not a
part of the PostgreSQL Database distribution, though -- developed and
maintained separately.
PL/Ruby is a loadable procedural language for the PostgreSQL database
system (7.0 or later) that enables to write functions and trigger
procedures in Ruby.
TDS backend module for mod_sql of ProFTPD
pxtools is a collection of tools to work with a Paradox-databases.
pxtools consists of the following:
* pxinfo scans the header of a specified database-file and dumps
the important information.
* pxsqldump/pxcsvdump are utilities to extract the data from a
Paradox-database. The output is an SQL-/CSV-dump that can be
used to recreate the database in an SQL-enviroment.
This module provides a nearly complete wrapping of the Sleepycat C API
for the Database Environment, Database, Cursor, and Transaction
objects, and each of these is exposed as a Python Type in the
bsddb3.db module. The database objects can use different access
methods, btree, hash, recno, and queue. For the first time all of
these are fully supported in the Python wrappers. Please see the
document in developers' web site for more details on the types and
methods provided.