Late Release for Oracle XE Database


Tue, February 28, 2006

CIO

Oracle made its low-end, free-of-charge Oracle Database 10g Express Edition database, also known as XE, generally available Tuesday. When the company initially released the beta version of the software in October of last year, Oracle expected to debut the first full release of XE by year-end.

Oracle chose to delay the product until the end of February in order to add additional unspecified security features to the database, according to Mark Townsend, senior director, product management with the company’s server technologies division. "We’ve made sure the database is extremely secure," he said in a recent phone interview.

The database vendor has retained the same restrictions on XE that it announced back in October, Townsend said. The restrictions apply to storage -- 4 gigabytes of memory, 1 gigabyte of random access memory (RAM) and only using one central processing unit (CPU) per host server. "We have no plans at this point to open source XE," he added.

The XE database supports 32-bit Windows and Linux distributions from market leaders Red Hat and Novell. It runs on both Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 and Red Hat Fedora and both Suse Linux Enterprise Server 9 and Suse Linux 10, according to Monica Kumar, director of product marketing with Oracle. The database also supports Linux distributions popular among developers, she said -- Mandriva Linux 2006 Power Pack+, Debian and Ubuntu.

Additionally, XE supports development environments including Java, .Net and PHP. Townsend also pointed to Application Express, which is built into the XE database, and is another development environment for creating and deploying Web-based applications.

XE is built on the same code as the company’s enterprise-level Oracle Database 10g Release 2. Oracle expects that users who adopt the free edition of XE will later want to upgrade to paid versions of the 10g database. The vendor is also hoping that the XE database will appeal to both developers and the academic community.

Rajeev Kaula, a professor in the computer information systems department of Missouri State University, is using XE to teach database application development classes involving SQL (structured query language) and Oracle’s extension to SQL -- PL/SQL (procedural language for SQL).

"XE, to me, is like a breath of fresh air," Kaula said in a phone interview Monday. "It’s so quick and very easy to download."

Previously, his students were downloading the enterprise release of 10g and seemed to run into a lot of problems. "The word of mouth spread that Oracle was very difficult to install," Kaula said, diminishing other students’ enthusiasm for downloading the database. With XE, those issues have gone away. "XE was the main driver to offer my course as an online course," Kaula said.

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