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Firebird 2.5.9 Release Notes (PDF available)

For more details about Firebird 2.5 architectures please look at the Firebird 2.5 Architecture Comparison document.


Win32

Win64

Linux x86

Linux AMD64

Mac OS X

Final release: v2.5.9 (End of Series)

Release Date File Name Size Description
Sources
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139-0.tar.bz2 13 MB Compressed tarball
Win32
32-bit Classic, Superclassic & Superserver
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139_0_Win32.exe 6 MB Windows executable installer for full Superclassic/Classic or Superserver, recommended for first-time users
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139-0_Win32.zip 10 MB Zip kit for manual/custom installs of Superclassic/Classic or Superserver
32-bit Embedded
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139-0_Win32_embed.zip 4 MB Embedded, separate download, zip kit. Custom installation required, read the Guide!
32-bit Debug Kits (Binary + PDB components)
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139_0_Win32_pdb.exe 11 MB Full Superclassic/Classic or Superserver, installer kit
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139-0_Win32_pdb.zip 18 MB Full Superclassic/Classic or Superserver, zip kit
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139-0_Win32_embed_pdb.zip 9 MB Embedded, separate download, zip kit
Win64
64-bit Classic, Superclassic & Superserver
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139_0_x64.exe 10 MB Windows executable installer for full Superclassic/Classic or Superserver, recommended for first-time users
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139-0_x64.zip 11 MB Zip kit for manual/custom installs of Superclassic/Classic or Superserver
64-bit Embedded
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139-0_x64_embed.zip 5 MB Embedded, separate download, zip kit. Custom installation required, read the Guide!
64-bit Debug Kits (Binary + PDB components)
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139_0_x64_pdb.exe 15 MB Full Superclassic/Classic or Superserver, installer kit
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139-0_x64_pdb.zip 20 MB Full Superclassic/Classic or Superserver, zip kit
June 24, 2019 Firebird-2.5.9.27139-0_x64_embed_pdb.zip 9 MB Embedded, separate download, zip kit
Linux x86
IMPORTANT: Note affecting all Linux builds
The recommended Linux kernel version is 2.6.34 and glibc should be version 2.12 or higher. Minimum — kernel 2.6.27 and glibc 2.7.
If your glibc version is lower than v.2.7, it must be upgraded before using Firebird 2.5 Classic/SuperСЃlassic.
32-bit Classic, Superclassic & Embedded
June 24, 2019 FirebirdCS-2.5.9.27139-0.i686.rpm 7 MB Superclassic/Classic server, RPM kit
June 24, 2019 FirebirdCS-2.5.9.27139-0.i686.tar.gz 7 MB Superclassic/Classic server, compressed tarball
June 24, 2019 FirebirdCS-debuginfo-2.5.9.27139-0.i686.tar.gz 34 MB Debug Build, Superclassic/Classic server, compressed tarball
32-bit Superserver
June 24, 2019 FirebirdSS-2.5.9.27139-0.i686.rpm 7 MB Superserver, RPM kit
June 24, 2019 FirebirdSS-2.5.9.27139-0.i686.tar.gz 7 MB Superserver, compressed tarball
June 24, 2019 FirebirdSS-debuginfo-2.5.9.27139-0.i686.tar.gz 33 MB Debug Build, Superserver, compressed tarball
Linux AMD64
IMPORTANT: Note affecting all Linux builds
The recommended Linux kernel version is 2.6.34 and glibc should be version 2.12 or higher. Minimum — kernel 2.6.27 and glibc 2.7.
If your glibc version is lower than v.2.7, it must be upgraded before using Firebird 2.5 Classic/SuperСЃlassic.
64-bit Classic, Superclassic & Embedded
June 24, 2019 FirebirdCS-2.5.9.27139-0.amd64.rpm 7 MB Superclassic/Classic server, RPM kit
June 24, 2019 FirebirdCS-2.5.9.27139-0.amd64.tar.gz 7 MB Superclassic/Classic server, compressed tarball
June 24, 2019 FirebirdCS-debuginfo-2.5.9.27139-0.amd64.tar.gz 34 MB Debug Build, Superclassic/Classic server, compressed tarball
64-bit Superserver
June 24, 2019 FirebirdSS-2.5.9.27139-0.amd64.rpm 7 MB Superserver, RPM kit
June 24, 2019 FirebirdSS-2.5.9.27139-0.amd64.tar.gz 7 MB Superserver, compressed tarball
June 24, 2019 FirebirdSS-debuginfo-2.5.9.27139-0.amd64.tar.gz 33 MB Debug Build, Superserver, compressed tarball
Mac OS X
NOTE: Because use of libstdc++ is now deprecated Mac OS X users should be aware that Firebird 2.5.8 will run only on Mac OS X 10.9 or higher versions. If you want to use an earlier version of OS X you will need to use an earlier version of Firebird.
«lipo» are the 64-bit Firebird Server with client libs as fat lib (32 and 64 bits). See here for examples.
Mac OS X 64-bit Classic, Superclassic & Embedded (Intel)
June 24, 2019 FirebirdCS-2.5.9-27139-x86_64.pkg 7 MB 64-bit package
June 24, 2019 FirebirdCS-2.5.9-27139-lipo-x86_64.pkg 12 MB 64-bit Lipo package
Mac OS X 64-bit Superserver (Intel)
June 24, 2019 FirebirdSS-2.5.9-271391-x86_64.pkg 7 MB 64-bit package
June 24, 2019 FirebirdSS-2.5.9-27139-lipo-x86_64.pkg 9 MB 64-bit Lipo package
Mac OS X 32-bit
June 24, 2019 FirebirdCS-2.5.9-27139-i386.pkg 7 MB Mac OS X 32-bit Classic, Superclassic & Embedded (Intel) package, compressed
June 24, 2019 FirebirdSS-2.5.9-27139-i386.pkg 7 MB Mac OS X 32-bit Superserver (Intel) package, compressed

Firebird 2.5.9В Release Notes (PDF available)

For more details about Firebird 2.5 architectures please look at the Firebird 2.5 Architecture Comparison document.
В

Источник

Firebird Database Server on Mac OSX

David Pugh

David Pugh, who hails from Christchurch, New Zealand, wrote the original version of this paper during October-December, 2004. For some time, it was available at the Apple Mac open source developer homepages but it disappeared some time around the middle of 2006.

In December, 2006, David contributed the document sources, along with those for a companion document, The Rough Guide to Building Firebird 1.5 on MacOSX, an extract from the document you are reading now.

Introduction

In July 2000, Borland (then Inprise) released the source code of their database product, Interbase, under the Interbase Public License. Firebird is the Open Source direct descendent of that database. For more information about Interbase and Firebird, there is an excellent description of the history of events leading up to the release of Interbase to the Open Source community, and the subsequent development of Firebird.

Why Am I Writing This ?

Until now, my database of choice has been PostgreSQL running on Linux, and more recently on OSX. Our company was commisioned to build a Java application targeted at the Windows platform. Firebird was chosen as the database because of it’s wide platform availability (Windows, Linux, BSD etc) . In particular, Firebird is regarded as mature and stable on Windows, the main target market for the application.

To perform my QA tasks for this project, I elected to install Firebird on my Powerbook. While downloading and installing the MacOSX Firebird package was relatively straightforward, I found myself scrabbling around the net looking for information on how to put my installed Firebird to use under MacOSX.

It is my hope that this document will give others a headstart with Firebird on OSX.

Copyright and Caveats

The structure and content of this document is based on the document entitled Firebird Database on Linux prepared by Pascal Chong on March 9 2003 [URL link now lost]. An annotation pertaining to the licensing of that document appears in the Appendix at the end of this one.

Thank you Pascal, for your original document, even though it was targetted at Linux, helped me up and running with Firebird under OSX .

Why Should I Use Firebird ?

Open Source databases generally suffer from 2 common deficiencies : either they are large, such as PostgreSQL and MySQL, or they lack features and documentation, such as HypersonicSQL or McKoi.

Firebird has a relatively tiny footprint. At about 10MB for the MacOSX ‘packaged’ version. If your requirement is for an “ embedded database ”, bundled with an application server and/or an application, then it is possible to slim down the required files by approx 5Mb. Firebird has all the common features of more mature databases, such as support for transactions, stored procedures, SQL-compliance, etc. If your background is in DB2 and PostgreSQL, the syntax is very similar, and the data types and data handling may seem very familiar, such as the mandatory “ single-quotes ” for strings.

The design emphasis for Firebird seems to be on small, fast and minimum management. This is ideal for developers who need a database for storage, but do not want to spend too much time on tuning the database for performance. In many situations you may not even need stored procedures, or do complex table joins. In such cases, Firebird is the ideal compromise between size and functionality.

Источник

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