RE: RIP DDL Wizard

From: Jeff Smith <jeff.d.smith_at_oracle.com>
Date: Fri, 8 Mar 2019 05:36:26 -0800 (PST)
Message-ID: <cf155b26-0a5f-4e76-835e-b4f12363c3b0_at_default>



I’ve never heard of it, but I can imagine it’s use cases.

 

What could it do that SQLcl’s DDL command could not? Maybe there are some ER’s we could address on our tooling side to fill any gaps they left behind.

 

From: Jacek Gębal <jgebal_at_gmail.com> Sent: Wednesday, March 6, 2019 5:16 PM
To: dbakevlar_at_gmail.com
Cc: MAdams_at_equian.com; oracle-l_at_freelists.org Subject: Re: RIP DDL Wizard

 

utPLSQL was recently supported by RedGate and we're getting interest from their side in unit testing for Oracle PL/SQL & SQL.

It seems strange that they are giving up on some of their products for Oracle DB given their overall interest in DB DevOps and CI/CD.

 

Cheers

Jacek

 

On Wed, 6 Mar 2019 at 20:31, Kellyn Pot'Vin-Gorman <HYPERLINK "mailto:dbakevlar_at_gmail.com"dbakevlar_at_gmail.com> wrote:

I'm sorry to hear this and will be giving the folks over there a hard time about it.  Although Redgate doesn't have the following on the Oracle side like they do on the Microsoft SQL side, its still a shame to see it go.  With their huge impact on the DevOps, CI/CD with their SQL Provision, (think thin clone with data masking) product plugged in with their SQL Toolbelt, they've got quite the customer base, with Oracle supported stuff just a side gig, (same with MySQL and other db platforms).  

 

Good to know about DDL Wizard.

 

         

Kellyn Pot'Vin-Gorman

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On Wed, Mar 6, 2019 at 3:03 PM Matt Adams <HYPERLINK "mailto:MAdams_at_equian.com"MAdams_at_equian.com> wrote:

I just found out that Redgate (the purchasers of the DDL Wizard developers Net 2000 LTD.)  will no longer supply license keys for any version, including the free/unsupported version.   Which means that while the software can still be downloaded, it’s useless.

 

I know that DDL Wizard has largely been replaced by the DBMS_METADATA package and features built into software packages like TOAD and SQL DEVELOPER, but I still used it on a regular basis and still loved it.  Unfortunately, my previous laptop has died, and I cannot run DDL Wizard on the new one.

 

This tool was of tremendous benefit in it’s heyday and I for one will miss it.

 

Good bye DDL Wizard.   Rest in Piece.

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Received on Fri Mar 08 2019 - 14:36:26 CET

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