May 07, 2020 Teradata SQL Assistant Java Edition release 13.0 is available for download. It provides an information discovery tool for retrieving and displaying data from Teradata Database systems. It can be run on multiple operating system platforms, such as Windows, Linux, and Mac OSX. Most WebDAV clients, such as Microsoft Miniredirector/Web Folders, Mac OS X Finder and Microsoft Office require Class 2 server. If they discover a Class 1 server they will treat it as read-only. To create a Class 2 server, you must implement ILockAsync interface on your folder and file items.
This topic lists the requirements to use the Microsoft ODBC Driver for SQL Server on Linux and macOS.
SQL version compatibility
The Linux and macOS drivers SQL version compatibility is the same as the Windows drivers SQL version compatibility.
Operating system support
Versions 17, 13.1, and 13 of the Linux and macOS drivers are supported on the x64 architecture of the following operating systems:
1 ODBC Driver 17 supports SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 SP4 only
The installation packages for the Microsoft ODBC Driver 13, 13.1, and 17 for SQL Server on Linux and macOS resolve the driver's dependencies automatically when installed using the package management system of your distribution, as described in Install the ODBC Driver (Linux) and Install the ODBC Driver (macOS).
Microsoft ODBC Driver 11 for SQL Server
See Also
Installing the Driver Manager
Known Issues in this Version of the Driver Release Notes
Here I’ll show you how to get SQL Server up and running on your Mac in less than half an hour. And the best part is, you’ll have SQL Server running locally without needing any virtualization software.
Prior to SQL Server 2017, if you wanted to run SQL Server on your Mac, you first had to create a virtual machine (using VirtualBox, Parallels Desktop, VMware Fusion, or Bootcamp), then install Windows onto that VM, then finally SQL Server. This is still a valid option depending on your requirements (here’s how to install SQL Server on a Mac with VirtualBox if you’d like to try that method).
Starting with SQL Server 2017, you can now install SQL Server directly on to a Linux machine. And because macOS is Unix based (and Linux is Unix based), you can run SQL Server for Linux on your Mac. The way to do this is to run SQL Server on Docker.
So let’s go ahead and install Docker. Then we’ll download and install SQL Server.
Mac Os Sql ServerA SQL Server GUI for your Mac – Azure Data Studio
Azure Data Studio (formerly SQL Operations Studio) is a free GUI management tool that you can use to manage SQL Server on your Mac. You can use it to create and manage databases, write queries, backup and restore databases, and more.
Azure Data Studio is available on Windows, Mac and Linux.
Here are some articles/tutorials I’ve written for Azure Data Studio:
Another Free SQL Server GUI – DBeaver
Another SQL Server GUI tool that you can use on your Mac (and Windows/Linux/Solaris) is DBeaver.
DBeaver is a free, open source database management tool that can be used on most database management systems (such as MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, SQLite, Oracle, DB2, SQL Server, Sybase, Microsoft Access, Teradata, Firebird, Derby, and more).
Sql Express For Mac Os X 10 12![]()
I wrote a little introduction to DBeaver, or you can go straight to the DBeaver download page and try it out with your new SQL Server installation.
Sql Server For Mac Os X Free DownloadLimitations of SQL Server for Linux/Mac
SQL Server 2017 for Linux does have some limitations (at least, in its initial release). The Linux release doesn’t include many of the extra services that are available in the Windows release, such as Analysis Services, Reporting Services, etc. Here’s a list of what’s available and what’s not on SQL Server 2017 for Linux.
Another limitation is that SQL Server Management Studio is not available on Mac or Linux. SSMS a full-blown GUI management for SQL Server, and it provides many more features than Azure Data Studio and DBeaver (at least at the time of writing). You can still use SSMS on a Windows machine to connect to SQL Server on a Linux or Mac machine, but you just can’t install it locally on the Linux or Mac machine.
If you need any of the features not supported in SQL Server for Linux, you’ll need SQL Server for Windows. However, you can still run SQL Server for Windows on your Mac by using virtualization software. Here’s how to install SQL Server for Windows on a Mac using VirtualBox.
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