![]() Unfortunately Sequel Pro doesn’t support that, however, as I said, it offers the possibility of writing your own “bundle” (effectively a plugin). Redmine supports wiki text - and this is where HeidiSQL came in handy as you could select a few rows of data and it allowed you to copy that to clipboard as wiki text/table so you could then just paste it into Redmine and have the data formatted and therefore easy to read. (saves me running the same SELECT over and over again every time I need to check a campaign flag for instance). In Cognitive Match we use Redmine internally as our task tracking system, and when dealing with production investigation, I found myself quite often having to copy and paste rows of data from MySQL into Redmine - either so data can be investigated/approved by colleagues, or simply as an effective way of “saving to stack” row ID’s, campaign settings etc. Now that I found to be cool because I don’t want to learn a new scripting/programming language for each product which allows me to write my own plugins. One of the good things I found about it, is it offers a plugin framework ( bundles) which allows you to write your own bundles - and even better, these can be written in Bash script, or, any other scripting language you can shebang from bash. I have to admit it doesn’t yet rival with HeidiSQL but like all the open-source projects, they had to start somewhere so a bit of patience is required. So digging around I found this open source (hence free) client called Sequel Pro. You can of course use the MySQL Workbench but I found it clunky and not that helpful to be honest. Some of you might know that I’ve moved to Mac recently (no comment!) - as such I had to ditch the HeidiSQL client for MySQL (booo! why does it only run on Windows?) and had to figure out another handy MySQL client which works on Mac OS X. Posted August 16th, 2011 by Liv & filed under Blogroll, News, Tech. I am not a ‘power user’ by any means, but I am sure many Mac users who need to access databases will find Sequel Ace the right tool for the job.Sequel Pro Bundles: Copy As HTML, Copy As Wiki Table, Copy as CSV It also returns some of the features I have missed in the last versions of ‘Pro’, and offers more besides. The earlier version (‘Pro’) was not slow, and perhaps it’s the new M1 chip I am experiencing, but Sequel Ace seems fast. It’s very early days – I downloaded and installed Sequel Ace earlier today, but so far I am impressed with the speed of it. pem files, then Sequel Pro will offer you a handy ‘recent locations’ option to get to wherever you store your. pem files in the ~/.ssh folder so you will need to navigate around. ![]() ![]() One other thing, when connecting through SSH, Sequel Ace doesn’t automatically search for your. ![]() However, I’m one of those that has a local copy (encrypted of course) of things like database passwords. Then, search google for Harry Bailey’s excellent article on – it’s all don’t take any responsibility for the details in the article, but I read through it and it seemed perfectly reasonable to me. If not, you’ve got some work to do, diving into the guts of your OS and moving things around.Īs with anything, please make a backup of the files and work on the copies, rather than the originals… just in case! Fortunately, you’ve got a few options.įirstly, did you happen to keep a note of your passwords for each database somewhere handy? If so, you’ll be best off just re-creating those favourites, by typing in the credentials for each that you need. “What about all those saved favourites…?” I hear you cry! And you’re right – there is a bit of work to do if you’ve got some favourites that you need to open on Sequel Ace that you used to have on Sequel Pro. It’s updated and works on my M1 and Big Sur. Sequel Ace is available in the Apple App store, and is the new database management tool, maintained by developers from Sequel Pro. RIP, Sequel Pro… and welcome to Sequel Ace! It won’t work, and since it is not being actively developed, will never work on Big Sur. However, by far the biggest issue (for me) is the lowly ‘Sequel Pro’ software I’ve been using for years to access databases on different servers. The code doesn’t exist to allow Windows to run on the M1 chip. The main one being anything ‘Microsoft’ now won’t work – for example, running VMWare and having a Windows virtual machine just isn’t happening right now. Yes, it’s a lovely piece of silicon, and is a good deal faster to use in day to day operations than the older Intel designed chip, but of course has introduced a few snags. This is further compounded by moving off Intel chips to the new Apple M1 chip. I upgraded my OS to Big Sur and as expected a number of issues arose due to incompatible software.
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