Am 16.05.2009 um 12:33 schrieb Kyle Sluder:

On Sat, May 16, 2009 at 5:48 AM, Andreas Grosam <agro...@onlinehome.de> wrote:
Given the complexity of Core Data (and the occasionally interspersed
warnings, that this stuff is no "entry level") it sounds silly that it would not support database servers, that is, supporting multi-user, locking and
transactions.

Well then go ahead and call it silly.

Even more, it would in no way an exaggerated asset if it would seamlessly support to create application servers, leveraging DO, and creating web applications with minimal code changes starting from a single- or a client
server model.

There is/was a technology for this called Enterprise Objects
Framework, from which Core Data is descended.

And there's a free clone of EOF which you should be able to use with Cocoa:

GDL2, the GNUstep Database Library 2:

http://www.gnu.org/software/gnustep/experience/GDL2.html

it is released under the GNU LESSER General Public License Version 3 of 29 June 2007 (<http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.html>, <http:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGPL>), that means you are not demanded to release your software under that license too.


regards,

        Lars
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