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SQuirreL SQL

SQuirreL SQL Client is a graphical Java program that will allow you to view the structure of a JDBC compliant database, browse the data in tables, issue SQL commands etc, see Introduction. The minimum version of Java supported is 1.6.x as of SQuirreL version 3.0. See the Old Versions page for versions of SQuirreL that will work with older versions of Java.


SQuirreL's functionality can be extended through the use of plugins.

A short introduction can be found here. To see the change history (including changes not yet released) click here.

For a more detailed introduction see the English or German of our paper on SQuirreL.

Susan Cline graciously took the time to document the steps she followed to setup an Apache Derby database from scratch and use the SQuirreL SQL Client to explore it.

Quite some time ago Kulvir Singh Bhogal wrote a great tutorial on SQuirreL and published it at the IBM developerWorks site. He has kindly allowed us to mirror it locally. The tutorial is not really up to date but especially for doing the first steps it is still of help.

SQuirrel was originally released under the GNU General Public License. Since version 1.1beta2 it has been released under the GNU Lesser General Public License.
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SQuirreL SQL is similar to:

Firebird, nuBuilder

Who uses SQuirreL SQL:

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Features:

  • - easily view and edit data in any JDBC-compliant database,
  • - view the database’s meta-data,
  • - work with multiple databases on both local and remote machines,
  • - use a single, consistent interface to work with different database engines, and
  • - expand the tool’s capabilities and include DB-specific functionality using plugins.
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More Reviews

Great -
~ anonymous on Feb 25, 2010

Great - I use it all the time to connect to MySQL, SQL Server, PostgresQL. The ctrl+space context help is wonderful, and works the same on ALL databases I have tried.
~ Scott Carr on Feb 18, 2010

Great - auto-complete. yum.
~ Virgil Griffith on Nov 24, 2009

Great - Very stable as of 3.x. Auto-completion is hard to beat. Connects to DB2 and MySQL all day every day without a complaint.
~ anonymous on Nov 21, 2009

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