SQL Server Features Not Available in MariaDB
Contents
When planning a migration between different DBMSs, one of the most important aspects to consider is that the new database system will probably miss some features supported by the old one. This is not relevant for all users. The most widely used features are supported by most DBMSs. However, it is important to make a list of unsupported features and check which of them are currently used by applications. In most cases it is possible to implement such features on the application side, or simply stop using them.
This page has a list of SQL Server features that are not supported in MariaDB. The list is not exhaustive.
Introduced in SQL Server versions older than 2016
- Full outer joins.
GROUP BY CUBE
syntax.MERGE
statement.- In MariaDB, indexes are always ascending. Defining them as
ASC
orDESC
has no effect.- For single-column indexes, the performance difference between an
ORDER BY ... ASC
andDESC
is negligible. - For multiple-column indexes, an index may be unusable for certain queries because
DESC
is not supported. In some cases, a generated column can be used to invert the order of an index (for example, the expression0 - price
can be indexed to index the prices in a descending order).
- For single-column indexes, the performance difference between an
- The WITH syntax is currently only supported for the
SELECT
statement. - Filtered indexes (
CREATE INDEX ... WHERE
). - Autonomous transactions.
- User-defined types.
- Rules.
- Triggers don't support the following features:
- Triggers on DDL and login.
INSTEAD OF
triggers.- The
DISABLE TRIGGER
syntax.
- Cursors advanced features.
- Global cursors.
DELETE ... CURRENT OF
,UPDATE ... CURRENT OF
statements: MariaDB cursors are read-only.- Specifying a direction (MariaDB cursors can only advance by one row).
- Synonyms.
- Table variables.
- Queues.
- XML indexes, XML schema collection, XQuery.
- User access to system functionalities, for example:
- Running system commands (
xp_cmdshell()
). - Sending emails (
sp_send_dbmail()
). - Sending HTTP requests.
- Running system commands (
- External languages, external libraries (MariaDB only supports procedural SQL and PL/SQL).
- Negative permissions (the
DENY
command). - Snapshot replication. See Provisioning a Slave.
Introduced in SQL Server 2016
- Native data masking
- PolyBase (however, MariaDB 10.5 supports accessing Amazon S3 via the S3 storage engine and several DBMSs via CONNECT)
- R and Python services
- ColumnStore indexes. MariaDB has a storage engine called ColumnStore, but this is a completely different feature.
Introduced in SQL Server 2017
- Adaptive joins
- Graph SQL
See Also
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