DB Browser for SQLite
Table of Contents
- DB Browser for SQLite
What it is
DB Browser for SQLite (DB4S) is a high quality, visual, open source tool to create, design, and edit database files compatible with SQLite.
DB4S is for users and developers who want to create, search, and edit databases. DB4S uses a familiar spreadsheet-like interface, so complicated SQL commands do not have to be learned.
Controls and wizards are available for users to:
- Create and compact database files
- Create, define, modify and delete tables
- Create, define, and delete indexes
- Browse, edit, add, and delete records
- Search records
- Import and export records as text
- Import and export tables from/to CSV files
- Import and export databases from/to SQL dump files
- Issue SQL queries and inspect the results
- Examine a log of all SQL commands issued by the application
- Plot simple graphs based on table or query data
What it is not
Even though DB4S comes with a spreadsheet-like interface, it is not meant to replace your spreadsheet application. We implement a few convenience functions which go beyond a simple database frontend but do not add them when they do not make sense in a database context or are so complex to implement that they will only ever be a poor replacement for your favorite spreadsheet application. We are a small team with limited time after all. Thanks for your understanding :)
Wiki
For user and developer documentation, check out our Wiki at: https://github.com/sqlitebrowser/sqlitebrowser/wiki.
Continuous, Nightly builds
Download continuous builds for AppImage, macOS and Windows here:
Note: A continuous build is generated when a new commit is added to the
master
branch.
Download nightly builds for Windows and macOS here:
Windows
Download Windows releases here:
Or use Chocolatey:
choco install sqlitebrowser
Or use winget:
winget install -e --id DBBrowserForSQLite.DBBrowserForSQLite
Continuous, Nightly builds
Continuous builds are available here:
Nightly builds are available here:
macOS
DB Browser for SQLite works well on macOS.
- macOS 10.15 (Catalina) - 14.0 (Sonoma) are tested and known to work.
Stable release
Download macOS releases here:
The latest macOS binary can be installed via Homebrew Cask:
brew install --cask db-browser-for-sqlite
Continuous, Nightly builds
Continuous builds are available here:
Nightly builds are available here:
and also you can be installed via Homebrew Cask:
brew tap homebrew/cask-versions
# for the version without SQLCipher support
brew install --cask db-browser-for-sqlite-nightly
# for the version with SQLCipher support
brew install --cask db-browser-for-sqlcipher-nightly
It also has its own Homebrew tap the include Cask for older version.
For more information, see the following: https://github.com/sqlitebrowser/homebrew-tap
Linux
DB Browser for SQLite works well on Linux.
Arch Linux
Arch Linux provides an up to date version
Install with the following command:
sudo pacman -S sqlitebrowser
Debian
Debian focuses more on stability rather than newest features.
Therefore packages will typically contain an older (but well tested) version, compared to the latest release.
Update the cache using:
sudo apt-get update
Install the package using:
sudo apt-get install sqlitebrowser
Fedora
Install for Fedora (i386 and x86_64) by issuing the following command:
sudo dnf install sqlitebrowser
openSUSE
sudo zypper install sqlitebrowser
Ubuntu and Derivatives
Stable release
For Ubuntu and derivatives, @deepsidhu1313 provides a PPA with the latest release here:
To add this PPA just type in this command in terminal:
sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:linuxgndu/sqlitebrowser
Then update the cache using:
sudo apt-get update
Install the package using:
sudo apt-get install sqlitebrowser
Packages for Older Ubuntu releases are supported while launchpad keeps building those or if Older Ubuntu release has dependency packages that are required to build the latest version of Sqlitebrowser. We don't remove builds from our ppa repos, so users can still install older version of sqlitebrowser if they like. Alternatively Linux users can also switch to Snap packages if Snap packages are supported by the distro they are using.
Nightly builds
Nightly builds are available here:
To add this PPA, type these commands into the terminal:
sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:linuxgndu/sqlitebrowser-testing
Then update the cache using:
sudo apt-get update
Install the package using:
sudo apt-get install sqlitebrowser
Other Linux
On others, compile DB4S using the instructions in BUILDING.md.
FreeBSD
DB Browser for SQLite works well on FreeBSD, and there is a port for it (thanks
to lbartoletti 😄).
DB4S can be installed
using either this command:
make -C /usr/ports/databases/sqlitebrowser install
or this command:
pkg install sqlitebrowser
Snap packages
Snap Nightlies
snap install sqlitebrowser --devmode
Snap Stable
snap install sqlitebrowser
Compiling
Instructions for compiling on Windows, macOS, Linux, and FreeBSD are in BUILDING.
X (Known as Twitter)
Follow us on X: https://x.com/sqlitebrowser
Website
Old project page
Releases
- Version 3.12.2 released - 2021-05-18
- Version 3.12.1 released - 2020-11-09
- Version 3.12.0 released - 2020-06-16
- Version 3.11.2 released - 2019-04-03
- Version 3.11.1 released - 2019-02-18
- Version 3.11.0 released - 2019-02-07
- Version 3.10.1 released - 2017-09-20
- Version 3.10.0 released - 2017-08-20
- Version 3.9.1 released - 2016-10-03
- Version 3.9.0 released - 2016-08-24
- Version 3.8.0 released - 2015-12-25
- Version 3.7.0 released - 2015-06-14
- Version 3.6.0 released - 2015-04-27
- Version 3.5.1 released - 2015-02-08
- Version 3.5.0 released - 2015-01-31
- Version 3.4.0 released - 2014-10-29
- Version 3.3.1 released - 2014-08-31 - Project renamed from "SQLite Database Browser"
- Version 3.3.0 released - 2014-08-24
- Version 3.2.0 released - 2014-07-06
- Version 3.1.0 released - 2014-05-17
- Version 3.0.3 released - 2014-04-28
- Version 3.0.2 released - 2014-02-12
- Version 3.0.1 released - 2013-12-02
- Version 3.0 released - 2013-09-15
- Version 3.0rc1 released - 2013-09-09 - Project now on GitHub
- Version 2.0b1 released - 2009-12-10 - Based on Qt4.6
- Version 1.2 released - 2005-04-05
- Version 1.1 released - 2004-07-20
- Version 1.01 released - 2003-10-02
- Version 1.0 released to public domain - 2003-08-19
History
This program was developed originally by Mauricio Piacentini (@piacentini) from Tabuleiro Producoes as the Arca Database Browser. The original version was used as a free companion tool to the Arca Database Xtra, a commercial product that embeds SQLite databases with some additional extensions to handle compressed and binary data.
The original code was trimmed and adjusted to be compatible with standard SQLite 2.x databases. The resulting program was renamed SQLite Database Browser, and released into the Public Domain by Mauricio. Icons were contributed by Raquel Ravanini, also from Tabuleiro. Jens Miltner (@jmiltner) contributed the code to support SQLite 3.x databases for the 1.2 release.
Pete Morgan (@daffodil) created an initial project on GitHub with the code in 2012, where several contributors fixed and improved pieces over the years. René Peinthor (@rp-) and Martin Kleusberg (@MKleusberg) then became involved, and have been the main driving force from that point. Justin Clift (@justinclift) helps out with testing on OSX, and started the new github.com/sqlitebrowser organisation on GitHub.
John T. Haller, of PortableApps.com fame, created the new logo. He based it on the Tango icon set (public domain).
In August 2014, the project was renamed to "Database Browser for SQLite" at the request of Richard Hipp (creator of SQLite), as the previous name was creating unintended support issues.
In September 2014, the project was renamed to "DB Browser for SQLite", to avoid confusion with an existing application called "Database Browser".
Contributors
View the list by going to the Contributors tab.
License
DB Browser for SQLite is bi-licensed under the Mozilla Public License Version 2, as well as the GNU General Public License Version 3 or later.
Modification or redistribution is permitted under the conditions of these licenses.
Check LICENSE-EXTENSIONS
for other rights regarding included SQLite extensions in macOS builds.
Check LICENSE-PLUGINS
for other rights regarding included third-party resources.