First a design question; why should it be in a database? SGML files are pretty well-defined and few applications need a lot of them.
Second: Being in a database suggests that a partial SGML file is good enough for most purposes. Perhaps. How do you keep them consistent?
Large file support is strictly up to the OS. Perl will usually accomodate itself to whatever the OS allows, so long as you compile your own perl.
After Compline,
Zaxo
In reply to Re: converting a large SGML file into a database
by Zaxo
in thread converting a large SGML file into a database
by dannoura
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