Are people, in general, aware that MySQL employs a pluggable storage engine? I wonder if much of the confusion about MySQLs abilities stems from arguments from people aware of it against those that have only ever used the stock engines.
Most people use the default storage engine, without really thinking about it, but almost every project I've worked with recommends innodb - not sure why.
Are people, in general, aware that MySQL employs a pluggable storage engine? I wonder if much of the confusion about MySQLs abilities stems from arguments from people aware of it against those that have only ever used the stock engines.