Sqsh (pronounced skwish) is short for SQshelL (pronounced s-q-shell), it is intended as a replacement for the venerable 'isql' program supplied by SAP Sybase. It came about due to years of frustration of trying to do real work with a program that was never meant to perform real work.
Sqsh is much more than a nice prompt (a la 'dsql', from David B. Joyner), it is intended to provide much of the functionality provided by a good shell, such as variables, aliasing, redirection, pipes, back-grounding, job control, history, command substitution, and dynamic configuration. Also, as a by-product of the design, it is remarkably easy to extend and add functionality.
Sqsh was developped by Scott C. Gray, and is currently maintained by Michael Peppler ([email protected]) and Martin Wesdorp ([email protected]).
Sqsh may be found on the following sites:
https://vonloxley.github.io/sqsh/
http://sourceforge.net/projects/sqsh/
99% of the software that we, the authors of Sqsh, use is free, therefore we like to give back in kind. Sqsh is held under the GNU General Public License (GPL) and therefore may be freely distributed under the terms of this license.
Refer to the INSTALL file for directions on installation.