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SQL*Loader FAQ |
+91-9080125737 |
SQL*Loader is a bulk loader utility used for moving data from external files into the Oracle database. Its syntax is similar to that of the DB2 load utility, but comes with more options. SQL*Loader supports various load formats, selective loading, and multi-table loads.
SQL*Loader (sqlldr) is the utility to use for high performance data loads. The data can be loaded from any text file and inserted into the database.
One can load data into an Oracle database by using the sqlldr (sqlload on some platforms) utility. Invoke the utility without arguments to get a list of available parameters. Look at the following example:
sqlldr username@server/password control=loader.ctl sqlldr username/password@server control=loader.ctl
This sample control file (loader.ctl) will load an external data file containing delimited data:
load data infile 'c:\data\mydata.csv' into table emp fields terminated by "," optionally enclosed by '"' ( empno, empname, sal, deptno )
The mydata.csv file may look like this:
10001,"Scott Tiger", 1000, 40 10002,"Frank Naude", 500, 20
Optionally, you can work with tabulation delimited files by using one of the following syntaxes:
fields terminated by "\t" fields terminated by X'09'
Additionally, if your file was in Unicode, you could make the following addition.
load data CHARACTERSET UTF16 infile 'c:\data\mydata.csv' into table emp fields terminated by "," optionally enclosed by '"' ( empno, empname, sal, deptno )
Another Sample control file with in-line data formatted as fix length records. The trick is to specify "*" as the name of the data file, and use BEGINDATA to start the data section in the control file:
load data infile * replace into table departments ( dept position (02:05) char(4), deptname position (08:27) char(20) ) begindata COSC COMPUTER SCIENCE ENGL ENGLISH LITERATURE MATH MATHEMATICS POLY POLITICAL SCIENCE
Open the MS-Excel spreadsheet and save it as a CSV (Comma Separated Values) file. This file can now be copied to the Oracle machine and loaded using the SQL*Loader utility.
Possible problems and workarounds:
The spreadsheet may contain cells with newline characters (ALT+ENTER). SQL*Loader expects the entire record to be on a single line. Run the following macro to remove newline characters (Tools -> Macro -> Visual Basic Editor):
' Removing tabs and carriage returns from worksheet cells Sub CleanUp() Dim TheCell As Range On Error Resume Next For Each TheCell In ActiveSheet.UsedRange With TheCell If .HasFormula = False Then .Value = Application.WorksheetFunction.Clean(.Value) End If End With Next TheCell End Sub
Oracle does not supply any data unload utilities. Here are some workarounds:
Using SQL*Plus
You can use SQL*Plus to select and format your data and then spool it to a file. This example spools out a CSV (comma separated values) file that can be imported into MS-Excel:
set echo off newpage 0 space 0 pagesize 0 feed off head off trimspool on spool oradata.txt select col1 || ',' || col2 || ',' || col3 from tab1 where col2 = 'XYZ'; spool off
Warning: if your data contains a comma, choose another separator that is not in the data. You can also enclose the column that contains the comma between ".
You can also use the "set colsep" command if you don't want to put the commas in by hand. This saves a lot of typing. Example:
set colsep ',' set echo off newpage 0 space 0 pagesize 0 feed off head off trimspool on spool oradata.txt select col1, col2, col3 from tab1 where col2 = 'XYZ'; spool off
Using PL/SQL
PL/SQL's UTL_FILE package can also be used to unload data. Example:
declare fp utl_file.file_type; begin fp := utl_file.fopen('c:\oradata','tab1.txt','w'); utl_file.putf(fp, '%s, %sn', 'TextField', 55); utl_file.fclose(fp); end; /
Using Oracle SQL Developer
The freely downloadable Oracle SQL Developer application is capable of exporting data from Oracle tables in numerous formats, like Excel, SQL insert statements, SQL loader format, HTML, XML, PDF, TEXT, Fixed text, etc.
It can also import data from Excel (.xls), CSV (.csv), Text (.tsv) and DSV (.dsv) formats directly into a database.
Third-party programs
You might also want to investigate third party tools to help you unload data from Oracle. Here are some examples:
Loading delimited (variable length) data
In the first example we will show how delimited (variable length) data can be loaded into Oracle:
LOAD DATA INFILE * INTO TABLE load_delimited_data FIELDS TERMINATED BY "," OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '"' TRAILING NULLCOLS ( data1, data2 ) BEGINDATA 11111,AAAAAAAAAA 22222,"A,B,C,D,"
NOTE: The default data type in SQL*Loader is CHAR(255). To load character fields longer than 255 characters, code the type and length in your control file. By doing this, Oracle will allocate a big enough buffer to hold the entire column, thus eliminating potential "Field in data file exceeds maximum length" errors. Example:
... resume char(4000), ...
Loading positional (fixed length) data
If you need to load positional data (fixed length), look at the following control file example:
LOAD DATA INFILE * INTO TABLE load_positional_data ( data1 POSITION(1:5), data2 POSITION(6:15) ) BEGINDATA 11111AAAAAAAAAA 22222BBBBBBBBBB
For example, position(01:05) will give the 1st to the 5th character (11111 and 22222).
One can skip unwanted header records or continue an interrupted load (for example if you run out of space) by specifying the "SKIP=n" keyword. "n" specifies the number of logical rows to skip. Look at these examples:
OPTIONS (SKIP=5) LOAD DATA INFILE * INTO TABLE load_positional_data ( data1 POSITION(1:5), data2 POSITION(6:15) ) BEGINDATA 11111AAAAAAAAAA 22222BBBBBBBBBB ...
sqlldr userid=ora_id/ora_passwd control=control_file_name.ctl skip=4
If you are continuing a multiple table direct path load, you may need to use the CONTINUE_LOAD clause instead of the SKIP parameter. CONTINUE_LOAD allows you to specify a different number of rows to skip for each of the tables you are loading.
Data can be modified as it loads into the Oracle Database. One can also populate columns with static or derived values. However, this only applies for the conventional load path (and not for direct path loads). Here are some examples:
LOAD DATA INFILE * INTO TABLE modified_data ( rec_no "my_db_sequence.nextval", region CONSTANT '31', time_loaded "to_char(SYSDATE, 'HH24:MI')", data1 POSITION(1:5) ":data1/100", data2 POSITION(6:15) "upper(:data2)", data3 POSITION(16:22)"to_date(:data3, 'YYMMDD')" ) BEGINDATA 11111AAAAAAAAAA991201 22222BBBBBBBBBB990112
LOAD DATA INFILE 'mail_orders.txt' BADFILE 'bad_orders.txt' APPEND INTO TABLE mailing_list FIELDS TERMINATED BY "," ( addr, city, state, zipcode, mailing_addr "decode(:mailing_addr, null, :addr, :mailing_addr)", mailing_city "decode(:mailing_city, null, :city, :mailing_city)", mailing_state, move_date "substr(:move_date, 3, 2) || substr(:move_date, 7, 2)" )
Loading from multiple input files
One can load from multiple input files provided they use the same record format by repeating the INFILE clause. Here is an example:
LOAD DATA INFILE file1.dat INFILE file2.dat INFILE file3.dat APPEND INTO TABLE emp ( empno POSITION(1:4) INTEGER EXTERNAL, ename POSITION(6:15) CHAR, deptno POSITION(17:18) CHAR, mgr POSITION(20:23) INTEGER EXTERNAL )
Loading into multiple tables
One can also specify multiple "INTO TABLE" clauses in the SQL*Loader control file to load into multiple tables. Look at the following example:
LOAD DATA INFILE * INTO TABLE tab1 WHEN tab = 'tab1' ( tab FILLER CHAR(4), col1 INTEGER ) INTO TABLE tab2 WHEN tab = 'tab2' ( tab FILLER POSITION(1:4), col1 INTEGER ) BEGINDATA tab1|1 tab1|2 tab2|2 tab3|3
The "tab" field is marked as a FILLER as we don't want to load it.
Note the use of "POSITION" on the second routing value (tab = 'tab2'). By default field scanning doesn't start over from the beginning of the record for new INTO TABLE clauses. Instead, scanning continues where it left off. POSITION is needed to reset the pointer to the beginning of the record again. In delimited formats, use "POSITION(1)" after the first column to reset the pointer.
Another example:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'mydata.dat' REPLACE INTO TABLE emp WHEN empno != ' ' ( empno POSITION(1:4) INTEGER EXTERNAL, ename POSITION(6:15) CHAR, deptno POSITION(17:18) CHAR, mgr POSITION(20:23) INTEGER EXTERNAL ) INTO TABLE proj WHEN projno != ' ' ( projno POSITION(25:27) INTEGER EXTERNAL, empno POSITION(1:4) INTEGER EXTERNAL )
Look at this example, (01) is the first character, (30:37) are characters 30 to 37:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'mydata.dat' BADFILE 'mydata.bad' DISCARDFILE 'mydata.dis' APPEND INTO TABLE my_selective_table WHEN (01) <> 'H' and (01) <> 'T' and (30:37) = '20031217' ( region CONSTANT '31', service_key POSITION(01:11) INTEGER EXTERNAL, call_b_no POSITION(12:29) CHAR )
NOTE: SQL*Loader does not allow the use of OR in the WHEN clause. You can only use AND as in the example above! To workaround this problem, code multiple "INTO TABLE ... WHEN" clauses. Here is an example:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'mydata.dat' BADFILE 'mydata.bad' DISCARDFILE 'mydata.dis' APPEND INTO TABLE my_selective_table WHEN (01) <> 'H' and (01) <> 'T' ( region CONSTANT '31', service_key POSITION(01:11) INTEGER EXTERNAL, call_b_no POSITION(12:29) CHAR ) INTO TABLE my_selective_table WHEN (30:37) = '20031217' ( region CONSTANT '31', service_key POSITION(01:11) INTEGER EXTERNAL, call_b_no POSITION(12:29) CHAR )
One cannot use POSITION(x:y) with delimited data. Luckily, from Oracle 8i one can specify FILLER columns. FILLER columns are used to skip columns/fields in the load file, ignoring fields that one does not want. Look at this example:
LOAD DATA TRUNCATE INTO TABLE T1 FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' ( field1, field2 FILLER, field3 )
BOUNDFILLER (available with Oracle 9i and above) can be used if the skipped column's value will be required later again. Here is an example:
LOAD DATA INFILE * TRUNCATE INTO TABLE sometable FIELDS TERMINATED BY "," trailing nullcols ( c1, field2 BOUNDFILLER, field3 BOUNDFILLER, field4 BOUNDFILLER, field5 BOUNDFILLER, c2 ":field2 || :field3", c3 ":field4 + :field5" )
One can create one logical record from multiple physical records using one of the following two clauses:
Using Stream Record format, you can define a record delimiter, so that you're allowed to have the default delimiter ('\n') in the field's content.
After the INFILE clause set the delimiter:
load data infile "test.dat" "str '|\n'" into test_table fields terminated by ';' TRAILING NULLCOLS ( desc, txt )
test.dat:
one line;hello dear world;| two lines;Dear world, hello!;|
Note that this doesn't seem to work with inline data (INFILE * and BEGINDATA).
One cannot, but by setting the ROWS= parameter to a large value, committing can be reduced. Make sure you have big rollback segments ready when you use a high value for ROWS=.
The conventional path loader essentially loads the data by using standard INSERT statements. The direct path loader (DIRECT=TRUE) bypasses much of the logic involved with that, and loads directly into the Oracle data files. More information about the restrictions of direct path loading can be obtained from the Oracle Server Utilities Guide.
Some of the restrictions with direct path loads are:
SQL*Loader can load data from a "primary data file", SDF (Secondary Data file - for loading nested tables and VARRAYs) or LOBFILE. The LOBFILE method provides an easy way to load documents, photos, images and audio clips into BLOB and CLOB columns. Look at this example:
Given the following table:
CREATE TABLE image_table ( image_id NUMBER(5), file_name VARCHAR2(30), image_data BLOB);
Control File:
LOAD DATA INFILE * INTO TABLE image_table REPLACE FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' ( image_id INTEGER(5), file_name CHAR(30), image_data LOBFILE (file_name) TERMINATED BY EOF ) BEGINDATA 001,image1.gif 002,image2.jpg 003,image3.jpg
Specify the character set WE8EBCDIC500 for the EBCDIC data. The following example shows the SQL*Loader controlfile to load a fixed length EBCDIC record into the Oracle Database:
LOAD DATA CHARACTERSET WE8EBCDIC500 INFILE data.ebc "fix 86 buffers 1024" BADFILE data.bad' DISCARDFILE data.dsc' REPLACE INTO TABLE temp_data ( field1 POSITION (1:4) INTEGER EXTERNAL, field2 POSITION (5:6) INTEGER EXTERNAL, field3 POSITION (7:12) INTEGER EXTERNAL, field4 POSITION (13:42) CHAR, field5 POSITION (43:72) CHAR, field6 POSITION (73:73) INTEGER EXTERNAL, field7 POSITION (74:74) INTEGER EXTERNAL, field8 POSITION (75:75) INTEGER EXTERNAL, field9 POSITION (76:86) INTEGER EXTERNAL )
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