From: | Allan Kamau <allank(at)sanbi(dot)ac(dot)za> |
---|---|
To: | Sam Mason <sam(at)samason(dot)me(dot)uk>, pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Piping CSV data to psql when executing COPY .. FROM STDIN |
Date: | 2008-10-28 13:11:05 |
Message-ID: | 49070F69.6080301@sanbi.ac.za |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-general |
Sam, I have been unable to understand your shell script well enough to
use it. Seems am slow this afternoon :-)
On this list I saw a message detailing using copy as illustrated below
(see <code/>)when I run this command I get the following output (see
<output/>)
<output>
COPY abc FROM STDIN WITH CSV HEADER;
\.
1 qrst a
2 zvy b
</output>
As you can see the ./ is placed a the top instead of the bottom of the
output. The does create some error when I run this output via psql.
I then get a datatype error when I pass to psql the following (edited)
sql from a text editor (see <sql/>)
<sql>
COPY abc FROM STDIN WITH CSV HEADER;
1 qrst a
2 zvy b
\.
</sql>
The error reads as follows
<output2>
psql:sql/some2.sql:7: ERROR: invalid input syntax for integer: "1
qrst a"
CONTEXT: COPY item_major, line 1, column id: "1 qrst a"
</output2>
<code>
\echo 'COPY abc FROM STDIN WITH CSV HEADER;'
COPY
(
SELECT * FROM abc
)
to STDOUT
WITH delimiter E'\t'
\echo '\\.'
</code>
Sam Mason wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 28, 2008 at 01:25:00PM +0200, Allan Kamau wrote:
>
>> The alternative I am attempting is to use "COPY abc FROM STDIN WITH
>> HEADER". I pipe the contents of the CSV file on my PC to the psql
>> command (that connects to the remote PC) while issuing this copy command.
>> This does seems not to work.
>>
>
> It does whenever I try it and if you've ever restored from a pg_dump
> then you've used it as well!
>
>
>> Is there a way around it.
>>
>
> When I've had a CSV file and needed to bung it into a database, I've
> tended to end up with shell scripts like this before:
>
> ( echo 'COPY abc FROM STDIN WITH CSV HEADER;'
> cat "$1"
> echo '\.'
> ) | psql
>
> an alternative is to use the "\copy" feature inside psql that does this
> sort of thing internally. One thing to be aware of is that it doesn't
> expect a semicolon at the end of the line, but is otherwise the same as
> the SQL COPY command.
>
>
> Sam
>
>
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