Use the SYSCS_UTIL.SYSCS_IMPORT_TABLE_LOBS_FROM_EXTFILE system
procedure to import data to a table, where the LOB data is stored in a separate
file. The main import file contains all of the other data and a reference
to the location of the LOB data.
Syntax
SYSCS_UTIL.SYSCS_IMPORT_TABLE_LOBS_FROM_EXTFILE (
IN SCHEMANAME VARCHAR(128),
IN TABLENAME VARCHAR(128),
IN FILENAME VARCHAR(32672),
IN COLUMNDELIMITER CHAR(1),
IN CHARACTERDELIMITER CHAR(1),
IN CODESET VARCHAR(128),
IN REPLACE SMALLINT)
)
The import utility looks in the main import file for a
reference to the location of the LOB data.
- SCHEMANAME
- Specifies the schema of the table. You can specify a NULL value to use
the default schema name. The SCHEMANAME parameter takes
an input argument that is a VARCHAR (128) data type.
- TABLENAME
- Specifies the name of the table into which the data is to be imported.
This table cannot be a system table or a declared temporary table. The string
must exactly match case of the table name. Specifying a NULL value results
in an error. The TABLENAME parameter takes an input argument
that is a VARCHAR (128) data type.
- FILENAME
- Specifies the name of the file that contains the data to be imported.
If the path is omitted, the current working directory is used. The specified
location of the file should refer to the server side location if using the
Network Server. Specifying a NULL value results in an error. The FILENAME parameter
takes an input argument that is a VARCHAR (32672) data type.
- COLUMNDELIMITER
- Specifies a column delimiter. The specified character is used in place
of a comma to signify the end of a column. You can specify a NULL value to
use the default value of a comma. The COLUMNDELIMITER parameter
takes an input argument that is a CHAR (1) data type.
- CHARACTERDELIMITER
- Specifies a character delimiter. The specified character is used in place
of double quotation marks to enclose a character string. You can specify a
NULL value to use the default value of a double quotation mark. The CHARACTERDELIMITER parameter
takes an input argument that is a CHAR (1) data type.
- CODESET
- Specifies the code set of the data in the input file. The code set name
should be one of the Java-supported character encoding sets. Data is converted
from the specified code set to the database code set (UTF-8). You can specify
a NULL value to interpret the data file in the same code set as the JVM in
which it is being executed. The CODESET parameter takes
an input argument that is a VARCHAR (128) data type.
- REPLACE
- A non-zero value for the replace parameter will import in REPLACE mode,
while a zero value will import in INSERT mode. REPLACE mode deletes all existing
data from the table by truncating the table and inserts the imported data.
The table definition and the index definitions are not changed. You can only
import with REPLACE mode if the table already exists. INSERT mode adds the
imported data to the table without changing the existing table data. Specifying
a NULL value results in an error. The REPLACE parameter
takes an input argument that is a SMALLINT data type.
If you create a schema, table, or column name as a non-delimited
identifier, you must pass the name to the import procedure using all uppercase
characters. If you created a schema, table, or column name as a delimited
identifier, you must pass the name to the import procedure using the same
case that was used when it was created.
Execute privileges
If authentication and SQL authorization are both enabled, only the
database owner has
execute privileges on this procedure by default. See "Enabling user
authentication" and "Setting the SQL standard authorization mode" in the
Derby Developer's Guide for more information. The
database owner can grant access to other users. The user must also have INSERT
privileges on the table.
Usage
This procedure will read the LOB data using
the reference that is stored in the main import file. If you are importing
from a non-Derby source, the format of the reference to the LOB stored in
the main import file must be lobsFileName.Offset.length/.
- Offset is position in the external file in bytes
- length is the size of the LOB column data in bytes
For additional information on using this procedure, see the section
"Importing and exporting data" in the
Derby Server and Administration Guide.
Example importing data from a main import file that contains
references which point to a separate file that contains LOB data
The
following example shows how to import data into the STAFF table in
a sample database from a delimited data file staff.del. This
example defines a comma as the column delimiter. The data will be appended
to the existing data in the table.
CALL SYSCS_UTIL.SYSCS_IMPORT_TABLE_LOBS_FROM_EXTFILE(
'APP','STAFF','c:\data\staff.del',',','"','UTF-8',0);