pgloader/docs/ref/fixed.rst
Dimitri Fontaine 25c79dfebc Switch the documentation to using Sphinx.
The website is moving to pgloader.org and readthedocs.io is going to be
integrated. Let's see what happens. The docs build fine locally with the
sphinx tools and the docs/Makefile.

Having separate files for the documentation should help ease the maintenance
and add new topics, such as support for Common Lisp Hackers level docs,
which are currently missing.
2017-12-21 17:45:09 +01:00

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ReStructuredText

Loading Fixed Cols File Formats
===============================
This command instructs pgloader to load data from a text file containing
columns arranged in a *fixed size* manner. Here's an example::
LOAD FIXED
FROM inline
(
a from 0 for 10,
b from 10 for 8,
c from 18 for 8,
d from 26 for 17 [null if blanks, trim right whitespace]
)
INTO postgresql:///pgloader
TARGET TABLE fixed
(
a, b,
c time using (time-with-no-separator c),
d
)
WITH truncate
SET work_mem to '14MB',
standard_conforming_strings to 'on'
BEFORE LOAD DO
$$ drop table if exists fixed; $$,
$$ create table fixed (
a integer,
b date,
c time,
d text
);
$$;
01234567892008052011431250firstline
01234562008052115182300left blank-padded
12345678902008052208231560another line
2345609872014092914371500
2345678902014092914371520
The `fixed` format command accepts the following clauses and options.
Fixed File Format Source Specification: FROM
--------------------------------------------
Filename where to load the data from. Accepts an *ENCODING* option. Use the
`--list-encodings` option to know which encoding names are supported.
The filename may be enclosed by single quotes, and could be one of the
following special values:
- *inline*
The data is found after the end of the parsed commands. Any number
of empty lines between the end of the commands and the beginning of
the data is accepted.
- *stdin*
Reads the data from the standard input stream.
- *FILENAMES MATCHING*
The whole *matching* clause must follow the following rule::
[ ALL FILENAMES | [ FIRST ] FILENAME ]
MATCHING regexp
[ IN DIRECTORY '...' ]
The *matching* clause applies given *regular expression* (see above
for exact syntax, several options can be used here) to filenames.
It's then possible to load data from only the first match of all of
them.
The optional *IN DIRECTORY* clause allows specifying which directory
to walk for finding the data files, and can be either relative to
where the command file is read from, or absolute. The given
directory must exists.
Fields Specifications
---------------------
The *FROM* option also supports an optional comma separated list of *field*
names describing what is expected in the `FIXED` data file.
Each field name is composed of the field name followed with specific reader
options for that field. Supported per-field reader options are the
following, where only *start* and *length* are required.
- *start*
Position in the line where to start reading that field's value. Can
be entered with decimal digits or `0x` then hexadecimal digits.
- *length*
How many bytes to read from the *start* position to read that
field's value. Same format as *start*.
Those optional parameters must be enclosed in square brackets and
comma-separated:
- *terminated by*
See the description of *field terminated by* below.
The processing of this option is not currently implemented.
- *date format*
When the field is expected of the date type, then this option allows
to specify the date format used in the file.
Date format string are template strings modeled against the
PostgreSQL `to_char` template strings support, limited to the
following patterns:
- YYYY, YYY, YY for the year part
- MM for the numeric month part
- DD for the numeric day part
- HH, HH12, HH24 for the hour part
- am, AM, a.m., A.M.
- pm, PM, p.m., P.M.
- MI for the minutes part
- SS for the seconds part
- MS for the milliseconds part (4 digits)
- US for the microseconds part (6 digits)
- unparsed punctuation signs: - . * # @ T / \ and space
Here's an example of a *date format* specification::
column-name [date format 'YYYY-MM-DD HH24-MI-SS.US']
- *null if*
This option takes an argument which is either the keyword *blanks*
or a double-quoted string.
When *blanks* is used and the field value that is read contains only
space characters, then it's automatically converted to an SQL `NULL`
value.
When a double-quoted string is used and that string is read as the
field value, then the field value is automatically converted to an
SQL `NULL` value.
- *trim both whitespace*, *trim left whitespace*, *trim right whitespace*
This option allows to trim whitespaces in the read data, either from
both sides of the data, or only the whitespace characters found on
the left of the streaing, or only those on the right of the string.
Fixed File Format Loading Options: WITH
---------------------------------------
When loading from a `FIXED` file, the following options are supported:
- *truncate*
When this option is listed, pgloader issues a `TRUNCATE` command
against the PostgreSQL target table before reading the data file.
- *disable triggers*
When this option is listed, pgloader issues an `ALTER TABLE ...
DISABLE TRIGGER ALL` command against the PostgreSQL target table
before copying the data, then the command `ALTER TABLE ... ENABLE
TRIGGER ALL` once the `COPY` is done.
This option allows loading data into a pre-existing table ignoring
the *foreign key constraints* and user defined triggers and may
result in invalid *foreign key constraints* once the data is loaded.
Use with care.
- *skip header*
Takes a numeric value as argument. Instruct pgloader to skip that
many lines at the beginning of the input file.