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COPY(5)
NAME
COPY - copy data between files and tables
SYNOPSIS
COPY table [ ( column [, ...] ) ]
FROM { 'filename' | stdin }
[ [ WITH ]
[ BINARY ]
[ OIDS ]
[ DELIMITER [ AS ] 'delimiter' ]
[ NULL [ AS ] 'null string' ] ]
COPY table [ ( column [, ...] ) ]
TO { 'filename' | stdout }
[ [ WITH ]
[ BINARY ]
[ OIDS ]
[ DELIMITER [ AS ] 'delimiter' ]
[ NULL [ AS ] 'null string' ] ]
INPUTS
table
The name (possibly schema-qualified) of an existing table.
column
An optional list of columns to be copied. If no column list is
specified, all columns will be used.
filename
The absolute Unix path name of the input or output file.
stdin
Specifies that input comes from the client application.
stdout
Specifies that output goes to the client application.
BINARY
Changes the behavior of field formatting, forcing all data to be
stored or read in binary format rather than as text. You can not
specify DELIMITER or NULL in binary mode.
OIDS Specifies copying the internal object id (OID) for each row.
delimiter
The single character that separates fields within each row (line) of
the file.
null string
The string that represents a NULL value. The default is ``\N''
(backslash-N). You might prefer an empty string, for example.
Note: On a copy in, any data item that matches this string will be
stored as a NULL value, so you should make sure that you use the same
string as you used on copy out.
OUTPUTS
COPY The copy completed successfully.
ERROR: reason
The copy failed for the reason stated in the error message.
DESCRIPTION
COPY moves data between PostgreSQL tables and standard file-system files.
COPY TO copies the contents of a table to a file, while COPY FROM copies
data from a file to a table (appending the data to whatever is in the table
already).
If a list of columns is specified, COPY will only copy the data in the
specified columns to or from the file. If there are any columns in the
table that are not in the column list, COPY FROM will insert the default
values for those columns.
COPY with a file name instructs the PostgreSQL backend to directly read
from or write to a file. The file must be accessible to the backend and the
name must be specified from the viewpoint of the backend. When stdin or
stdout is specified, data flows through the client frontend to the backend.
Tip: Do not confuse COPY with the psql instruction \copy. \copy
invokes COPY FROM stdin or COPY TO stdout, and then fetches/stores the
data in a file accessible to the psql client. Thus, file accessibility
and access rights depend on the client rather than the backend when
\copy is used.
NOTES
COPY can only be used with plain tables, not with views.
The BINARY keyword will force all data to be stored/read as binary format
rather than as text. It is somewhat faster than the normal copy command,
but a binary copy file is not portable across machine architectures.
By default, a text copy uses a tab ("\t") character as a delimiter between
fields. The field delimiter may be changed to any other single character
with the keyword DELIMITER. Characters in data fields that happen to match
the delimiter character will be backslash quoted.
You must have select privilege on any table whose values are read by COPY
TO, and insert privilege on a table into which values are being inserted by
COPY FROM. The backend also needs appropriate Unix permissions for any file
read or written by COPY.
COPY FROM will invoke any triggers and check constraints on the destination
table. However, it will not invoke rules.
COPY stops operation at the first error. This should not lead to problems
in the event of a COPY TO, but the target relation will already have
received earlier rows in a COPY FROM. These rows will not be visible or
accessible, but they still occupy disk space. This may amount to a
considerable amount of wasted disk space if the failure happened well into
a large copy operation. You may wish to invoke VACUUM to recover the wasted
space.
Files named in a COPY command are read or written directly by the backend,
not by the client application. Therefore, they must reside on or be
accessible to the database server machine, not the client. They must be
accessible to and readable or writable by the PostgreSQL user (the user ID
the server runs as), not the client. COPY naming a file is only allowed to
database superusers, since it allows reading or writing any file that the
backend has privileges to access.
Tip: The psql instruction \copy reads or writes files on the client
machine with the client's permissions, so it is not restricted to
superusers.
It is recommended that the file name used in COPY always be specified as an
absolute path. This is enforced by the backend in the case of COPY TO, but
for COPY FROM you do have the option of reading from a file specified by a
relative path. The path will be interpreted relative to the backend's
working directory (somewhere below $PGDATA), not the client's working
directory.
FILE FORMATS
TEXT FORMAT
When COPY is used without the BINARY option, the file read or written is a
text file with one line per table row. Columns (attributes) in a row are
separated by the delimiter character. The attribute values themselves are
strings generated by the output function, or acceptable to the input
function, of each attribute's data type. The specified null-value string is
used in place of attributes that are NULL. COPY FROM will raise an error
if any line of the input file contains more or fewer columns than are
expected.
If OIDS is specified, the OID is read or written as the first column,
preceding the user data columns. (An error is raised if OIDS is specified
for a table that does not have OIDs.)
End of data can be represented by a single line containing just backslash-
period (\.). An end-of-data marker is not necessary when reading from a
Unix file, since the end of file serves perfectly well; but an end marker
must be provided when copying data to or from a client application.
Backslash characters (\) may be used in the COPY data to quote data
characters that might otherwise be taken as row or column delimiters. In
particular, the following characters must be preceded by a backslash if
they appear as part of an attribute value: backslash itself, newline, and
the current delimiter character.
The following special backslash sequences are recognized by COPY FROM:
SequenceRepresents\bBackspace (ASCII 8)\fForm feed (ASCII 12)\nNewline
(ASCII 10)\rCarriage return (ASCII 13)\tTab (ASCII 9)\vVertical tab (ASCII
11)\digitsBackslash followed by one to three octal digits specifies the
character with that numeric code Presently, COPY TO will never emit an
octal-digits backslash sequence, but it does use the other sequences listed
above for those control characters.
Never put a backslash before a data character N or period (.). Such pairs
will be mistaken for the default null string or the end-of-data marker,
respectively. Any other backslashed character that is not mentioned in the
above table will be taken to represent itself.
It is strongly recommended that applications generating COPY data convert
data newlines and carriage returns to the \n and \r sequences respectively.
At present (PostgreSQL 7.2 and older versions) it is possible to represent
a data carriage return without any special quoting, and to represent a data
newline by a backslash and newline. However, these representations will not
be accepted by default in future releases.
Note that the end of each row is marked by a Unix-style newline ("\n").
Presently, COPY FROM will not behave as desired if given a file containing
DOS- or Mac-style newlines. This is expected to change in future releases.
BINARY FORMAT
The file format used for COPY BINARY changed in PostgreSQL v7.1. The new
format consists of a file header, zero or more tuples, and a file trailer.
FILE HEADER
The file header consists of 24 bytes of fixed fields, followed by a
variable-length header extension area. The fixed fields are:
Signature
12-byte sequence PGBCOPY\n\377\r\n\0 --- note that the null is a
required part of the signature. (The signature is designed to allow
easy identification of files that have been munged by a non-8-bit-
clean transfer. This signature will be changed by newline-translation
filters, dropped nulls, dropped high bits, or parity changes.)
Integer layout field
int32 constant 0x01020304 in source's byte order. Potentially, a
reader could engage in byte-flipping of subsequent fields if the wrong
byte order is detected here.
Flags field
int32 bit mask to denote important aspects of the file format. Bits
are numbered from 0 (LSB) to 31 (MSB) --- note that this field is
stored with source's endianness, as are all subsequent integer fields.
Bits 16-31 are reserved to denote critical file format issues; a
reader should abort if it finds an unexpected bit set in this range.
Bits 0-15 are reserved to signal backwards-compatible format issues; a
reader should simply ignore any unexpected bits set in this range.
Currently only one flag bit is defined, and the rest must be zero:
Bit 16
if 1, OIDs are included in the dump; if 0, not
Header extension area length
int32 length in bytes of remainder of header, not including self. In
the initial version this will be zero, and the first tuple follows
immediately. Future changes to the format might allow additional data
to be present in the header. A reader should silently skip over any
header extension data it does not know what to do with.
The header extension area is envisioned to contain a sequence of self-
identifying chunks. The flags field is not intended to tell readers what is
in the extension area. Specific design of header extension contents is left
for a later release.
This design allows for both backwards-compatible header additions (add
header extension chunks, or set low-order flag bits) and non-backwards-
compatible changes (set high-order flag bits to signal such changes, and
add supporting data to the extension area if needed).
TUPLES
Each tuple begins with an int16 count of the number of fields in the tuple.
(Presently, all tuples in a table will have the same count, but that might
not always be true.) Then, repeated for each field in the tuple, there is
an int16 typlen word possibly followed by field data. The typlen field is
interpreted thus:
Zero Field is NULL. No data follows.
> 0 Field is a fixed-length data type. Exactly N bytes of data follow the
typlen word.
-1 Field is a varlena data type. The next four bytes are the varlena
header, which contains the total value length including itself.
< -1 Reserved for future use.
For non-NULL fields, the reader can check that the typlen matches the
expected typlen for the destination column. This provides a simple but very
useful check that the data is as expected.
There is no alignment padding or any other extra data between fields. Note
also that the format does not distinguish whether a data type is pass-by-
reference or pass-by-value. Both of these provisions are deliberate: they
might help improve portability of the files (although of course endianness
and floating-point-format issues can still keep you from moving a binary
file across machines).
If OIDs are included in the dump, the OID field immediately follows the
field-count word. It is a normal field except that it's not included in the
field-count. In particular it has a typlen --- this will allow handling of
4-byte vs 8-byte OIDs without too much pain, and will allow OIDs to be
shown as NULL if that ever proves desirable.
FILE TRAILER
The file trailer consists of an int16 word containing -1. This is easily
distinguished from a tuple's field-count word.
A reader should report an error if a field-count word is neither -1 nor the
expected number of columns. This provides an extra check against somehow
getting out of sync with the data.
USAGE
The following example copies a table to standard output, using a vertical
bar (|) as the field delimiter:
COPY country TO stdout WITH DELIMITER '|';
To copy data from a Unix file into the country table:
COPY country FROM '/usr1/proj/bray/sql/country_data';
Here is a sample of data suitable for copying into a table from stdin (so
it has the termination sequence on the last line):
AF AFGHANISTAN
AL ALBANIA
DZ ALGERIA
ZM ZAMBIA
ZW ZIMBABWE
\.
Note that the white space on each line is actually a TAB.
The following is the same data, output in binary format on a Linux/i586
machine. The data is shown after filtering through the Unix utility od -c.
The table has three fields; the first is char(2), the second is text, and
the third is integer. All the rows have a null value in the third field.
0000000 P G B C O P Y \n 377 \r \n \0 004 003 002 001
0000020 \0 \0 \0 \0 \0 \0 \0 \0 003 \0 377 377 006 \0 \0 \0
0000040 A F 377 377 017 \0 \0 \0 A F G H A N I S
0000060 T A N \0 \0 003 \0 377 377 006 \0 \0 \0 A L 377
0000100 377 \v \0 \0 \0 A L B A N I A \0 \0 003 \0
0000120 377 377 006 \0 \0 \0 D Z 377 377 \v \0 \0 \0 A L
0000140 G E R I A \0 \0 003 \0 377 377 006 \0 \0 \0 Z
0000160 M 377 377 \n \0 \0 \0 Z A M B I A \0 \0 003
0000200 \0 377 377 006 \0 \0 \0 Z W 377 377 \f \0 \0 \0 Z
0000220 I M B A B W E \0 \0 377 377
COMPATIBILITY
SQL92
There is no COPY statement in SQL92.
The following syntax was used by pre-7.3 applications and is still
supported:
COPY [ BINARY ] table [ WITH OIDS ]
FROM { 'filename' | stdin }
[ [USING] DELIMITERS 'delimiter' ]
[ WITH NULL AS 'null string' ]
COPY [ BINARY ] table [ WITH OIDS ]
TO { 'filename' | stdout }
[ [USING] DELIMITERS 'delimiter' ]
[ WITH NULL AS 'null string' ]
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Alphabetical listing for C |
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