As table name you can also specify columns you want imported.Will import all columns:<?phppg_copy_from($db, 'cpm.ics', $rows);?>Will import only specified columns:<?phppg_copy_from($db, 'cpm.ics (type, product, date, count, amount)', $rows);?>
(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
pg_copy_from — Insertar registros dentro de una tabla desde un array
$connection
,$table_name
,$rows
,$delimiter
= ?,$null_as
= ?
La función pg_copy_from() inserta registros dentro de una tabla desde
el parámetro rows
. Esta realiza internamente un comando SQL COPY FROM
para insertar registros.
connection
Recurso de conexión a la base de datos PostgreSQL.
table_name
Nombre de la tabla en la cual se copiará lo que provenga de rows
.
rows
Un array de datos a ser copiados dentro de table_name
.
Cada valor en el parámetro rows
se convierte en una fila en table_name
.
Cada valor en el parámetro rows
debe ser una cadena delimitada de los valores
a insertar en cada campo. Los valores deben ser terminados con un salto de línea.
delimiter
Símbolo que serpara valores por cada campo en cada elemento del parámetro
rows
. El predeterminado es TAB
.
null_as
Es como SQL NULL
(anula) los valores que son representados en el
parámetro rows
. El predeterminado es \N ("\\N").
Ejemplo #1 Ejemplo de la función pg_copy_from()
<?php
$db = pg_connect("dbname=publisher") or die("No se pudo conectar");
$rows = pg_copy_to($db, $table_name);
pg_query($db, "DELETE FROM $table_name");
pg_copy_from($db, $table_name, $rows);
?>
As table name you can also specify columns you want imported.Will import all columns:<?phppg_copy_from($db, 'cpm.ics', $rows);?>Will import only specified columns:<?phppg_copy_from($db, 'cpm.ics (type, product, date, count, amount)', $rows);?>
To solve the problem of how many backslashes to use for the parameters $separator and $null_as: The backslashes are interpreted twice, first by PHP and then by PostgreSQL. So write four backslashes to indicate one backslash in the input data. So both '\\\\N' and as "\\\\N" become NULL AS E'\\N' meaning the same as NULL AS '\N' in the internally used SQL statement.The loaded input data must be backslash-escaped. According to the PostgreSQL documentation, you can use the following escape sequences:\\ = Backslash (ASCII 92)\b = Backspace (ASCII 8)\t = Tab (ASCII 9)\n = Newline (ASCII 10)\v = Vertical tab (ASCII 11)\f = Form feed (ASCII 12)\r = Carriage return (ASCII 13)\000 (Backslash followed by one to three octal digits) = the byte with that numeric code\x00 (Backslash x followed by one or two hex digits) = the byte with that numeric codeWith the default setting, a data field containing only \N (one non-escaped backslash and an N) indicates a NULL value. This default value \N has been chosen because it does not collide with properly encoded data.
When using this function, don't get bit by the double quote (") vs. single quote (') differences. It is a small thing, but the error messaging is misleading. If you use a single quote, you will see the \t separated values all try to be inserted into the first field.Small consideration, but will save someone who is working late and can't get these functions to work.
see also: pg_put_line for a solution that does not require buffering of all the data to be copied,
Default is "\\\N" not "\\N" at least in php 5.4pg_copy_from($db, $table_name, "\t", "\\\N")
By default NULL values are a backslash followed with capital N ("\\N"). Also, you can't insert entries with OIDs (I've added it to my TODO list though)
As of postgresql 9.1 "standard_conforming_strings" is set to onThis will not work anymore<?php$copy_message = "1\t\\N\t300";pg_copy_from($db, "message", $copy_message);?>result will be a "N" in that field. if the field allow text that is else it will fail to insert the post.simple fix<?php$copy_message = "1\t\\NULL\t300";pg_copy_from($db, "message", $copy_message, "\t","\\NULL");?>
pg syntax is :COPY test (cola, colb, colc) FROM stdin;...this function doesn't let you in which order the columns are !
Something needs to be said about the format of the array.Judging by what I've seen, it's pretty much what you getfrom loading a tab-separated file with file(). That is, thelines are linefeed-terminated and there's no need to havean extra line with "\.". On the other hand, when I try using thiscommand the connection to the server ends up in some oddstate and is then lost:PHP Warning: U?S?o() query failed: server closed the connection unexpectedlyI think it might be safer to use the lower-level functionpg_put_line() for now.