I’m going to go over some methods to import data from text files into SQL Server today. The particular file I went out and grabbed is comma delimited and with a few qualifiers in it. It is a typical file you may get and a request made to import or just for your own administrative tasks.
Below is the location of field layout and file that I grabbed off the net to play with. This is just a text file comma separated of zip codes. I will attach the file as well to this blog.
http://spatialnews.geocomm.com/newsletter/2000/jan/zipcodes.html
Field 1 – State Fips Code
Field 2 – 5-digit Zipcode
Field 3 – State Abbreviation
Field 4 – Zipcode Name
Field 5 – Longitude in Decimal Degrees (West is assumed, no minus sign)
Field 6 – Latitude in Decimal Degrees (North is assumed, no plus sign)
Field 7 – 1990 Population (100%)
Field 8 – Allocation Factor (decimal portion of state within zipcode)
Example of file
Import Wizard
First and very manual technique is the import wizard. This is great for ad-hoc and just to slam it in tasks.
In SSMS right click the database you want to import into. Scroll to Tasks and select Import Data…
For the data source we want out zips.txt file. Browse for it and select it. You should notice the wizard tries to fill in the blanks for you. One key thing here with this file I picked is there are “ “ qualifiers. So we need to make sure we add “ into the text qualifier field. The wizard will not do this for you.
Go through the remaining pages to view everything. No further changes should be needed though
Hit next after checking the pages out and select your destination. This in our case will be DBA.dbo.zips.
Following the destination step, go into the edit mappings section to ensure we look good on the types and counts.
Hit next and then finish. Once completed you will see the count of rows transferred and the success or failure rate
Import wizard completed and you have the data!
bcp utility
Method two is bcp with a format file http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms162802.aspx
This is probably going to win for speed on most occasions but is limited to the formatting of the file being imported. For this file it actually works well with a small format file to show the contents and mappings to SQL Server.
To create a format file all we really need is the type and the count of columns for the most basic files. In our case the qualifier makes it a bit difficult but there is a trick to ignoring them. The trick is to basically throw a field into the format file that will reference it but basically ignore it in the import process.
Given that our format file in this case would appear like this
9.0 9 1 SQLCHAR 0 0 """ 0 dummy1 "" 2 SQLCHAR 0 50 "","" 1 Field1 "" 3 SQLCHAR 0 50 "","" 2 Field2 "" 4 SQLCHAR 0 50 "","" 3 Field3 "" 5 SQLCHAR 0 50 ""," 4 Field4 "" 6 SQLCHAR 0 50 "," 5 Field5 "" 7 SQLCHAR 0 50 "," 6 Field6 "" 8 SQLCHAR 0 50 "," 7 Field7 "" 9 SQLCHAR 0 50 "n" 8 Field8 ""
The bcp call would be as follows
C:Program FilesMicrosoft SQL Server90ToolsBinn>bcp DBA..zips in “C:zips.txt” -f “c:zip_format_file.txt” -S LKFW0133 -T
Given a successful run you should see this in command prompt after executing the statement
Starting copy... 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 1000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 2000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 3000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 4000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 5000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 6000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 7000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 8000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 9000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 10000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 11000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 12000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 13000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 14000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 15000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 16000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 17000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 18000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 19000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 20000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 21000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 22000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 23000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 24000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 25000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 26000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 27000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 28000 1000 rows sent to SQL Server. Total sent: 29000
bcp import completed!
BULK INSERT
Next, we have BULK INSERT given the same format file from bcp
CREATE TABLE zips ( Col1 nvarchar(50), Col2 nvarchar(50), Col3 nvarchar(50), Col4 nvarchar(50), Col5 nvarchar(50), Col6 nvarchar(50), Col7 nvarchar(50), Col8 nvarchar(50) ); GO INSERT INTO zips SELECT * FROM OPENROWSET(BULK 'C:Documents and SettingstkruegerMy Documentsblogcenzuszipcodeszips.txt', FORMATFILE='C:Documents and SettingstkruegerMy Documentsblogzip_format_file.txt' ) as t1 ; GO
That was simple enough given the work on the format file that we already did. Bulk insert isn’t as fast as bcp but gives you some freedom from within TSQL and SSMS to add functionality to the import.
SSIS
Next is my favorite playground in SSIS
We can do many methods in SSIS to get data from point A, to point B. I’ll show you data flow task and the SSIS version of BULK INSERT
First create a new integrated services project.
Create a new flat file connection by right clicking the connection managers area. This will be used in both methods
Bulk insert
You can use format file here as well which is beneficial to moving methods around. This essentially is calling the same processes with format file usage. Drag over a bulk insert task and double click it to go into the editor.
Fill in the information starting with connection. This will populate much as the wizard did.
Example of format file usage
Or specify your own details
Execute this and again, we have some data
Data Flow method
Bring over a data flow task and double click it to go into the data flow tab.
Bring over a flat file source and SQL Server destination. Edit the flat file source to use the connection manager “The file” we already created. Connect the two once they are there
Double click the SQL Server Destination task to open the editor. Enter in the connection manager information and select the table to import into.
Go into the mappings and connect the dots per say
Typical issue of type conversions is Unicode to non-unicode.
We fix this with a Data conversion or explicit conversion in the editor. Data conversion tasks are usually the route I take. Drag over a data conversation task and place it between the connection from the flat file source to the SQL Server destination.
New look in the mappings
And after execution…
SqlBulkCopy Method
Sense we’re in the SSIS package we can use that awesome “script task” to show SlqBulkCopy. Not only fast but also handy for those really “unique” file formats we receive so often
Bring over a script task into the control flow
Double click the task and go to the script page. Click the Design script to open up the code behind
Go ahead and put this code into the task.
Imports System Imports System.Data Imports System.Math Imports System.Xml Imports System.Data.SqlClient Imports System.Data.OleDb Imports Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime Public Class ScriptMain Public Sub Main() Dim conn As New SqlConnection("Data Source=LKFW0133;Initial Catalog=DBA;Integrated Security=SSPI") Using bulk As New SqlBulkCopy(conn.ConnectionString) bulk.BatchSize = 1000 bulk.NotifyAfter = 1000 bulk.DestinationTableName = "zips" AddHandler bulk.SqlRowsCopied, AddressOf OnSqlRowsCopied bulk.WriteToServer(LoadupDTFromTxt) End Using Dts.TaskResult = Dts.Results.Success End Sub Private Sub OnSqlRowsCopied(ByVal sender As Object, _ ByVal args As SqlRowsCopiedEventArgs) Console.WriteLine("Copied {0} so far...", args.RowsCopied) End Sub Private Function LoadupDTFromTxt() As DataTable Dim cn As New OleDbConnection("Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0; Data Source=C:;Extended Properties=""Text;HDR=No;FMT=Delimited""") Dim da As New OleDbDataAdapter() Dim ds As New DataSet Dim cd As New OleDbCommand("SELECT * FROM C:zips.txt", cn) cn.Open() da.SelectCommand = cd ds.Clear() da.Fill(ds, "zips") Return ds.Tables(0) cn.Close() End Function End Class
Then execute the script task
Again the same results as previous methods but with a new look.
All of these methods have a place in each unique situation. Performance wise in my experience, bcp wins on speed typically. This is not always a method you can use though which leads us to other resources SQL Server and services provide us.
Of course none of this would be completely finished unless we added some statistics on runtimes along with these methods. I went ahead and created 3 addition zips.txt files to go with the original. In these files we have the following
zips.txt – 29,471 rows at around 1.8MB
zips_halfmill.txt – 500,991 rows at around 31.4MB
zips_million.txt – 1,001,981 rows at around 62.8MB
zips_5mill.txt – 5,009,901 rows and around 314.3MB
I ran these each through all the methods. My results are below. Mind you, the important thing to understand is that I write my blogs/articles off my eprsonal test lab. In no way do I utilize monster servers that would be more suited for benchmarking each. All hardware is created not so equal and results will be varying given that variable. Take these results but keep in mind that resources will make them move up and down the chart. Memory, I/O and CPU is a big factor in speed.
Tests were complete by running each process 5 times. All resources cleared on each execution.
Shown in AVG of milliseconds between the types. Import Wizard was not tested as this is basically a Data Flow Task behind the scenes and can be seen (minus the slow user clicking things) from the Data Flow Task in SSIS results
Hope this helps as a good reference in your own imports.