How to import data from text file to mysql database

匆匆过客 提交于 2019-11-26 23:50:00

It should be as simple as...

LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/mydata.txt' INTO TABLE PerformanceReport;

By default LOAD DATA INFILE uses tab delimited, one row per line, so should take it in just fine.

Eric Leschinski

Walkthrough on using MySQL's LOAD DATA command:

  1. Create your table:

    CREATE TABLE foo(myid INT, mymessage VARCHAR(255), mydecimal DECIMAL(8,4));
    
  2. Create your tab delimited file (note there are tabs between the columns):

    1   Heart disease kills     1.2
    2   one out of every two    2.3
    3   people in America.      4.5
    
  3. Use the load data command:

    LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE '/tmp/foo.txt' 
    INTO TABLE foo COLUMNS TERMINATED BY '\t';
    

    If you get a warning that this command can't be run, then you have to enable the --local-infile=1 parameter described here: How can I correct MySQL Load Error

  4. The rows get inserted:

    Query OK, 3 rows affected (0.00 sec)
    Records: 3  Deleted: 0  Skipped: 0  Warnings: 0
    
  5. Check if it worked:

    mysql> select * from foo;
    +------+----------------------+-----------+
    | myid | mymessage            | mydecimal |
    +------+----------------------+-----------+
    |    1 | Heart disease kills  |    1.2000 |
    |    2 | one out of every two |    2.3000 |
    |    3 | people in America.   |    4.5000 |
    +------+----------------------+-----------+
    3 rows in set (0.00 sec)
    

How to specify which columns to load your text file columns into:

Like this:

LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE '/tmp/foo.txt' INTO TABLE foo
FIELDS TERMINATED BY '\t' LINES TERMINATED BY '\n'
(@col1,@col2,@col3) set myid=@col1,mydecimal=@col3;

The file contents get put into variables @col1, @col2, @col3. myid gets column 1, and mydecimal gets column 3. If this were run, it would omit the second row:

mysql> select * from foo;
+------+-----------+-----------+
| myid | mymessage | mydecimal |
+------+-----------+-----------+
|    1 | NULL      |    1.2000 |
|    2 | NULL      |    2.3000 |
|    3 | NULL      |    4.5000 |
+------+-----------+-----------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)

If your table is separated by others than tabs, you should specify it like...

LOAD DATA LOCAL 
    INFILE '/tmp/mydata.txt' INTO TABLE PerformanceReport 
    COLUMNS TERMINATED BY '\t'  ## This should be your delimiter
    OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '"'; ## ...and if text is enclosed, specify here
priya gupta

The LOAD DATA INFILE statement reads rows from a text file into a table at a very high speed.

LOAD DATA INFILE '/tmp/test.txt' 
INTO TABLE test
FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
LINES STARTING BY 'xxx';

If the data file looks like this:

xxx"abc",1
something xxx"def",2
"ghi",3

The resulting rows will be ("abc",1) and ("def",2). The third row in the file is skipped because it does not contain the prefix.

LOAD DATA INFILE 'data.txt'
INTO TABLE tbl_name
FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
ENCLOSED BY '"'
LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n'

You can also load data files by using the mysqlimport utility; it operates by sending a LOAD DATA INFILE statement to the server

mysqlimport -u root -ptmppassword --local test employee.txt

test.employee: Records: 3  Deleted: 0  Skipped: 0  Warnings: 0

You should set the option:

local-infile=1

into your [mysql] entry of my.cnf file or call mysql client with the --local-infile option:

mysql --local-infile -uroot -pyourpwd yourdbname

You have to be sure that the same parameter is defined into your [mysqld] section too to enable the "local infile" feature server side.

It's a security restriction.

LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE '/softwares/data/data.csv' INTO TABLE tableName;

1. if it's tab delimited txt file:

LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE 'D:/MySQL/event.txt' INTO TABLE event

LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n';

2. otherwise:

LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE 'D:/MySQL/event.txt' INTO TABLE event

FIELDS TERMINATED BY 'x' (here x could be comma ',', tab '\t', semicolon ';', space ' ')

LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n';

LOAD DATA INFILE '/home/userlap/data2/worldcitiespop.txt' INTO TABLE cc FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','LINES TERMINATED BY '\r \n' IGNORE 1 LINES;
  • IGNORE 1 LINES to skip over an initial header line containing column names
  • FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' is to read the comma-delimited file
  • If you have generated the text file on a Windows system, you might have to use LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n' to read the file properly, because Windows programs typically use two characters as a line terminator. Some programs, such as WordPad, might use \r as a line terminator when writing files. To read such files, use LINES TERMINATED BY '\r'.
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