On Fri, 4 Feb 2005 13:32:40 +0100 (CET), Joolz <joolz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hello everyone, > > I'm building a postgresql db which will have to get lots of data > from "the outside" (customers, that is). The db has lots of > constraints, and I'm sure that our customers will offer lots of > invalid information. We receive the information in csv format. My > first thought was to read them into the database with COPY, but > "COPY stops operation at the first error." > > What I need is an import where all valid lines from the csv files > are read into the db, and I also get a logfile for all invalid > lines, stating the line number plus the pg error message so I can > see which constraint was violated. > > I can't think of a direct, elegant solution for this, does anyone > have any suggestions? Thanks a lot! How about a Perl script that uses DBI with autocommit turned on and loops over the file using (something like) 'while (my @line = split(',',scalar(<>)) {}'? Perl tracks the line number of the current input file (including STDIN) in $. (dollar-period). If you get a DBI error, 'warn "Input error at line $.\n";'. -- Mike Rylander mrylander@xxxxxxxxx GPLS -- PINES Development Database Developer http://open-ils.org ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: don't forget to increase your free space map settings