PostgreSQL encoding issue while executing query from command line - postgresql

I am trying to execute an SQL query which is stored in the file. I am using following command to execute:
psql -d DB_NAME -a -f QUERY_NAME.sql
I have some non English text in the SQL file like - સુરત
When the query is executed the text in the database looks like - à ª¸à «Âà ª°à ª¤
How do I execute the query from command line so that it runs correctly?

Make sure the client_encoding matches the encoding of your file. Check your system locale. Then use a matching command line argument for psql. Quoting the manual here:
If at least one of standard input or standard output are a terminal,
then psql sets the client encoding to "auto", which will detect the
appropriate client encoding from the locale settings (LC_CTYPE
environment variable on Unix systems). If this doesn't work out as
expected, the client encoding can be overridden using the environment
variable PGCLIENTENCODING.
Example for a Linux shell:
env PGCLIENTENCODING='WIN1258' psql DB_NAME -a -f QUERY_NAME.sql
List of available encodings in the manual.

Related

pg_dump on Windows puts extraneous characters in the dump file?

Using PostgreSQL v13.x, Windows 2019 Server
I'm using the following command either from a Powershell or command window
> pg_dump -h 127.0.0.1 -U postgres -W --format custom --file my_db_dump.sql my_db
(p/w prompted and entered)
The dump is created successfully. However it's full of extraneous non-printable control-sequence characters, e.g., ^A^N^#^X^#^#^#...., you name it. Post processing, e.g., dos2unix, :set ff=unix, :%!col -xb doesn't eliminate the characters. Is there a switch in pg_dump to control this? I didn't see it in the pg_dump documentation.
You have specified the custom format which is not plain SQL. It has structure and some compression. If you want plain SQL that is also available as a format.

Is it possible to convert a psql's ASCII table output to CSV? [duplicate]

What is the easiest way to save PL/pgSQL output from a PostgreSQL database to a CSV file?
I'm using PostgreSQL 8.4 with pgAdmin III and PSQL plugin where I run queries from.
Do you want the resulting file on the server, or on the client?
Server side
If you want something easy to re-use or automate, you can use Postgresql's built in COPY command. e.g.
Copy (Select * From foo) To '/tmp/test.csv' With CSV DELIMITER ',' HEADER;
This approach runs entirely on the remote server - it can't write to your local PC. It also needs to be run as a Postgres "superuser" (normally called "root") because Postgres can't stop it doing nasty things with that machine's local filesystem.
That doesn't actually mean you have to be connected as a superuser (automating that would be a security risk of a different kind), because you can use the SECURITY DEFINER option to CREATE FUNCTION to make a function which runs as though you were a superuser.
The crucial part is that your function is there to perform additional checks, not just by-pass the security - so you could write a function which exports the exact data you need, or you could write something which can accept various options as long as they meet a strict whitelist. You need to check two things:
Which files should the user be allowed to read/write on disk? This might be a particular directory, for instance, and the filename might have to have a suitable prefix or extension.
Which tables should the user be able to read/write in the database? This would normally be defined by GRANTs in the database, but the function is now running as a superuser, so tables which would normally be "out of bounds" will be fully accessible. You probably don’t want to let someone invoke your function and add rows on the end of your “users” table…
I've written a blog post expanding on this approach, including some examples of functions that export (or import) files and tables meeting strict conditions.
Client side
The other approach is to do the file handling on the client side, i.e. in your application or script. The Postgres server doesn't need to know what file you're copying to, it just spits out the data and the client puts it somewhere.
The underlying syntax for this is the COPY TO STDOUT command, and graphical tools like pgAdmin will wrap it for you in a nice dialog.
The psql command-line client has a special "meta-command" called \copy, which takes all the same options as the "real" COPY, but is run inside the client:
\copy (Select * From foo) To '/tmp/test.csv' With CSV DELIMITER ',' HEADER
Note that there is no terminating ;, because meta-commands are terminated by newline, unlike SQL commands.
From the docs:
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 server when \copy is used.
Your application programming language may also have support for pushing or fetching the data, but you cannot generally use COPY FROM STDIN/TO STDOUT within a standard SQL statement, because there is no way of connecting the input/output stream. PHP's PostgreSQL handler (not PDO) includes very basic pg_copy_from and pg_copy_to functions which copy to/from a PHP array, which may not be efficient for large data sets.
There are several solutions:
1 psql command
psql -d dbname -t -A -F"," -c "select * from users" > output.csv
This has the big advantage that you can using it via SSH, like ssh postgres#host command - enabling you to get
2 postgres copy command
COPY (SELECT * from users) To '/tmp/output.csv' With CSV;
3 psql interactive (or not)
>psql dbname
psql>\f ','
psql>\a
psql>\o '/tmp/output.csv'
psql>SELECT * from users;
psql>\q
All of them can be used in scripts, but I prefer #1.
4 pgadmin but that's not scriptable.
In terminal (while connected to the db) set output to the cvs file
1) Set field seperator to ',':
\f ','
2) Set output format unaligned:
\a
3) Show only tuples:
\t
4) Set output:
\o '/tmp/yourOutputFile.csv'
5) Execute your query:
:select * from YOUR_TABLE
6) Output:
\o
You will then be able to find your csv file in this location:
cd /tmp
Copy it using the scp command or edit using nano:
nano /tmp/yourOutputFile.csv
CSV Export Unification
This information isn't really well represented. As this is the second time I've needed to derive this, I'll put this here to remind myself if nothing else.
Really the best way to do this (get CSV out of postgres) is to use the COPY ... TO STDOUT command. Though you don't want to do it the way shown in the answers here. The correct way to use the command is:
COPY (select id, name from groups) TO STDOUT WITH CSV HEADER
Remember just one command!
It's great for use over ssh:
$ ssh psqlserver.example.com 'psql -d mydb "COPY (select id, name from groups) TO STDOUT WITH CSV HEADER"' > groups.csv
It's great for use inside docker over ssh:
$ ssh pgserver.example.com 'docker exec -tu postgres postgres psql -d mydb -c "COPY groups TO STDOUT WITH CSV HEADER"' > groups.csv
It's even great on the local machine:
$ psql -d mydb -c 'COPY groups TO STDOUT WITH CSV HEADER' > groups.csv
Or inside docker on the local machine?:
docker exec -tu postgres postgres psql -d mydb -c 'COPY groups TO STDOUT WITH CSV HEADER' > groups.csv
Or on a kubernetes cluster, in docker, over HTTPS??:
kubectl exec -t postgres-2592991581-ws2td 'psql -d mydb -c "COPY groups TO STDOUT WITH CSV HEADER"' > groups.csv
So versatile, much commas!
Do you even?
Yes I did, here are my notes:
The COPYses
Using /copy effectively executes file operations on whatever system the psql command is running on, as the user who is executing it1. If you connect to a remote server, it's simple to copy data files on the system executing psql to/from the remote server.
COPY executes file operations on the server as the backend process user account (default postgres), file paths and permissions are checked and applied accordingly. If using TO STDOUT then file permissions checks are bypassed.
Both of these options require subsequent file movement if psql is not executing on the system where you want the resultant CSV to ultimately reside. This is the most likely case, in my experience, when you mostly work with remote servers.
It is more complex to configure something like a TCP/IP tunnel over ssh to a remote system for simple CSV output, but for other output formats (binary) it may be better to /copy over a tunneled connection, executing a local psql. In a similar vein, for large imports, moving the source file to the server and using COPY is probably the highest-performance option.
PSQL Parameters
With psql parameters you can format the output like CSV but there are downsides like having to remember to disable the pager and not getting headers:
$ psql -P pager=off -d mydb -t -A -F',' -c 'select * from groups;'
2,Technician,Test 2,,,t,,0,,
3,Truck,1,2017-10-02,,t,,0,,
4,Truck,2,2017-10-02,,t,,0,,
Other Tools
No, I just want to get CSV out of my server without compiling and/or installing a tool.
New version - psql 12 - will support --csv.
psql - devel
--csv
Switches to CSV (Comma-Separated Values) output mode. This is equivalent to \pset format csv.
csv_fieldsep
Specifies the field separator to be used in CSV output format. If the separator character appears in a field's value, that field is output within double quotes, following standard CSV rules. The default is a comma.
Usage:
psql -c "SELECT * FROM pg_catalog.pg_tables" --csv postgres
psql -c "SELECT * FROM pg_catalog.pg_tables" --csv -P csv_fieldsep='^' postgres
psql -c "SELECT * FROM pg_catalog.pg_tables" --csv postgres > output.csv
If you're interested in all the columns of a particular table along with headers, you can use
COPY table TO '/some_destdir/mycsv.csv' WITH CSV HEADER;
This is a tiny bit simpler than
COPY (SELECT * FROM table) TO '/some_destdir/mycsv.csv' WITH CSV HEADER;
which, to the best of my knowledge, are equivalent.
I had to use the \COPY because I received the error message:
ERROR: could not open file "/filepath/places.csv" for writing: Permission denied
So I used:
\Copy (Select address, zip From manjadata) To '/filepath/places.csv' With CSV;
and it is functioning
psql can do this for you:
edd#ron:~$ psql -d beancounter -t -A -F"," \
-c "select date, symbol, day_close " \
"from stockprices where symbol like 'I%' " \
"and date >= '2009-10-02'"
2009-10-02,IBM,119.02
2009-10-02,IEF,92.77
2009-10-02,IEV,37.05
2009-10-02,IJH,66.18
2009-10-02,IJR,50.33
2009-10-02,ILF,42.24
2009-10-02,INTC,18.97
2009-10-02,IP,21.39
edd#ron:~$
See man psql for help on the options used here.
I'm working on AWS Redshift, which does not support the COPY TO feature.
My BI tool supports tab-delimited CSVs though, so I used the following:
psql -h dblocation -p port -U user -d dbname -F $'\t' --no-align -c "SELECT * FROM TABLE" > outfile.csv
In pgAdmin III there is an option to export to file from the query window. In the main menu it's Query -> Execute to file or there's a button that does the same thing (it's a green triangle with a blue floppy disk as opposed to the plain green triangle which just runs the query). If you're not running the query from the query window then I'd do what IMSoP suggested and use the copy command.
I tried several things but few of them were able to give me the desired CSV with header details.
Here is what worked for me.
psql -d dbame -U username \
-c "COPY ( SELECT * FROM TABLE ) TO STDOUT WITH CSV HEADER " > \
OUTPUT_CSV_FILE.csv
I've written a little tool called psql2csv that encapsulates the COPY query TO STDOUT pattern, resulting in proper CSV. It's interface is similar to psql.
psql2csv [OPTIONS] < QUERY
psql2csv [OPTIONS] QUERY
The query is assumed to be the contents of STDIN, if present, or the last argument. All other arguments are forwarded to psql except for these:
-h, --help show help, then exit
--encoding=ENCODING use a different encoding than UTF8 (Excel likes LATIN1)
--no-header do not output a header
If you have longer query and you like to use psql then put your query to a file and use the following command:
psql -d my_db_name -t -A -F";" -f input-file.sql -o output-file.csv
To Download CSV file with column names as HEADER use this command:
Copy (Select * From tableName) To '/tmp/fileName.csv' With CSV HEADER;
Since Postgres 12, you can change the output format :
\pset format csv
The following formats are allowed :
aligned, asciidoc, csv, html, latex, latex-longtable, troff-ms, unaligned, wrapped
If you want to export the result of a request, you can use the \o filename feature.
Example :
\pset format csv
\o file.csv
SELECT * FROM table LIMIT 10;
\o
\pset format aligned
I found that psql --csv creates a CSV file with UTF8 characters but it is missing the UTF8 Byte Order Mark (0xEF 0xBB 0xBF). Without taking it into account, the default import of this CSV file will corrupt international characters such as CJK characters.
To fix it, I devised the following script:
# Define a connection to the Postgres database through environment variables
export PGHOST=your.pg.host
export PGPORT=5432
export PGDATABASE=your_pg_database
export PGUSER=your_pg_user
# Place credentials in $HOME/.pgpass with the format:
# ${PGHOST}:${PGPORT}:${PGUSER}:master:${PGPASSWORD}
# Populate long SQL query in a text file:
cat > /tmp/query.sql <<EOF
SELECT item.item_no,item_descrip,
invoice.invoice_no,invoice.sold_qty
FROM item
LEFT JOIN invoice
ON item.item_no=invoice.item_no;
EOF
# Generate CSV report with UTF8 BOM mark
printf '\xEF\xBB\xBF' > report.csv
psql -f /tmp/query.sql --csv | tee -a report.csv
Doing it this way, lets me script the CSV creation process for automation and allows me to succinctly maintain the script in a single source file.
import json
cursor = conn.cursor()
qry = """ SELECT details FROM test_csvfile """
cursor.execute(qry)
rows = cursor.fetchall()
value = json.dumps(rows)
with open("/home/asha/Desktop/Income_output.json","w+") as f:
f.write(value)
print 'Saved to File Successfully'
JackDB, a database client in your web browser, makes this really easy. Especially if you're on Heroku.
It lets you connect to remote databases and run SQL queries on them.
Source
(source: jackdb.com)
Once your DB is connected, you can run a query and export to CSV or TXT (see bottom right).
Note: I'm in no way affiliated with JackDB. I currently use their free services and think it's a great product.
Per the request of #skeller88, I am reposting my comment as an answer so that it doesn't get lost by people who don't read every response...
The problem with DataGrip is that it puts a grip on your wallet. It is not free. Try the community edition of DBeaver at dbeaver.io. It is a FOSS multi-platform database tool for SQL programmers, DBAs and analysts that supports all popular databases: MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite, Oracle, DB2, SQL Server, Sybase, MS Access, Teradata, Firebird, Hive, Presto, etc.
DBeaver Community Edition makes it trivial to connect to a database, issue queries to retrieve data, and then download the result set to save it to CSV, JSON, SQL, or other common data formats. It's a viable FOSS competitor to TOAD for Postgres, TOAD for SQL Server, or Toad for Oracle.
I have no affiliation with DBeaver. I love the price and functionality, but I wish they would open up the DBeaver/Eclipse application more and made it easy to add analytics widgets to DBeaver / Eclipse, rather than requiring users to pay for the annual subscription to create graphs and charts directly within the application. My Java coding skills are rusty and I don't feel like taking weeks to relearn how to build Eclipse widgets, only to find that DBeaver has disabled the ability to add third-party widgets to the DBeaver Community Edition.
Do DBeaver users have insight as to the steps to create analytics widgets to add into the Community Edition of DBeaver?

How to batch load data with psql with different encodings?

I have a UTF8 database and a UTF8 script to fill tables with data. However I want to run this script with psql -d instance -U user -f fillTables.sql. As my system has a Windows CP1252 encoding it looks like psql uses this to parse the file. I found this documentation and saw these backslash commands, but don't get it working
psql \encoding UTF8 -d instance -U user -f fillTables.sql
It looks like these are meant for starting psql and entering commands inside the psql console, right? How can I set different encoding for a batch processing of different files?
I got it working with export PGCLIENTENCODING=UTF8 (in cygwin, there is another syntax for windows), but would accept other answers if they can achieve the same with an option of psql.

PostgreSQL - read an SQL file into a PostgreSQL database from the commandline

I use Ruby to generate a bunch of SQL commands, and store this into a file.
I then login to my PostgreSQL database. Then I do something like:
\i /tmp/bla.sql
And this populates my database.
This all works fine as it is, no problem here.
I dislike the manual part where I have to use \i, though (because I need this to work in a cron job eventually, and I think commands like \i are only available when you are directly in the interactive psql prompt).
So my question now is:
Is it possible to use a psql command from the command line that directly will start to read in an external file?
You can directly use the psql command as shown below.
Works for me with Ubuntu and Mint. On Windows it should be quite the same...
psql -U user -d database -f filepath
Example:
psql -U postgres -d testdb -f /home/you/file.sql
For more information take a lock at the official documentation: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/app-psql.html
When you try to execute an sql file using cron, you will also need to set the environment - database name, password etc. This is a short shell script snippet that does it all
source /var/lib/pgsql/scripts/.pgenv
echo $PATH
psql << AAA
select current_date;
select sp_pg_myprocedure(current_date);
AAA
In .pgenv, you set the values such as
export PGPORT=<yourport>
export PGHOST=<yourhost>
export PGDATA=<yourdatadir>
Also have a .pgpass file so that the password is supplied.
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-pgpass.html
Replace the part where SELECT is being done with whatever you want to do, or do it as #Kuchi has shown.

How can I specify the schema to run an sql file against in the Postgresql command line

I run scripts against my database like this...
psql -d myDataBase -a -f myInsertFile.sql
The only problem is I want to be able to specify in this command what schema to run the script against. I could call set search_path='my_schema_01' but the files are supposed to be portable. How can I do this?
You can create one file that contains the set schema ... statement and then include the actual file you want to run:
Create a file run_insert.sql:
set schema 'my_schema_01';
\i myInsertFile.sql
Then call this using:
psql -d myDataBase -a -f run_insert.sql
More universal way is to set search_path (should work in PostgreSQL 7.x and above):
SET search_path TO myschema;
Note that set schema myschema is an alias to above command that is not available in 8.x.
See also: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.3/static/ddl-schemas.html
Main Example
The example below will run myfile.sql on database mydatabase using schema myschema.
psql "dbname=mydatabase options=--search_path=myschema" -a -f myfile.sql
The way this works is the first argument to the psql command is the dbname argument. The docs mention a connection string can be provided.
If this parameter contains an = sign or starts with a valid URI prefix
(postgresql:// or postgres://), it is treated as a conninfo string
The dbname keyword specifies the database to connect to and the options keyword lets you specify command-line options to send to the server at connection startup. Those options are detailed in the server configuration chapter. The option we are using to select the schema is search_path.
Another Example
The example below will connect to host myhost on database mydatabase using schema myschema. The = special character must be url escaped with the escape sequence %3D.
psql postgres://myuser#myhost?options=--search_path%3Dmyschema
The PGOPTIONS environment variable may be used to achieve this in a flexible way.
In an Unix shell:
PGOPTIONS="--search_path=my_schema_01" psql -d myDataBase -a -f myInsertFile.sql
If there are several invocations in the script or sub-shells that need the same options, it's simpler to set PGOPTIONS only once and export it.
PGOPTIONS="--search_path=my_schema_01"
export PGOPTIONS
psql -d somebase
psql -d someotherbase
...
or invoke the top-level shell script with PGOPTIONS set from the outside
PGOPTIONS="--search_path=my_schema_01" ./my-upgrade-script.sh
In Windows CMD environment, set PGOPTIONS=value should work the same.
I'm using something like this and works very well:* :-)
(echo "set schema 'acme';" ; \
cat ~/git/soluvas-framework/schedule/src/main/resources/org/soluvas/schedule/tables_postgres.sql) \
| psql -Upostgres -hlocalhost quikdo_app_dev
Note: Linux/Mac/Bash only, though probably there's a way to do that in Windows/PowerShell too.
This works for me:
psql postgresql://myuser:password#myhost/my_db -f myInsertFile.sql
In my case, I wanted to add schema to a file dynamically so that whatever schema name user will provide from the cli, I will run sql file with that provided schema name.
For this, I replaced some text in the sql file. First I added {{schema}} in the file like this
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION {{schema}}.usp_dailygaintablereportdata(
then replace {{schema}} dynamically with user provided schema name with the help of sed command
sed -i "s/{{schema}}/$pgSchemaName/" $filename
result=$(psql -U $user -h $host -p $port -d $dbName -f "$filename" 2>&1)
sed -i "s/$pgSchemaName/{{schema}}/" $filename
First replace is done, then target file is run and then again our replace is reverted back
I was facing similar problems trying to do some dat import on an intermediate schema (that later we move on to the final one). As we rely on things like extensions (for example PostGIS), the "run_insert" sql file did not fully solved the problem.
After a while, we've found that at least with Postgres 9.3 the solution is far easier... just create your SQL script always specifying the schema when refering to the table:
CREATE TABLE "my_schema"."my_table" (...);
COPY "my_schema"."my_table" (...) FROM stdin;
This way using psql -f xxxxx works perfectly, and you don't need to change search_paths nor use intermediate files (and won't hit extension schema problems).