# Oracle output plugins for Embulk Oracle output plugins for Embulk loads records to Oracle. ## Overview * **Plugin type**: output * **Load all or nothing**: depnds on the mode. see below. * **Resume supported**: depnds on the mode. see below. ## Configuration - **driver_path**: path to the jar file of the Oracle JDBC driver (string) - **host**: database host name (string, required if url is not set or insert_method is "oci") - **port**: database port number (integer, default: 1521) - **user**: database login user name (string, required) - **password**: database login password (string, default: "") - **database**: destination database name (string, required if url is not set or insert_method is "oci") - **url**: URL of the JDBC connection (string, optional) - **table**: destination table name (string, required) - **options**: extra connection properties (hash, default: {}) - **mode**: "insert", "insert_direct", "truncate_insert", or "replace". See below. (string, required) - **insert_method**: see below - **batch_size**: size of a single batch insert (integer, default: 16777216) - **default_timezone**: If input column type (embulk type) is timestamp, this plugin needs to format the timestamp into a SQL string. This default_timezone option is used to control the timezone. You can overwrite timezone for each columns using column_options option. (string, default: `UTC`) - **column_options**: advanced: a key-value pairs where key is a column name and value is options for the column. - **type**: type of a column when this plugin creates new tables (e.g. `VARCHAR(255)`, `INTEGER NOT NULL UNIQUE`). This used when this plugin creates intermediate tables (insert, truncate_insert and merge modes), when it creates the target table (insert_direct and replace modes), and when it creates nonexistent target table automatically. (string, default: depends on input column type. `BIGINT` if input column type is long, `BOOLEAN` if boolean, `DOUBLE PRECISION` if double, `CLOB` if string, `TIMESTAMP` if timestamp) - **value_type**: This plugin converts input column type (embulk type) into a database type to build a INSERT statement. This value_type option controls the type of the value in a INSERT statement. (string, default: depends on input column type. Available values options are: `byte`, `short`, `int`, `long`, `double`, `float`, `boolean`, `string`, `nstring`, `date`, `time`, `timestamp`, `decimal`, `null`, `pass`) - **timestamp_format**: If input column type (embulk type) is timestamp and value_type is `string` or `nstring`, this plugin needs to format the timestamp value into a string. This timestamp_format option is used to control the format of the timestamp. (string, default: `%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%6N`) - **timezone**: If input column type (embulk type) is timestamp, this plugin needs to format the timestamp value into a SQL string. In this cases, this timezone option is used to control the timezone. (string, value of default_timezone option is used by default) ### Modes * **insert**: * Behavior: This mode writes rows to some intermediate tables first. If all those tasks run correctly, runs `INSERT INTO SELECT * FROM UNION ALL SELECT * FROM UNION ALL ...` query. If the target table doesn't exist, it is created automatically. * Transactional: Yes. This mode successfully writes all rows, or fails with writing zero rows. * Resumable: Yes. * **insert_direct**: * Behavior: This mode inserts rows to the target table directly. If the target table doesn't exist, it is created automatically. * Transactional: No. If fails, the target table could have some rows inserted. * Resumable: No. * **truncate_insert**: * Behavior: Same with `insert` mode excepting that it truncates the target table right before the last `INSERT ...` query. * Transactional: Yes. * Resumable: Yes. * **replace**: * Behavior: This mode writes rows to an intermediate table first. If all those tasks run correctly, drops the target table and alters the name of the intermediate table into the target table name. * Transactional: Yes. * Resumable: No. ### Insert methods insert_method supports three options. "normal" means normal insert (default). It requires Oracle JDBC driver. "direct" means direct path insert. It is faster than "normal". It requires Oracle JDBC driver too, but the version 12 driver doesn't work (the version 11 driver works). "oci" means direct path insert using OCI(Oracle Call Interface). It is fastest. It requires both Oracle JDBC driver and Oracle Instant Client (version 12.1.0.2.0). You must set the library loading path to the OCI library. ### Example ```yaml out: type: oracle driver_path: /opt/oracle/ojdbc6.jar host: localhost user: root password: "" database: my_database table: my_table mode: insert insert_method: direct ``` Advanced configuration: ```yaml out: type: oracle driver_path: /opt/oracle/ojdbc6.jar host: localhost user: root password: "" database: my_database table: my_table options: {LoginTimeout: 20000} mode: insert_direct insert_method: direct column_options: my_col_1: {type: 'VARCHAR(255)'} my_col_3: {type: 'INT NOT NULL'} my_col_4: {value_type: string, timestamp_format: `%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z`, timezone: '-0700'} my_col_5: {type: 'DECIMAL(18,9)', value_type: pass} ``` ### Build ``` $ ./gradlew gem ``` *** YourKit is used to improve performance of embulk-output-oracle. YourKit supports open source projects with its full-featured Java Profiler. 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