The SQL*Plus COPY command can copy data between two databases via SQL*Net . The preferred method of doing this is to use SQL*Plus on the host where the database resides. If performing the copy command from a client SQL*Net connection, the data is transferred through the client machine.
The copy command copies data from one Oracle instance to another. The data is simply copied directly from a source to a target. The format of the copy command is:
SQL> copy from <source database> TO <target database> destination_table (column_name, column_name...) USING query
The action can include:
- Create – If the destination table already exists, copy will report an error, otherwise the table is created and the data is copied.
- Replace – If the destination table exists, copy will drop and recreate the table with the newly copied data. Otherwise, it will create the table and populate it with the data.
- Insert – If the destination table exists, copy inserts the new rows into the table. Otherwise, copy reports an error and aborts.
- Append – Inserts the data into the table if it exists, otherwise it will create the table and then insert the data.
Here "test1" is remote database and "orcl" is target database where the table new_emp is created.
Once the command above is executed, the copy utility displays the values of three parameters, each of which can be set with the SQL*Plus set command. The arraysize specifies the number of rows that SQL*Plus will retrieve from the database at one time. The copy commit parameter specifies how often a commit is performed and is related to the number of trips – one trip is the number of rows defined in arraysize. Finally, the long parameter displays the maximum number of characters copied for each column with a LONG datatype.
Array fetch/bind size is 15. (arraysize is 15)
Will commit when done. (copycommit is 0)
Maximum long size is 80. (long is 80)
Table NEW_EMP created.
14 rows selected from scott@test1
14 rows inserted into NEW_EMP.
14 rows committed into NEW_EMP at scott@orcl
SQL> desc new_emp;
Name Null? Type
---------------------------- --------------- -------------------
EMPNO NOT NULL NUMBER(4)
ENAME VARCHAR2(10)
JOB VARCHAR2(9)
MGR NUMBER(4)
HIREDATE DATE
SAL NUMBER(7,2)
COMM NUMBER(7,2)
DEPTNO NUMBER(2)
The command above did not specify column names for the new table (new_emp). As a result, the new table will have the same column names as the table being copied. If different column names are required, they can be specified after the table name:
create new_emp (col1, col2, …)
However, if one column name is specified, they all must be specified.
A DBA could perform this same function with a database link from one database pointing to another. The appeal of the copy command is that it only requires SQL*Net service names and proper privileges to get the job done. For those environments that restrict the usage of database links, the copy utility can be leveraged. In addition, the copy command provides many options, as defined by the actions create, replace, insert and append.
If the copy command is executed from a client PC to copy data from remote database DB0 to remote database DB1, the data will be copied from DB0 to the client PC and then to DB1. For this reason, it is best to use SQL*Plus from either remote host and not require the data to travel through a client machine in order to reach its final destination.
The following command copied the table_with_one_million_rows table to new_table:
SQL> copy from scott/tiger@DB0 to scott/tiger@DB1 create new_table using select * from table_with_one_million_rows;
Array fetch/bind size is 5000. (arraysize is 5000)
Will commit after every 5000 array binds. (copycommit is 5000)
Maximum long size is 80. (long is 80)
Table NEW_TABLE created.
1000000 rows selected from scott@DB0.
1000000 rows inserted into NEW_TABLE.
1000000 rows committed into NEW_TABLE at scott@DB1.
The copy command becomes handy when we have limited (SELECT) access on the source database or we do not have OS level access for the server hosting the source database.
Enjoy :-)