I am using Aqua Data Studio 7.0.39 for my Database Stuff.
I have a 20 SQL files(all contains sql statements, obviously).
I want to execute all rather than copy-paste contains for each.
Is there any way in Aqua to do such things.
Note: I am using Sybase
Thank you !!
I'm also not sure of how to do this in Aqua, but it's very simple to create a batch/powershell script to execute .sql files
You can use the SAP/Sybase isql utility to execute files, and just create a loop to cover all the files you wish to execute.
Check my answer here for more information:
Running bulk of SQL Scripts in Sybase through batch
In the latest versions of ADS there is an integrated shell named FluidShell where you can achieve what you are looking for. See an overview here: https://www.aquaclusters.com/app/home/project/public/aquadatastudio/wikibook/Documentation15/page/246/FluidShell
The command you are looking for is source
source
NAME
source - execute commands or SQL statements from a file
SYNOPSIS
source [OPTION...] FILE [ARGUMENT...]
source [OPTION...]
DESCRIPTION
Read and execute commands or SQL statements from FILE in the current shell environment.
I have not used Aquafold before so I can't tell you exactly. However I have tackled a similar problem once before.
I once created a Powershell script. It opened a ODBC connection to my database and then executed stored procedures in a loop until end of file.
I suggest having a text document with each line being the name of an Stored Proc to run. Then in your powershell script read in a line from the file concatenate it into the call to execute a stored procedure. After each execution is completed you can delete the line from the text file and then read the next line until the EOF (end of file) is reached.
Hope this helps. If I have some time this morning I will try and do a working example for you and post it.
Related
I am using Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 currently. I have a .sql file on my computer which has a lot of sql statements of code in it. Basically has three create table statements, multiple insert into statements, multiple alter table statements,adding foreign keys, etc.
I want to know is there a way that I can load that .sql file into an Execute SQL Task. Or how is it possible, in SSIS, that I can execute this long .sql file? I feel like an Execute SQL Task is involved, but I don't know for sure. This was the Execute SQL Task I tried before to no avail.
Any help would be appreciated.
I have some screenshots basically to show how long of a file I'm talking about...and it goes longer than what is shown.
Execute SQL Task will be what runs commands.
Change the SQL Source type from the default of "Direct Input" to "File Connection"
Then in the FileConnection property, specify a file connection manager that points to MyFile.sql
That said, you can just run the above file(s) in SSMS, or sqlcmd if you prefer a command line
does the sql file contain parameterised insert statements? if so you need to have map the parameters and check that the source to which you are connecting is accessible and the structure of the tables are same as well
I am creating a batch file that will be executed daily at a specific time. The batch file will execute a .sql file. The .sql contains a complex select statement. I have created the sql file using Sql Developer. Also the output of the sql must be stored in an excel sheet with name as todays date.
I have read posts related to batch file to run the sql script but have not found clear answers. I am completely new to batch files.
Thanks
try to use bcp command http://sqlfool.com/2008/12/bcp-basics/ with queryout option
I have a .sql file and I am trying to import it into SQL Server 2008. What is the proper way to do this?
If your file is a large file, 50MB+, then I recommend you use sqlcmd, the command line utility that comes bundled with SQL Server. It is easy to use and it handles large files well. I tried it yesterday with a 22GB file using the following command:
sqlcmd -S SERVERNAME\INSTANCE_NAME -i C:\path\mysqlfile.sql -o C:\path\output_file.txt
The command above assumes that your server name is SERVERNAME, that you SQL Server installation uses the instance name INSTANCE_NAME, and that windows auth is the default auth method. After execution output.txt will contain something like the following:
...
(1 rows affected)
Processed 100 total records
(1 rows affected)
Processed 200 total records
(1 rows affected)
Processed 300 total records
...
use readfileonline.com if you need to see the contents of huge files.
UPDATE
This link provides more command line options and details such as username and password:
https://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/44101/importing-sql-server-database-from-a-sql-file
If you are talking about an actual database (an mdf file) you would Attach it
.sql files are typically run using SQL Server Management Studio. They are basically saved SQL statements, so could be anything. You don't "import" them. More precisely, you "execute" them. Even though the script may indeed insert data.
Also, to expand on Jamie F's answer, don't run a SQL file against your database unless you know what it is doing. SQL scripts can be as dangerous as unchecked exe's
Start SQL Server Management Studio
Connect to your database
File > Open > File and pick your file
Execute it
Try this process -
Open the Query Analyzer
Start --> Programs --> MS SQL Server --> Query Analyzer
Once opened, connect to the database that you are wish running the script on.
Next, open the SQL file using File --> Open option. Select .sql file.
Once it is open, you can execute the file by pressing F5.
In order to import your .sql try the following steps
Start SQL Server Management Studio
Connect to your Database
Open the Query Editor
Drag and Drop your .sql File into the editor
Execute the import
A .sql file is a set of commands that can be executed against the SQL server.
Sometimes the .sql file will specify the database, other times you may need to specify this.
You should talk to your DBA or whoever is responsible for maintaining your databases. They will probably want to give the file a quick look. .sql files can do a lot of harm, even inadvertantly.
See the other answers if you want to plunge ahead.
Get the names of the server and database in SSMS:
Run the following command in PowerShell or CMD:
sqlcmd -S "[SERVER NAME]" -d [DATABASE NAME] -i .\[SCRIPT].sql
Here is a screenshot of what it might look like:
There is no such thing as importing in MS SQL. I understand what you mean. It is so simple. Whenever you get/have a something.SQL file, you should just double click and it will directly open in your MS SQL Studio.
Suppose I am having 100 sql files and I need to execute all the files one by one in sequence. Is there any approach to do this with out executing the scripts manually?
You can write a bat file to execute them using sqlcmd Utility
Write a shell script or similar to run them sequentially.
We've had great success with the SQL Deploy tool by SSW Australia.
It's not free - but worth every penny, and saves you so much time, it pays for itself in no time at all!
(I have no affiliation with SSW Australia other than being a happy user of SQL Deploy)
Pipe the dir /b > foo.txt output to a file
Add sqlcmd at the start of each line etc using a decent text editor like notepad++
You can use PowerShell to do this. The following blog post describes such a script. As part of the foreach a pipe is used to sort the files in the manner that you want to process them. In this example it is being sorted by descending alphabetical file name, but you can also do it by other attributes, such as the date the file was created.
Also the following blog post describes how to run all the .sql files in a directory like the above linked post, but without the use of PowerShell
Assuming your files are named something like this:
001_my_script.sql
002_another_script.sql
003_foo_script.sql
004_bar_script.sql
You can do the following at the command line:
copy *.sql /a my_big_script.sql
And then run the resulting file as one script (via sqlcmd or Management Studio).
Suppose I have wrote script Table_ABC.sql which creates table ABC. I have created many such scripts for each of required tables. Now i want to write a script that call all of these script files in a sequence so basically I want another script file createTables.sql. Mysql provides option to execute a script file from "mysql" shell application but could find some command like exec c:/myscripts/mytable.sql. Please tell me if there is any command that can be written in sql script itself to call other one in latest mysql versions or alternative for same.
Thanks
You can use source command. So your script will be something like:
use your_db;
source script/s1.sql;
source script/s2.sql;
-- so on, so forth