Oracle® Database Utilities 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E22490-05 |
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This chapter describes the Oracle Data Pump Import utility (impdp). The following topics are discussed:
Data Pump Import (hereinafter referred to as Import for ease of reading) is a utility for loading an export dump file set into a target system. The dump file set is made up of one or more disk files that contain table data, database object metadata, and control information. The files are written in a proprietary, binary format. During an import operation, the Data Pump Import utility uses these files to locate each database object in the dump file set.
Import can also be used to load a target database directly from a source database with no intervening dump files. This is known as a network import.
Data Pump Import enables you to specify whether a job should move a subset of the data and metadata from the dump file set or the source database (in the case of a network import), as determined by the import mode. This is done using data filters and metadata filters, which are implemented through Import commands. See "Filtering During Import Operations".
To see some examples of the various ways in which you can use Import, refer to "Examples of Using Data Pump Import".
The Data Pump Import utility is invoked using the impdp
command. The characteristics of the import operation are determined by the import parameters you specify. These parameters can be specified either on the command line or in a parameter file.
Note:
Do not invoke Import asSYSDBA,
except at the request of Oracle technical support. SYSDBA
is used internally and has specialized functions; its behavior is not the same as for general users.Note:
Be aware that if you are performing a Data Pump Import into a table or tablespace created with theNOLOGGING
clause enabled, then a redo log file may still be generated. The redo that is generated in such a case is generally for maintenance of the master table or related to underlying recursive space transactions, data dictionary changes, and index maintenance for indices on the table that require logging.The following sections contain more information about invoking Import:
You can interact with Data Pump Import by using a command line, a parameter file, or an interactive-command mode.
Command-Line Interface: Enables you to specify the Import parameters directly on the command line. For a complete description of the parameters available in the command-line interface, see "Parameters Available in Import's Command-Line Mode".
Parameter File Interface: Enables you to specify command-line parameters in a parameter file. The only exception is the PARFILE
parameter because parameter files cannot be nested. The use of parameter files is recommended if you are using parameters whose values require quotation marks. See "Use of Quotation Marks On the Data Pump Command Line".
Interactive-Command Interface: Stops logging to the terminal and displays the Import prompt, from which you can enter various commands, some of which are specific to interactive-command mode. This mode is enabled by pressing Ctrl+C during an import operation started with the command-line interface or the parameter file interface. Interactive-command mode is also enabled when you attach to an executing or stopped job.
For a complete description of the commands available in interactive-command mode, see "Commands Available in Import's Interactive-Command Mode".
The import mode determines what is imported. The specified mode applies to the source of the operation, either a dump file set or another database if the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is specified.
When the source of the import operation is a dump file set, specifying a mode is optional. If no mode is specified, then Import attempts to load the entire dump file set in the mode in which the export operation was run.
The mode is specified on the command line, using the appropriate parameter. The available modes are described in the following sections:
Note:
When you import a dump file that was created by a full-mode export, the import operation attempts to copy the password for theSYS
account from the source database. This sometimes fails (for example, if the password is in a shared password file). If it does fail, then after the import completes, you must set the password for the SYS
account at the target database to a password of your choice.A full import is specified using the FULL
parameter. In full import mode, the entire content of the source (dump file set or another database) is loaded into the target database. This is the default for file-based imports. You must have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role if the source is another database.
Cross-schema references are not imported for non-privileged users. For example, a trigger defined on a table within the importing user's schema, but residing in another user's schema, is not imported.
The DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role is required on the target database and the DATAPUMP_EXP_FULL_DATABASE
role is required on the source database if the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is used for a full import.
See Also:
"FULL"A schema import is specified using the SCHEMAS
parameter. In a schema import, only objects owned by the specified schemas are loaded. The source can be a full, table, tablespace, or schema-mode export dump file set or another database. If you have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role, then a list of schemas can be specified and the schemas themselves (including system privilege grants) are created in the database in addition to the objects contained within those schemas.
Cross-schema references are not imported for non-privileged users unless the other schema is remapped to the current schema. For example, a trigger defined on a table within the importing user's schema, but residing in another user's schema, is not imported.
See Also:
"SCHEMAS"A table-mode import is specified using the TABLES
parameter. In table mode, only the specified set of tables, partitions, and their dependent objects are loaded. The source can be a full, schema, tablespace, or table-mode export dump file set or another database. You must have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role to specify tables that are not in your own schema.
You can use the transportable option during a table-mode import by specifying the TRANPORTABLE=ALWAYS
parameter with the TABLES
parameter. Note that this requires use of the NETWORK_LINK
parameter, as well.
A tablespace-mode import is specified using the TABLESPACES
parameter. In tablespace mode, all objects contained within the specified set of tablespaces are loaded, along with the dependent objects. The source can be a full, schema, tablespace, or table-mode export dump file set or another database. For unprivileged users, objects not remapped to the current schema will not be processed.
See Also:
"TABLESPACES"A transportable tablespace import is specified using the TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES
parameter. In transportable tablespace mode, the metadata from another database is loaded using a database link (specified with the NETWORK_LINK
parameter). There are no dump files involved. The actual data files, specified by the TRANSPORT_DATAFILES
parameter, must be made available from the source system for use in the target database, typically by copying them over to the target system.
Encrypted columns are not supported in transportable tablespace mode.
This mode requires the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role.
Note:
You cannot export transportable tablespaces and then import them into a database at a lower release level. The target database must be at the same or higher release level as the source database.Considerations for Time Zone File Versions in Transportable Tablespace Mode
Jobs performed in transportable tablespace mode have the following requirements concerning time zone file versions:
If the source is Oracle Database 11g release 2 (11.2.0.2) or later and there are tables in the transportable set that use TIMESTAMP WITH TIMEZONE (TSTZ) columns, then the time zone file version on the target database must exactly match the time zone file version on the source database.
If the source is earlier than Oracle Database 11g release 2 (11.2.0.2), then the time zone file version must be the same on the source and target database for all transportable jobs regardless of whether the transportable set uses TSTZ columns.
If these requirements are not met, then the import job aborts before anything is imported. This is because if the import job were allowed to import the objects, there might be inconsistent results when tables with TSTZ columns were read.
To identify the time zone file version of a database, you can execute the following SQL statement:
SQL> SELECT VERSION FROM V$TIMEZONE_FILE;
See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for more information about transportable tablespaces
Oracle Database Globalization Support Guide for more information about time zone file versions
You can specify a connect identifier in the connect string when you invoke the Data Pump Import utility. The connect identifier can specify a database instance that is different from the current instance identified by the current Oracle System ID (SID). The connect identifier can be an Oracle*Net connect descriptor or a net service name (usually defined in the tnsnames.ora
file) that maps to a connect descriptor. Use of a connect identifier requires that you have Oracle Net Listener running (to start the default listener, enter lsnrctl
start
). The following is an example of this type of connection, in which inst1
is the connect identifier:
impdp hr@inst1 DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=hr.dmp TABLES=employees
Import then prompts you for a password:
Password: password
The local Import client connects to the database instance identified by the connect identifier inst1
(a net service name), and imports the data from the dump file hr.dmp
to inst1
.
Specifying a connect identifier when you invoke the Import utility is different from performing an import operation using the NETWORK_LINK
parameter. When you start an import operation and specify a connect identifier, the local Import client connects to the database instance identified by the connect identifier and imports the data from the dump file named on the command line to that database instance.
Whereas, when you perform an import using the NETWORK_LINK
parameter, the import is performed using a database link, and there is no dump file involved. (A database link is a connection between two physical database servers that allows a client to access them as one logical database.)
See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for more information about database links
Oracle Database Net Services Administrator's Guide for more information about connect identifiers and Oracle Net Listener
Data Pump Import provides data and metadata filtering capability to help you limit the type of information that is imported.
Data specific filtering is implemented through the QUERY
and SAMPLE
parameters, which specify restrictions on the table rows that are to be imported. Data filtering can also occur indirectly because of metadata filtering, which can include or exclude table objects along with any associated row data.
Each data filter can only be specified once per table and once per job. If different filters using the same name are applied to both a particular table and to the whole job, then the filter parameter supplied for the specific table takes precedence.
Data Pump Import provides much greater metadata filtering capability than was provided by the original Import utility. Metadata filtering is implemented through the EXCLUDE
and INCLUDE
parameters. The EXCLUDE
and INCLUDE
parameters are mutually exclusive.
Metadata filters identify a set of objects to be included or excluded from a Data Pump operation. For example, you could request a full import, but without Package Specifications or Package Bodies.
To use filters correctly and to get the results you expect, remember that dependent objects of an identified object are processed along with the identified object. For example, if a filter specifies that a package is to be included in an operation, then grants upon that package will also be included. Likewise, if a table is excluded by a filter, then indexes, constraints, grants, and triggers upon the table will also be excluded by the filter.
If multiple filters are specified for an object type, then an implicit AND
operation is applied to them. That is, objects participating in the job must pass all of the filters applied to their object types.
The same filter name can be specified multiple times within a job.
To see a list of valid object types, query the following views: DATABASE_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for full mode, SCHEMA_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for schema mode, and TABLE_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for table and tablespace mode. The values listed in the OBJECT_PATH
column are the valid object types. Note that full object path names are determined by the export mode, not by the import mode.
See Also:
"Metadata Filters" for an example of using filtering
The Import "EXCLUDE" parameter
The Import "INCLUDE" parameter
This section describes the parameters available in the command-line mode of Data Pump Import. Be sure to read the following sections before using the Import parameters:
Many of the descriptions include an example of how to use the parameter. For background information on setting up the necessary environment to run the examples, see:
For parameters that can have multiple values specified, the values can be separated by commas or by spaces. For example, you could specify TABLES=employees,jobs
or TABLES=employees jobs
.
For every parameter you enter, you must enter an equal sign (=) and a value. Data Pump has no other way of knowing that the previous parameter specification is complete and a new parameter specification is beginning. For example, in the following command line, even though NOLOGFILE
is a valid parameter, it would be interpreted as another dump file name for the DUMPFILE
parameter:
impdp DIRECTORY=dpumpdir DUMPFILE=test.dmp NOLOGFILE TABLES=employees
This would result in two dump files being created, test.dmp
and nologfile.dmp
.
To avoid this, specify either NOLOGFILE=YES
or NOLOGFILE=NO
.
Use of Quotation Marks On the Data Pump Command Line
Some operating systems treat quotation marks as special characters and will therefore not pass them to an application unless they are preceded by an escape character, such as the backslash (\). This is true both on the command line and within parameter files. Some operating systems may require an additional set of single or double quotation marks on the command line around the entire parameter value containing the special characters.
The following examples are provided to illustrate these concepts. Be aware that they may not apply to your particular operating system and that this documentation cannot anticipate the operating environments unique to each user.
Suppose you specify the TABLES
parameter in a parameter file, as follows:
TABLES = \"MixedCaseTableName\"
If you were to specify that on the command line, then some operating systems would require that it be surrounded by single quotation marks, as follows:
TABLES - '\"MixedCaseTableName\"'
To avoid having to supply additional quotation marks on the command line, Oracle recommends the use of parameter files. Also, note that if you use a parameter file and the parameter value being specified does not have quotation marks as the first character in the string (for example, TABLES=scott."EmP"
), then the use of escape characters may not be necessary on some systems.
See Also:
The Import "PARFILE" parameter
"Default Locations for Dump, Log, and SQL Files" for information about creating default directory objects
Your Oracle operating system-specific documentation for information about how special and reserved characters are handled on your system
Using the Import Parameter Examples
If you try running the examples that are provided for each parameter, then be aware of the following:
After you enter the username and parameters as shown in the example, Import is started and you are prompted for a password. You must supply a password before a database connection is made.
Most of the examples use the sample schemas of the seed database, which is installed by default when you install Oracle Database. In particular, the human resources (hr
) schema is often used.
Examples that specify a dump file to import assume that the dump file exists. Wherever possible, the examples use dump files that are generated when you run the Export examples in Chapter 2.
The examples assume that the directory objects, dpump_dir1
and dpump_dir2
, already exist and that READ
and WRITE
privileges have been granted to the hr
user for these directory objects. See "Default Locations for Dump, Log, and SQL Files" for information about creating directory objects and assigning privileges to them.
Some of the examples require the DATAPUMP_EXP_FULL_DATABASE
and DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
roles. The examples assume that the hr
user has been granted these roles.
If necessary, ask your DBA for help in creating these directory objects and assigning the necessary privileges and roles.
Syntax diagrams of these parameters are provided in "Syntax Diagrams for Data Pump Import".
Unless specifically noted, these parameters can also be specified in a parameter file.
Default: Null
Used to stop the job after it is initialized. This allows the master table to be queried before any data is imported.
ABORT_STEP=[n | -1]
The possible values correspond to a process order number in the master table. The result of using each number is as follows:
n -- If the value is zero or greater, then the import operation is started and the job is aborted at the object that is stored in the master table with the corresponding process order number.
-1 and the job is an import using a NETWORK_LINK
-- Abort the job after setting it up but before importing any objects.
-1 and the job is an import that does not use NETWORK_LINK
-- Abort the job after loading the master table and applying filters.
None
> impdp hr SCHEMAS=hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 LOGFILE=schemas.log DUMPFILE=expdat.dmp ABORT_STEP=-1
Default: AUTOMATIC
Instructs Import to use a particular method to load data.
ACCESS_METHOD=[AUTOMATIC | DIRECT_PATH | EXTERNAL_TABLE | CONVENTIONAL]
The ACCESS_METHOD
parameter is provided so that you can try an alternative method if the default method does not work for some reason. Oracle recommends that you use the default option (AUTOMATIC
) whenever possible because it allows Data Pump to automatically select the most efficient method.
If the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is also specified, then the ACCESS_METHOD
parameter is ignored.
> impdp hr SCHEMAS=hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 LOGFILE=schemas.log DUMPFILE=expdat.dmp ACCESS_METHOD=CONVENTIONAL
Default: current job in user's schema, if there is only one running job.
Attaches the client session to an existing import job and automatically places you in interactive-command mode.
ATTACH [=[schema_name.]job_name]
Specify a schema_name
if the schema to which you are attaching is not your own. You must have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role to do this.
A job_name
does not have to be specified if only one running job is associated with your schema and the job is active. If the job you are attaching to is stopped, then you must supply the job name. To see a list of Data Pump job names, you can query the DBA_DATAPUMP_JOBS
view or the USER_DATAPUMP_JOBS
view.
When you are attached to the job, Import displays a description of the job and then displays the Import prompt.
When you specify the ATTACH
parameter, the only other Data Pump parameter you can specify on the command line is ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD
.
If the job you are attaching to was initially started using an encryption password, then when you attach to the job you must again enter the ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD
parameter on the command line to re-specify that password. The only exception to this is if the job was initially started with the ENCRYPTION=ENCRYPTED_COLUMNS_ONLY
parameter. In that case, the encryption password is not needed when attaching to the job.
You cannot attach to a job in another schema unless it is already running.
If the dump file set or master table for the job have been deleted, then the attach operation fails.
Altering the master table in any way can lead to unpredictable results.
The following is an example of using the ATTACH
parameter.
> impdp hr ATTACH=import_job
This example assumes that a job named import_job
exists in the hr
schema.
Default: Y
ES
Determines whether Data Pump can use Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) resources and start workers on other Oracle RAC instances.
CLUSTER=[YES | NO]
To force Data Pump Import to use only the instance where the job is started and to replicate pre-Oracle Database 11g release 2 (11.2) behavior, specify CLUSTER=NO
.
To specify a specific, existing service and constrain worker processes to run only on instances defined for that service, use the SERVICE_NAME
parameter with the CLUSTER=YES
parameter.
Use of the CLUSTER
parameter may affect performance because there is some additional overhead in distributing the import job across Oracle RAC instances. For small jobs, it may be better to specify CLUSTER=NO
to constrain the job to run on the instance where it is started. Jobs whose performance benefits the most from using the CLUSTER
parameter are those involving large amounts of data.
See Also:
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 SCHEMAS=hr CLUSTER=NO PARALLEL=3 NETWORK_LINK=dbs1
This example performs a schema-mode import of the hr
schema. Because CLUSTER=NO
is used, the job uses only the instance where it is started. Up to 3 parallel processes can be used. The NETWORK_LINK
value of dbs1
would be replaced with the name of the source database from which you were importing data. (Note that there is no dump file generated because this is a network import.)
The NETWORK_LINK
parameter is simply being used as part of the example. It is not required when using the CLUSTER
parameter.
Default: ALL
Enables you to filter what is loaded during the import operation.
CONTENT=[ALL | DATA_ONLY | METADATA_ONLY]
ALL
loads any data and metadata contained in the source. This is the default.
DATA_ONLY l
oads only table row data into existing tables; no database objects are created.
METADATA_ONLY
loads only database object definitions; no table row data is loaded. Be aware that if you specify CONTENT=METADATA_ONLY
, then any index or table statistics imported from the dump file are locked after the import operation is complete.
The CONTENT=METADATA_ONLY
parameter and value cannot be used in conjunction with the TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES
(transportable-tablespace mode) parameter or the QUERY
parameter.
The CONTENT=ALL
and CONTENT=DATA_ONLY
parameter and values cannot be used in conjunction with the SQLFILE
parameter.
The following is an example of using the CONTENT
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp CONTENT=METADATA_ONLY
This command will execute a full import that will load only the metadata in the expfull.dmp
dump file. It executes a full import because that is the default for file-based imports in which no import mode is specified.
Default: There is no default. If this parameter is not used, then the special data handling options it provides simply do not take effect.
The DATA_OPTIONS
parameter designates how certain types of data should be handled during import operations.
DATA_OPTIONS = [DISABLE_APPEND_HINT | SKIP_CONSTRAINT_ERRORS]
DISABLE_APPEND_HINT
- Specifies that you do not want the import operation to use the APPEND
hint while loading the data object. Disabling the APPEND
hint can be useful if there is a small set of data objects to load that already exist in the database and some other application may be concurrently accessing one or more of the data objects.
If DISABLE_APPEND_HINT
is not set, then the default behavior is to use the APPEND
hint for loading data objects.
SKIP_CONSTRAINT_ERRORS
- affects how non-deferred constraint violations are handled while a data object (table, partition, or subpartition) is being loaded. It has no effect on the load if deferred constraint violations are encountered. Deferred constraint violations always cause the entire load to be rolled back.
The SKIP_CONSTRAINT_ERRORS
option specifies that you want the import operation to proceed even if non-deferred constraint violations are encountered. It logs any rows that cause non-deferred constraint violations, but does not stop the load for the data object experiencing the violation.
If SKIP_CONSTRAINT_ERRORS
is not set, then the default behavior is to roll back the entire load of the data object on which non-deferred constraint violations are encountered.
If DISABLE_APPEND_HINT
is used, then it can take longer for data objects to load.
If SKIP_CONSTRAINT_ERRORS
is used and if a data object has unique indexes or constraints defined on it at the time of the load, then the APPEND
hint will not be used for loading that data object. Therefore, loading such data objects will take longer when the SKIP_CONSTRAINT_ERRORS
option is used.
Even if SKIP_CONSTRAINT_ERRORS
is specified, then it is not used unless a data object is being loaded using the external table access method.
This example shows a data-only table mode import with SKIP_CONSTRAINT_ERRORS
enabled:
> impdp hr TABLES=employees CONTENT=DATA_ONLY DUMPFILE=dpump_dir1:table.dmp DATA_OPTIONS=skip_constraint_errors
If any non-deferred constraint violations are encountered during this import operation, then they will be logged and the import will continue on to completion.
Default: DATA_PUMP_DIR
Specifies the default location in which the import job can find the dump file set and where it should create log and SQL files.
DIRECTORY=directory_object
The directory_object
is the name of a database directory object (not the file path of an actual directory). Upon installation, privileged users have access to a default directory object named DATA_PUMP_DIR
. Users with access to the default DATA_PUMP_DIR
directory object do not need to use the DIRECTORY
parameter at all.
A directory object specified on the DUMPFILE
, LOGFILE
, or SQLFILE
parameter overrides any directory object that you specify for the DIRECTORY
parameter. You must have Read access to the directory used for the dump file set and Write access to the directory used to create the log and SQL files.
The following is an example of using the DIRECTORY
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp LOGFILE=dpump_dir2:expfull.log
This command results in the import job looking for the expfull.dmp
dump file in the directory pointed to by the dpump_dir1
directory object. The dpump_dir2
directory object specified on the LOGFILE
parameter overrides the DIRECTORY
parameter so that the log file is written to dpump_dir2
.
See Also:
"Default Locations for Dump, Log, and SQL Files" for more information about default directory objects and the order of precedence Data Pump uses to determine a file's location
Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for more information about the CREATE
DIRECTORY
command
Default: expdat
.dmp
Specifies the names and optionally, the directory objects of the dump file set that was created by Export.
DUMPFILE=[directory_object:]file_name [, ...]
The directory_object
is optional if one has already been established by the DIRECTORY
parameter. If you do supply a value here, then it must be a directory object that already exists and that you have access to. A database directory object that is specified as part of the DUMPFILE
parameter overrides a value specified by the DIRECTORY
parameter.
The file_name
is the name of a file in the dump file set. The file names can also be templates that contain the substitution variable, %U
. If %U
is used, then Import examines each file that matches the template (until no match is found) to locate all files that are part of the dump file set. The %U
expands to a 2-digit incrementing integer starting with 01.
Sufficient information is contained within the files for Import to locate the entire set, provided the file specifications in the DUMPFILE
parameter encompass the entire set. The files are not required to have the same names, locations, or order that they had at export time.
The following is an example of using the Import DUMPFILE
parameter. You can create the dump files used in this example by running the example provided for the Export DUMPFILE
parameter. See "DUMPFILE".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=dpump_dir2:exp1.dmp, exp2%U.dmp
Because a directory object (dpump_dir2
) is specified for the exp1.dmp
dump file, the import job will look there for the file. It will also look in dpump_dir1
for dump files of the form exp2
nn
.dmp
. The log file will be written to dpump_dir1
.
Default: There is no default; the value is user-supplied.
Specifies a password for accessing encrypted column data in the dump file set. This prevents unauthorized access to an encrypted dump file set.
ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD = password
This parameter is required on an import operation if an encryption password was specified on the export operation. The password that is specified must be the same one that was specified on the export operation.
This parameter is valid only in the Enterprise Edition of Oracle Database 11g.
Data Pump encryption features require that the Oracle Advanced Security option be enabled. See Oracle Database Advanced Security Administrator's Guide for information about licensing requirements for the Oracle Advanced Security option.
The ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD
parameter is not valid if the dump file set was created using the transparent mode of encryption.
The ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD
parameter is not valid for network import jobs.
Encryption attributes for all columns must match between the exported table definition and the target table. For example, suppose you have a table, EMP
, and one of its columns is named EMPNO
. Both of the following situations would result in an error because the encryption attribute for the EMP
column in the source table would not match the encryption attribute for the EMP
column in the target table:
The EMP
table is exported with the EMPNO
column being encrypted, but before importing the table you remove the encryption attribute from the EMPNO
column.
The EMP
table is exported without the EMPNO
column being encrypted, but before importing the table you enable encryption on the EMPNO
column.
In the following example, the encryption password, 123456
, must be specified because it was specified when the dpcd2be1.dmp
dump file was created (see "ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD").
> impdp hr TABLES=employee_s_encrypt DIRECTORY=dpump_dir DUMPFILE=dpcd2be1.dmp ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD=123456
During the import operation, any columns in the employee_s_encrypt
table that were encrypted during the export operation are decrypted before being imported.
Default: BLOCKS
Instructs the source system in a network import operation to estimate how much data will be generated.
ESTIMATE=[BLOCKS | STATISTICS]
The valid choices for the ESTIMATE
parameter are as follows:
BLOCKS
- The estimate is calculated by multiplying the number of database blocks used by the source objects times the appropriate block sizes.
STATISTICS
- The estimate is calculated using statistics for each table. For this method to be as accurate as possible, all tables should have been analyzed recently. (Table analysis can be done with either the SQL ANALYZE
statement or the DBMS_STATS
PL/SQL package.)
The estimate that is generated can be used to determine a percentage complete throughout the execution of the import job.
The Import ESTIMATE
parameter is valid only if the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is also specified.
When the import source is a dump file set, the amount of data to be loaded is already known, so the percentage complete is automatically calculated.
The estimate may be inaccurate if either the QUERY
or REMAP_DATA
parameter is used.
In the following example, source_database_link
would be replaced with the name of a valid link to the source database.
> impdp hr TABLES=job_history NETWORK_LINK=source_database_link
DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 ESTIMATE=STATISTICS
The job_history
table in the hr
schema is imported from the source database. A log file is created by default and written to the directory pointed to by the dpump_dir1
directory object. When the job begins, an estimate for the job is calculated based on table statistics.
Default: There is no default
Enables you to filter the metadata that is imported by specifying objects and object types to exclude from the import job.
EXCLUDE=object_type[:name_clause] [, ...]
The object_type
specifies the type of object to be excluded. To see a list of valid values for object_type
, query the following views: DATABASE_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for full mode, SCHEMA_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for schema mode, and TABLE_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for table and tablespace mode. The values listed in the OBJECT_PATH
column are the valid object types.
For the given mode of import, all object types contained within the source (and their dependents) are included, except those specified in an EXCLUDE
statement. If an object is excluded, then all of its dependent objects are also excluded. For example, excluding a table will also exclude all indexes and triggers on the table.
The name_clause
is optional. It allows fine-grained selection of specific objects within an object type. It is a SQL expression used as a filter on the object names of the type. It consists of a SQL operator and the values against which the object names of the specified type are to be compared. The name_clause
applies only to object types whose instances have names (for example, it is applicable to TABLE
and VIEW
, but not to GRANT
). It must be separated from the object type with a colon and enclosed in double quotation marks, because single quotation marks are required to delimit the name strings. For example, you could set EXCLUDE=INDEX:"LIKE
'DEPT%'"
to exclude all indexes whose names start with dept
.
The name that you supply for the name_clause
must exactly match, including upper and lower casing, an existing object in the database. For example, if the name_clause
you supply is for a table named EMPLOYEES
, then there must be an existing table named EMPLOYEES
using all upper case. If the name_clause
were supplied as Employees
or employees
or any other variation, then the table would not be found.
More than one EXCLUDE
statement can be specified.
Depending on your operating system, the use of quotation marks when you specify a value for this parameter may also require that you use escape characters. Oracle recommends that you place this parameter in a parameter file, which can reduce the number of escape characters that might otherwise be needed on the command line.
As explained in the following sections, you should be aware of the effects of specifying certain objects for exclusion, in particular, CONSTRAINT
, GRANT
, and USER
.
The following constraints cannot be excluded:
NOT
NULL
constraints.
Constraints needed for the table to be created and loaded successfully (for example, primary key constraints for index-organized tables or REF
SCOPE
and WITH
ROWID
constraints for tables with REF
columns).
This means that the following EXCLUDE
statements will be interpreted as follows:
EXCLUDE=
CONSTRAINT
will exclude all nonreferential constraints, except for NOT
NULL
constraints and any constraints needed for successful table creation and loading.
EXCLUDE=
REF_CONSTRAINT
will exclude referential integrity (foreign key) constraints.
Specifying EXCLUDE=
GRANT
excludes object grants on all object types and system privilege grants.
Specifying EXCLUDE=
USER
excludes only the definitions of users, not the objects contained within users' schemas.
To exclude a specific user and all objects of that user, specify a command such as the following, where hr
is the schema name of the user you want to exclude.
impdp FULL=YES DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp EXCLUDE=SCHEMA:"='HR'"
Note that in this situation, an import mode of FULL
is specified. If no mode were specified, then the default mode, SCHEMAS
, would be used. This would cause an error because the command would indicate that the schema should be both imported and excluded at the same time.
If you try to exclude a user by using a statement such as EXCLUDE
=USER
:"= 'HR
'", then only CREATE USER hr
DDL statements will be excluded, and you may not get the results you expect.
The EXCLUDE
and INCLUDE
parameters are mutually exclusive.
Assume the following is in a parameter file, exclude.par
, being used by a DBA or some other user with the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role. (If you want to try the example, then you must create this file.)
EXCLUDE=FUNCTION EXCLUDE=PROCEDURE EXCLUDE=PACKAGE EXCLUDE=INDEX:"LIKE 'EMP%' "
You could then issue the following command. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this command by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp system DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp PARFILE=exclude.par
All data from the expfull.dmp
dump file will be loaded except for functions, procedures, packages, and indexes whose names start with emp
.
See Also:
"Filtering During Import Operations" for more information about the effects of using theEXCLUDE
parameterDefault: There is no default
Specifies the system change number (SCN) that Import will use to enable the Flashback utility.
FLASHBACK_SCN=scn_number
The import operation is performed with data that is consistent up to the specified scn_number
.
Note:
If you are on a logical standby system, then theFLASHBACK_SCN
parameter is ignored because SCNs are selected by logical standby. See Oracle Data Guard Concepts and Administration for information about logical standby databases.The FLASHBACK_SCN
parameter is valid only when the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is also specified.
The FLASHBACK_SCN
parameter pertains only to the Flashback Query capability of Oracle Database. It is not applicable to Flashback Database, Flashback Drop, or Flashback Data Archive.
FLASHBACK_SCN
and FLASHBACK_TIME
are mutually exclusive.
The following is an example of using the FLASHBACK_SCN
parameter.
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 FLASHBACK_SCN=123456 NETWORK_LINK=source_database_link
The source_database_link
in this example would be replaced with the name of a source database from which you were importing data.
Default: There is no default
Specifies the system change number (SCN) that Import will use to enable the Flashback utility.
FLASHBACK_TIME="TO_TIMESTAMP()"
The SCN that most closely matches the specified time is found, and this SCN is used to enable the Flashback utility. The import operation is performed with data that is consistent up to this SCN. Because the TO_TIMESTAMP
value is enclosed in quotation marks, it would be best to put this parameter in a parameter file. See "Use of Quotation Marks On the Data Pump Command Line".
Note:
If you are on a logical standby system, then theFLASHBACK_TIME
parameter is ignored because SCNs are selected by logical standby. See Oracle Data Guard Concepts and Administration for information about logical standby databases.This parameter is valid only when the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is also specified.
The FLASHBACK_TIME
parameter pertains only to the flashback query capability of Oracle Database. It is not applicable to Flashback Database, Flashback Drop, or Flashback Data Archive.
FLASHBACK_TIME
and FLASHBACK_SCN
are mutually exclusive.
You can specify the time in any format that the DBMS_FLASHBACK.ENABLE_AT_TIME
procedure accepts,. For example, suppose you have a parameter file, flashback_imp.par, that contains the following:
FLASHBACK_TIME="TO_TIMESTAMP('25-08-2008 14:35:00', 'DD-MM-YYYY HH24:MI:SS')"
You could then issue the following command:
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 PARFILE=flashback_imp.par NETWORK_LINK=source_database_link
The import operation will be performed with data that is consistent with the SCN that most closely matches the specified time.
See Also:
Oracle Database Advanced Application Developer's Guide for information about using flashbackDefault: Y
ES
Specifies that you want to perform a full database import.
FULL=YES
A value of FULL=YES
indicates that all data and metadata from the source (either a dump file set or another database) is imported.
Filtering can restrict what is imported using this import mode (see "Filtering During Import Operations").
If the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is used and the USERID
that is executing the import job has the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role on the target database, then that user must also have the DATAPUMP_EXP_FULL_DATABASE
role on the source database.
If you are an unprivileged user importing from a file, then only schemas that map to your own schema are imported.
FULL
is the default mode when you are performing a file-based import.
The following is an example of using the FULL
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DUMPFILE=dpump_dir1:expfull.dmp FULL=YES LOGFILE=dpump_dir2:full_imp.log
This example imports everything from the expfull.dmp
dump file. In this example, a DIRECTORY
parameter is not provided. Therefore, a directory object must be provided on both the DUMPFILE
parameter and the LOGFILE
parameter. The directory objects can be different, as shown in this example.
Default: NO
Displays online help for the Import utility.
HELP=YES
If HELP
=YES
is specified, then Import displays a summary of all Import command-line parameters and interactive commands.
> impdp HELP = YES
This example will display a brief description of all Import parameters and commands.
Default: There is no default
Enables you to filter the metadata that is imported by specifying objects and object types for the current import mode.
INCLUDE = object_type[:name_clause] [, ...]
The object_type
specifies the type of object to be included. To see a list of valid values for object_type
, query the following views: DATABASE_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for full mode, SCHEMA_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for schema mode, and TABLE_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for table and tablespace mode. The values listed in the OBJECT_PATH
column are the valid object types.
Only object types in the source (and their dependents) that are explicitly specified in the INCLUDE
statement are imported.
The name_clause
is optional. It allows fine-grained selection of specific objects within an object type. It is a SQL expression used as a filter on the object names of the type. It consists of a SQL operator and the values against which the object names of the specified type are to be compared. The name_clause
applies only to object types whose instances have names (for example, it is applicable to TABLE
, but not to GRANT
). It must be separated from the object type with a colon and enclosed in double quotation marks, because single quotation marks are required to delimit the name strings.
The name that you supply for the name_clause
must exactly match, including upper and lower casing, an existing object in the database. For example, if the name_clause
you supply is for a table named EMPLOYEES
, then there must be an existing table named EMPLOYEES
using all upper case. If the name_clause
were supplied as Employees
or employees
or any other variation, then the table would not be found.
More than one INCLUDE
statement can be specified.
Depending on your operating system, the use of quotation marks when you specify a value for this parameter may also require that you use escape characters. Oracle recommends that you place this parameter in a parameter file, which can reduce the number of escape characters that might otherwise be needed on the command line. See "Use of Quotation Marks On the Data Pump Command Line".
To see a list of valid paths for use with the INCLUDE
parameter, you can query the following views: DATABASE_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for Full mode, SCHEMA_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for schema mode, and TABLE_EXPORT_OBJECTS
for table and tablespace mode.
The INCLUDE
and EXCLUDE
parameters are mutually exclusive.
Assume the following is in a parameter file, imp_include.par
, being used by a DBA or some other user with the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role:
INCLUDE=FUNCTION INCLUDE=PROCEDURE INCLUDE=PACKAGE INCLUDE=INDEX:"LIKE 'EMP%' "
You can then issue the following command:
> impdp system SCHEMAS=hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp PARFILE=imp_include.par
You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
The Import operation will load only functions, procedures, and packages from the hr
schema and indexes whose names start with EMP
. Although this is a privileged-mode import (the user must have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role), the schema definition is not imported, because the USER
object type was not specified in an INCLUDE
statement.
Default: system-generated name of the form SYS_<IMPORT or SQLFILE>_<mode>_NN
The job name is used to identify the import job in subsequent actions, such as when the ATTACH
parameter is used to attach to a job, or to identify the job via the DBA_DATAPUMP_JOBS
or USER_DATAPUMP_JOBS
views.
JOB_NAME=jobname_string
The jobname_string
specifies a name of up to 30 bytes for this import job. The bytes must represent printable characters and spaces. If spaces are included, then the name must be enclosed in single quotation marks (for example, 'Thursday Import'). The job name is implicitly qualified by the schema of the user performing the import operation. The job name is used as the name of the master table, which controls the export job.
The default job name is system-generated in the form SYS_IMPORT_mode_NN
or SYS_SQLFILE_mode_NN
, where NN
expands to a 2-digit incrementing integer starting at 01. An example of a default name is 'SYS_IMPORT_TABLESPACE_02
'.
The following is an example of using the JOB_NAME
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp JOB_NAME=impjob01
Default: NO
Indicates whether the master table should be deleted or retained at the end of a Data Pump job that completes successfully. The master table is automatically retained for jobs that do not complete successfully.
KEEP_MASTER=[YES | NO]
None
> impdp hr SCHEMAS=hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 LOGFILE=schemas.log DUMPFILE=expdat.dmp KEEP_MASTER=YES
Default: import
.log
Specifies the name, and optionally, a directory object, for the log file of the import job.
LOGFILE=[directory_object:]file_name
If you specify a directory_object
, then it must be one that was previously established by the DBA and that you have access to. This overrides the directory object specified with the DIRECTORY
parameter. The default behavior is to create import
.log
in the directory referenced by the directory object specified in the DIRECTORY
parameter.
If the file_name
you specify already exists, then it will be overwritten.
All messages regarding work in progress, work completed, and errors encountered are written to the log file. (For a real-time status of the job, use the STATUS
command in interactive mode.)
A log file is always created unless the NOLOGFILE
parameter is specified. As with the dump file set, the log file is relative to the server and not the client.
Note:
Data Pump Import writes the log file using the database character set. If your clientNLS_LANG
environment sets up a different client character set from the database character set, then it is possible that table names may be different in the log file than they are when displayed on the client output screen.To perform a Data Pump Import using Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM), you must specify a LOGFILE
parameter that includes a directory object that does not include the Oracle ASM + notation. That is, the log file must be written to a disk file, and not written into the Oracle ASM storage. Alternatively, you can specify NOLOGFILE=YES
. However, this prevents the writing of the log file.
The following is an example of using the LOGFILE
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr SCHEMAS=HR DIRECTORY=dpump_dir2 LOGFILE=imp.log DUMPFILE=dpump_dir1:expfull.dmp
Because no directory object is specified on the LOGFILE
parameter, the log file is written to the directory object specified on the DIRECTORY
parameter.
See Also:
"Using Directory Objects When Oracle Automatic Storage Management Is Enabled" for information about Oracle Automatic Storage Management and directory objects
Default: NO
Indicates whether to import just the master table and then stop the job so that the contents of the master table can be examined.
MASTER_ONLY=[YES | NO]
If the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is also specified, then MASTER_ONLY=YES
is not supported.
> impdp hr SCHEMAS=hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 LOGFILE=schemas.log DUMPFILE=expdat.dmp MASTER_ONLY=YES
Default: NO
Indicates whether additional information about the job should be reported to the Data Pump log file.
METRICS=[YES | NO]
When METRICS=YES
is used, the number of objects and the elapsed time are recorded in the Data Pump log file.
None
> impdp hr SCHEMAS=hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 LOGFILE=schemas.log DUMPFILE=expdat.dmp METRICS=YES
Default: There is no default
Enables an import from a (source) database identified by a valid database link. The data from the source database instance is written directly back to the connected database instance.
NETWORK_LINK=source_database_link
The NETWORK_LINK
parameter initiates an import via a database link. This means that the system to which the impdp
client is connected contacts the source database referenced by the source_database_link
, retrieves data from it, and writes the data directly to the database on the connected instance. There are no dump files involved.
The source_database_link
provided must be the name of a database link to an available database. If the database on that instance does not already have a database link, then you or your DBA must create one using the SQL CREATE DATABASE LINK
statement.
When you perform a network import using the transportable method, you must copy the source data files to the target database before you start the import.
If the source database is read-only, then the connected user must have a locally managed tablespace assigned as the default temporary tablespace on the source database. Otherwise, the job will fail.
This parameter is required when any of the following parameters are specified: FLASHBACK_SCN
, FLASHBACK_TIME
, ESTIMATE
, TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES
, or TRANSPORTABLE
.
Caution:
If an import operation is performed over an unencrypted network link, then all data is imported as clear text even if it is encrypted in the database. See Oracle Database Advanced Security Administrator's Guide for more information about network security.See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for more information about database links
Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for more information about the CREATE DATABASE LINK
statement
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for more information about locally managed tablespaces
The Import NETWORK_LINK
parameter is not supported for tables containing SecureFiles that have ContentType set or that are currently stored outside of the SecureFiles segment through Oracle Database File System Links.
Network imports do not support the use of evolved types.
Network imports do not support LONG
columns.
When operating across a network link, Data Pump requires that the source and target databases differ by no more than one version. For example, if one database is Oracle Database 11g, then the other database must be either 11g or 10g. Note that Data Pump checks only the major version number (for example, 10g and 11g), not specific release numbers (for example, 10.1, 10.2, 11.1, or 11.2).
If the USERID
that is executing the import job has the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role on the target database, then that user must also have the DATAPUMP_EXP_FULL_DATABASE
role on the source database.
The only types of database links supported by Data Pump Import are: public, fixed user, and connected user. Current-user database links are not supported.
Network mode import does not use parallel query (PQ) slaves. See "Using PARALLEL During a Network Mode Import".
In the following example, the source_database_link
would be replaced with the name of a valid database link.
> impdp hr TABLES=employees DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1
NETWORK_LINK=source_database_link EXCLUDE=CONSTRAINT
This example results in an import of the employees
table (excluding constraints) from the source database. The log file is written to dpump_dir1
, specified on the DIRECTORY
parameter.
Default: NO
Specifies whether to suppress the default behavior of creating a log file.
NOLOGFILE=[YES | NO]
If you specify NOLOGFILE=YES
to suppress creation of a log file, then progress and error information is still written to the standard output device of any attached clients, including the client that started the original export operation. If there are no clients attached to a running job and you specify NOLOGFILE=YES
, then you run the risk of losing important progress and error information.
The following is an example of using the NOLOGFILE
parameter.
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp NOLOGFILE=YES
This command results in a full mode import (the default for file-based imports) of the expfull.dmp
dump file. No log file is written because NOLOGFILE
is set to YES
.
Default: 1
Specifies the maximum number of processes of active execution operating on behalf of the import job.
PARALLEL=integer
The value you specify for integer
specifies the maximum number of processes of active execution operating on behalf of the import job. This execution set consists of a combination of worker processes and parallel I/O server processes. The master control process, idle workers, and worker processes acting as parallel execution coordinators in parallel I/O operations do not count toward this total. This parameter enables you to make trade-offs between resource consumption and elapsed time.
If the source of the import is a dump file set consisting of files, then multiple processes can read from the same file, but performance may be limited by I/O contention.
To increase or decrease the value of PARALLEL
during job execution, use interactive-command mode.
Parallelism is used for loading user data and package bodies, and for building indexes.
See Also:
"Controlling Resource Consumption"Using PARALLEL During a Network Mode Import
During a network mode import, the PARALLEL
parameter defines the maximum number of worker processes that can be assigned to the job. To understand the effect of the PARALLEL
parameter during a network import mode, it is important to understand the concept of "table_data objects" as defined by Data Pump. When Data Pump moves data, it considers the following items to be individual "table_data objects":
a complete table (one that is not partitioned or subpartitioned)
partitions, if the table is partitioned but not subpartitioned
subpartitions, if the table is subpartitioned
For example:
A nonpartitioned table, scott.non_part_table
, has 1 table_data object:
scott.non_part_table
A partitioned table, scott.part_table
(having partition p1
and partition p2
), has 2 table_data objects:
scott.part_table:p1
scott.part_table:p
2
A subpartitioned table, scott.sub_part_table
(having partition p1
and p2
, and subpartitions p1s1
, p1s2
, p2s1
, and p2s2
) has 4 table_data objects:
scott.sub_part_table:p1s1
scott.sub_part_table:p1s2
scott.sub_part_table:p2s1
scott.sub_part_table:p2s2
During a network mode import, each table_data object is assigned its own worker process, up to the value specified for the PARALLEL
parameter. No parallel query (PQ) slaves are assigned because network mode import does not use parallel query (PQ) slaves. Multiple table_data objects can be unloaded at the same time, but each table_data object is unloaded using a single process.
Using PARALLEL During An Import In An Oracle RAC Environment
In an Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) environment, if an import operation has PARALLEL=1
, then all Data Pump processes reside on the instance where the job is started. Therefore, the directory object can point to local storage for that instance.
If the import operation has PARALLEL
set to a value greater than 1, then Data Pump processes can reside on instances other than the one where the job was started. Therefore, the directory object must point to shared storage that is accessible by all instances of the Oracle RAC.
This parameter is valid only in the Enterprise Edition of Oracle Database 11g.
To import a table or table partition in parallel (using PQ slaves), you must have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role.
The following is an example of using the PARALLEL
parameter.
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 LOGFILE=parallel_import.log JOB_NAME=imp_par3 DUMPFILE=par_exp%U.dmp PARALLEL=3
This command imports the dump file set that is created when you run the example for the Export PARALLEL
parameter. (See "PARALLEL".) The names of the dump files are par_exp01.dmp
, par_exp02.dmp
, and par_exp03.dmp
.
Default: There is no default
Specifies the name of an import parameter file.
PARFILE=[directory_path]file_name
Unlike dump files, log files, and SQL files which are created and written by the server, the parameter file is opened and read by the impdp
client. Therefore, a directory object name is neither required nor appropriate. The default is the user's current directory. The use of parameter files is highly recommended if you are using parameters whose values require the use of quotation marks.
The PARFILE
parameter cannot be specified within a parameter file.
The content of an example parameter file, hr_imp.par
, might be as follows:
TABLES= countries, locations, regions DUMPFILE=dpump_dir2:exp1.dmp,exp2%U.dmp DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 PARALLEL=3
You could then issue the following command to execute the parameter file:
> impdp hr PARFILE=hr_imp.par
The tables named countries
, locations
, and regions
will be imported from the dump file set that is created when you run the example for the Export DUMPFILE
parameter. (See "DUMPFILE".) The import job looks for the exp1.dmp
file in the location pointed to by dpump_dir2
. It looks for any dump files of the form exp2
nn
.dmp
in the location pointed to by dpump_dir1
. The log file for the job will also be written to dpump_dir1
.
Default: The default is departition
when partition names are specified on the TABLES
parameter and TRANPORTABLE=ALWAYS
is set (whether on the import operation or during the export). Otherwise, the default is none
.
Specifies how table partitions should be created during an import operation.
PARTITION_OPTIONS=[NONE | DEPARTITION | MERGE]
A value of none
creates tables as they existed on the system from which the export operation was performed. You cannot use the none
option or the merge
option if the export was performed with the transportable method, along with a partition or subpartition filter. In such a case, you must use the departition option.
A value of departition
promotes each partition or subpartition to a new individual table. The default name of the new table will be the concatenation of the table and partition name or the table and subpartition name, as appropriate.
A value of merge
combines all partitions and subpartitions into one table.
If the export operation that created the dump file was performed with the transportable method and if a partition or subpartition was specified, then the import operation must use the departition
option.
If the export operation that created the dump file was performed with the transportable method, then the import operation cannot use PARTITION_OPTIONS=MERGE
.
If there are any grants on objects being departitioned, then an error message is generated and the objects are not loaded.
The following example assumes that the sh.sales
table has been exported into a dump file named sales.dmp
. It uses the merge
option to merge all the partitions in sh.sales
into one non-partitioned table in scott
schema.
> impdp system TABLES=sh.sales PARTITION_OPTIONS=MERGE DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=sales.dmp REMAP_SCHEMA=sh:scott
See Also:
"TRANSPORTABLE" for an example of performing an import operation usingPARTITION_OPTIONS=DEPARTITION
Default: There is no default
Allows you to specify a query clause that filters the data that gets imported.
QUERY=[[schema_name.]table_name:]query_clause
The query_clause
is typically a SQL WHERE
clause for fine-grained row selection, but could be any SQL clause. For example, an ORDER BY
clause could be used to speed up a migration from a heap-organized table to an index-organized table. If a schema and table name are not supplied, then the query is applied to (and must be valid for) all tables in the source dump file set or database. A table-specific query overrides a query applied to all tables.
When the query is to be applied to a specific table, a colon (:) must separate the table name from the query clause. More than one table-specific query can be specified, but only one query can be specified per table.
If the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is specified along with the QUERY
parameter, then any objects specified in the query_clause
that are on the remote (source) node must be explicitly qualified with the NETWORK_LINK
value. Otherwise, Data Pump assumes that the object is on the local (target) node; if it is not, then an error is returned and the import of the table from the remote (source) system fails.
For example, if you specify NETWORK_LINK=dblink1
, then the query_clause
of the QUERY
parameter must specify that link, as shown in the following example:
QUERY=(hr.employees:"WHERE last_name IN(SELECT last_name FROM hr.employees@dblink1)")
Depending on your operating system, the use of quotation marks when you specify a value for this parameter may also require that you use escape characters. Oracle recommends that you place this parameter in a parameter file, which can reduce the number of escape characters that might otherwise be needed on the command line. See "Use of Quotation Marks On the Data Pump Command Line".
When the QUERY
parameter is used, the external tables method (rather than the direct path method) is used for data access.
To specify a schema other than your own in a table-specific query, you must be granted access to that specific table.
The QUERY
parameter cannot be used with the following parameters:
CONTENT=METADATA_ONLY
SQLFILE
TRANSPORT_DATAFILES
When the QUERY
parameter is specified for a table, Data Pump uses external tables to load the target table. External tables uses a SQL INSERT
statement with a SELECT
clause. The value of the QUERY
parameter is included in the WHERE
clause of the SELECT
portion of the INSERT
statement. If the QUERY
parameter includes references to another table with columns whose names match the table being loaded, and if those columns are used in the query, then you will need to use a table alias to distinguish between columns in the table being loaded and columns in the SELECT
statement with the same name. The table alias used by Data Pump for the table being loaded is KU$
.
For example, suppose you are importing a subset of the sh.sales
table based on the credit limit for a customer in the sh.customers
table. In the following example, KU$
is used to qualify the cust_id
field in the QUERY
parameter for loading sh.sales
. As a result, Data Pump imports only rows for customers whose credit limit is greater than $10,000.
QUERY='sales:"WHERE EXISTS (SELECT cust_id FROM customers c WHERE cust_credit_limit > 10000 AND ku$.cust_id = c.cust_id)"'
If KU$
is not used for a table alias, then all rows are loaded:
QUERY='sales:"WHERE EXISTS (SELECT cust_id FROM customers c WHERE cust_credit_limit > 10000 AND cust_id = c.cust_id)"'
The maximum length allowed for a QUERY
string is 4000 bytes including quotation marks, which means that the actual maximum length allowed is 3998 bytes.
The following is an example of using the QUERY
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL". Because the QUERY
value uses quotation marks, Oracle recommends that you use a parameter file.
Suppose you have a parameter file, query_imp.par
, that contains the following:
QUERY=departments:"WHERE department_id < 120"
You can then enter the following command:
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp PARFILE=query_imp.par NOLOGFILE=YES
All tables in expfull.dmp
are imported, but for the departments
table, only data that meets the criteria specified in the QUERY
parameter is imported.
Default: There is no default
The REMAP_DATA
parameter allows you to remap data as it is being inserted into a new database. A common use is to regenerate primary keys to avoid conflict when importing a table into a preexisting table on the target database.
You can specify a remap function that takes as a source the value of the designated column from either the dump file or a remote database. The remap function then returns a remapped value that will replace the original value in the target database.
The same function can be applied to multiple columns being dumped. This is useful when you want to guarantee consistency in remapping both the child and parent column in a referential constraint.
REMAP_DATA=[schema.]tablename.column_name:[schema.]pkg.function
The description of each syntax element, in the order in which they appear in the syntax, is as follows:
schema -- the schema containing the table to be remapped. By default, this is the schema of the user doing the import.
tablename -- the table whose column will be remapped.
column_name -- the column whose data is to be remapped. The maximum number of columns that can be remapped for a single table is 10.
schema -- the schema containing the PL/SQL package you created that contains the remapping function. As a default, this is the schema of the user doing the import.
pkg -- the name of the PL/SQL package you created that contains the remapping function.
function -- the name of the function within the PL/SQL that will be called to remap the column table in each row of the specified table.
The datatypes of the source argument and the returned value should both match the datatype of the designated column in the table.
Remapping functions should not perform commits or rollbacks except in autonomous transactions.
The maximum number of columns you can remap on a single table is 10. You can remap 9 columns on table a
and 8 columns on table b
, and so on, but the maximum for each table is 10.
The following example assumes a package named remap
has been created that contains a function named plusx
that changes the values for first_name
in the employees
table.
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expschema.dmp TABLES=hr.employees REMAP_DATA=hr.employees.first_name:hr.remap.plusx
Default: There is no default
Changes the name of the source data file to the target data file name in all SQL statements where the source data file is referenced: CREATE TABLESPACE
, CREATE LIBRARY
, and CREATE DIRECTORY
.
REMAP_DATAFILE=source_datafile:target_datafile
Remapping data files is useful when you move databases between platforms that have different file naming conventions. The source_datafile
and target_datafile
names should be exactly as you want them to appear in the SQL statements where they are referenced. Oracle recommends that you enclose data file names in quotation marks to eliminate ambiguity on platforms for which a colon is a valid file specification character.
Depending on your operating system, the use of quotation marks when you specify a value for this parameter may also require that you use escape characters. Oracle recommends that you place this parameter in a parameter file, which can reduce the number of escape characters that might otherwise be needed on the command line.
You must have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role to specify this parameter.
Suppose you had a parameter file, payroll.par
, with the following content:
DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 FULL=YES DUMPFILE=db_full.dmp REMAP_DATAFILE="'DB1$:[HRDATA.PAYROLL]tbs6.dbf':'/db1/hrdata/payroll/tbs6.dbf'"
You can then issue the following command:
> impdp hr PARFILE=payroll.par
This example remaps a VMS file specification (DR1$:[HRDATA.PAYROLL]tbs6.dbf
) to a UNIX file specification, (/db1/hrdata/payroll/tbs6.dbf
) for all SQL DDL statements during the import. The dump file, db_full.dmp,
is located by the directory object, dpump_dir1
.
Default: There is no default
Loads all objects from the source schema into a target schema.
REMAP_SCHEMA=source_schema:target_schema
Multiple REMAP_SCHEMA
lines can be specified, but the source schema must be different for each one. However, different source schemas can map to the same target schema. The mapping may not be 100 percent complete, because there are certain schema references that Import is not capable of finding. For example, Import will not find schema references embedded within the body of definitions of types, views, procedures, and packages.
If the schema you are remapping to does not already exist, then the import operation creates it, provided that the dump file set contains the necessary CREATE
USER
metadata for the source schema, and provided that you are importing with enough privileges. For example, the following Export commands create dump file sets with the necessary metadata to create a schema, because the user SYSTEM
has the necessary privileges:
> expdp system SCHEMAS=hr Password: password > expdp system FULL=YES Password: password
If your dump file set does not contain the metadata necessary to create a schema, or if you do not have privileges, then the target schema must be created before the import operation is performed. This is because the unprivileged dump files do not contain the necessary information for the import to create the schema automatically.
If the import operation does create the schema, then after the import is complete, you must assign it a valid password to connect to it. The SQL statement to do this, which requires privileges, is:
SQL> ALTER USER schema_name IDENTIFIED BY new_password
Unprivileged users can perform schema remaps only if their schema is the target schema of the remap. (Privileged users can perform unrestricted schema remaps.)
For example, SCOTT
can remap his BLAKE
's objects to SCOTT
, but SCOTT
cannot remap SCOTT
's objects to BLAKE
.
Suppose that, as user SYSTEM
, you execute the following Export and Import commands to remap the hr
schema into the scott
schema:
> expdp system SCHEMAS=hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=hr.dmp > impdp system DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=hr.dmp REMAP_SCHEMA=hr:scott
In this example, if user scott
already exists before the import, then the Import REMAP_SCHEMA
command will add objects from the hr
schema into the existing scott
schema. You can connect to the scott
schema after the import by using the existing password (without resetting it).
If user scott
does not exist before you execute the import operation, then Import automatically creates it with an unusable password. This is possible because the dump file, hr
.dmp
, was created by SYSTEM,
which has the privileges necessary to create a dump file that contains the metadata needed to create a schema. However, you cannot connect to scott
on completion of the import, unless you reset the password for scott
on the target database after the import completes.
Default: There is no default
Allows you to rename tables during an import operation.
You can use either of the following syntaxes (see the Usage Notes below):
REMAP_TABLE=[schema.]old_tablename[.partition]:new_tablename
OR
REMAP_TABLE=[schema.]old_tablename[:partition]:new_tablename
You can use the REMAP_TABLE
parameter to rename entire tables or to rename table partitions if the table is being departitioned. (See "PARTITION_OPTIONS".)
You can also use it to override the automatic naming of table partitions that were exported.
Be aware that with the first syntax, if you specify REMAP_TABLE=A.B:C
, then Import assumes that A
is a schema name, B
is the old table name, and C
is the new table name. To use the first syntax to rename a partition that is being promoted to a nonpartitioned table, you must specify a schema name.
To use the second syntax to rename a partition being promoted to a nonpartitioned table, you only need to qualify it with the old table name. No schema name is required.
Only objects created by the Import will be remapped. In particular, preexisting tables will not be remapped.
The REMAP_TABLE
parameter will not work if the table being remapped has named constraints in the same schema and the constraints need to be created when the table is created.
The following is an example of using the REMAP_TABLE
parameter to rename the employees
table to a new name of emps
:
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expschema.dmp TABLES=hr.employees REMAP_TABLE=hr.employees:emps
Default: There is no default
Remaps all objects selected for import with persistent data in the source tablespace to be created in the target tablespace.
REMAP_TABLESPACE=source_tablespace:target_tablespace
Multiple REMAP_TABLESPACE
parameters can be specified, but no two can have the same source tablespace. The target schema must have sufficient quota in the target tablespace.
Note that use of the REMAP_TABLESPACE
parameter is the only way to remap a tablespace in Data Pump Import. This is a simpler and cleaner method than the one provided in the original Import utility. That method was subject to many restrictions (including the number of tablespace subclauses) which sometimes resulted in the failure of some DDL commands.
By contrast, the Data Pump Import method of using the REMAP_TABLESPACE
parameter works for all objects, including the user, and it works regardless of how many tablespace subclauses are in the DDL statement.
Data Pump Import can only remap tablespaces for transportable imports in databases where the compatibility level is set to 10.1 or later.
Only objects created by the Import will be remapped. In particular, the tablespaces for preexisting tables will not be remapped if TABLE_EXISTS_ACTION
is set to SKIP
, TRUNCATE
, or APPEND
.
The following is an example of using the REMAP_TABLESPACE
parameter.
> impdp hr REMAP_TABLESPACE=tbs_1:tbs_6 DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=employees.dmp
Default: NO
Specifies whether the import job should reuse existing data files for tablespace creation.
REUSE_DATAFILES=[YES | NO]
If the default (n
) is used and the data files specified in CREATE TABLESPACE
statements already exist, then an error message from the failing CREATE TABLESPACE
statement is issued, but the import job continues.
If this parameter is specified as y
, then the existing data files are reinitialized.
Caution:
SpecifyingREUSE_DATAFILES=YES
may result in a loss of data.The following is an example of using the REUSE_DATAFILES
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp LOGFILE=reuse.log REUSE_DATAFILES=YES
This example reinitializes data files referenced by CREATE
TABLESPACE
statements in the expfull.dmp
file.
Default: There is no default
Specifies that a schema-mode import is to be performed.
SCHEMAS=schema_name [,...]
If you have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role, then you can use this parameter to perform a schema-mode import by specifying a list of schemas to import. First, the user definitions are imported (if they do not already exist), including system and role grants, password history, and so on. Then all objects contained within the schemas are imported. Unprivileged users can specify only their own schemas or schemas remapped to their own schemas. In that case, no information about the schema definition is imported, only the objects contained within it.
The use of filtering can restrict what is imported using this import mode. See "Filtering During Import Operations".
Schema mode is the default mode when you are performing a network-based import.
The following is an example of using the SCHEMAS
parameter. You can create the expdat.dmp
file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export SCHEMAS
parameter. See "SCHEMAS".
> impdp hr SCHEMAS=hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 LOGFILE=schemas.log DUMPFILE=expdat.dmp
The hr
schema is imported from the expdat.dmp
file. The log file, schemas.log
, is written to dpump_dir1
.
Default: There is no default
Used to specify a service name to be used in conjunction with the CLUSTER
parameter.
SERVICE_NAME=name
The SERVICE_NAME
parameter can be used with the CLUSTER=YES
parameter to specify an existing service associated with a resource group that defines a set of Oracle Real Application Clusters (Oracle RAC) instances belonging to that resource group, typically a subset of all the Oracle RAC instances.
The service name is only used to determine the resource group and instances defined for that resource group. The instance where the job is started is always used, regardless of whether it is part of the resource group.
The SERVICE_NAME
parameter is ignored if CLUSTER=NO
is also specified.
Suppose you have an Oracle RAC configuration containing instances A, B, C, and D. Also suppose that a service named my_service
exists with a resource group consisting of instances A, B, and C only. In such a scenario, the following would be true:
If you start a Data Pump job on instance A and specify CLUSTER=YES
(or accept the default, which is YES
) and you do not specify the SERVICE_NAME
parameter, then Data Pump creates workers on all instances: A, B, C, and D, depending on the degree of parallelism specified.
If you start a Data Pump job on instance A and specify CLUSTER=YES
and SERVICE_NAME=my_service
, then workers can be started on instances A, B, and C only.
If you start a Data Pump job on instance D and specify CLUSTER=YES
and SERVICE_NAME=my_service
, then workers can be started on instances A, B, C, and D. Even though instance D is not in my_service
it is included because it is the instance on which the job was started.
If you start a Data Pump job on instance A and specify CLUSTER=NO
, then any SERVICE_NAME
parameter you specify is ignored and all processes will start on instance A.
See Also:
"CLUSTER"> impdp system DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 SCHEMAS=hr SERVICE_NAME=sales NETWORK_LINK=dbs1
This example starts a schema-mode network import of the hr schema. Even though CLUSTER=YES
is not specified on the command line, it is the default behavior, so the job will use all instances in the resource group associated with the service name sales
. The NETWORK_LINK
value of dbs1
would be replaced with the name of the source database from which you were importing data. (Note that there is no dump file generated because this is a network import.)
The NETWORK_LINK
parameter is simply being used as part of the example. It is not required when using the SERVICE_NAME
parameter.
Default: the value of the Oracle Database configuration parameter, SKIP_UNUSABLE_INDEXES
.
Specifies whether Import skips loading tables that have indexes that were set to the Index Unusable state (by either the system or the user).
SKIP_UNUSABLE_INDEXES=[YES | NO]
If SKIP_UNUSABLE_INDEXES
is set to YES
, and a table or partition with an index in the Unusable state is encountered, then the load of that table or partition proceeds anyway, as if the unusable index did not exist.
If SKIP_UNUSABLE_INDEXES
is set to NO
, and a table or partition with an index in the Unusable state is encountered, then that table or partition is not loaded. Other tables, with indexes not previously set Unusable, continue to be updated as rows are inserted.
If the SKIP_UNUSABLE_INDEXES
parameter is not specified, then the setting of the Oracle Database configuration parameter, SKIP_UNUSABLE_INDEXES
(whose default value is y
), will be used to determine how to handle unusable indexes.
If indexes used to enforce constraints are marked unusable, then the data is not imported into that table.
Note:
This parameter is useful only when importing data into an existing table. It has no practical effect when a table is created as part of an import because in that case, the table and indexes are newly created and will not be marked unusable.The following is an example of using the SKIP_UNUSABLE_INDEXES
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp LOGFILE=skip.log SKIP_UNUSABLE_INDEXES=YES
Default: the default database edition on the remote node from which objects will be fetched
Specifies the database edition on the remote node from which objects will be fetched.
SOURCE_EDITION=edition_name
If SOURCE_EDITION=
edition_name
is specified, then the objects from that edition are imported. Data Pump selects all inherited objects that have not changed and all actual objects that have changed.
If this parameter is not specified, then the default edition is used. If the specified edition does not exist or is not usable, then an error message is returned.
See Also:
Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for information about how editions are created
Oracle Database Advanced Application Developer's Guide for more information about the editions feature, including inherited and actual objects
The SOURCE_EDITION
parameter is valid on an import operation only when the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is also specified. See "NETWORK_LINK".
This parameter is only useful if there are two or more versions of the same versionable objects in the database.
The job version must be set to 11.2 or higher. See "VERSION".
The following is an example of using the import SOURCE_EDITION
parameter:
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 SOURCE_EDITION=exp_edition
NETWORK_LINK=source_database_link EXCLUDE=USER
This example assumes the existence of an edition named exp_edition
on the system from which objects are being imported. Because no import mode is specified, the default of schema mode will be used. The source_database_link
would be replaced with the name of the source database from which you were importing data. The EXCLUDE=USER
parameter excludes only the definitions of users, not the objects contained within users' schemas. (Note that there is no dump file generated because this is a network import.)
Default: There is no default
Specifies a file into which all of the SQL DDL that Import would have executed, based on other parameters, is written.
SQLFILE=[directory_object:]file_name
The file_name
specifies where the import job will write the DDL that would be executed during the job. The SQL is not actually executed, and the target system remains unchanged. The file is written to the directory object specified in the DIRECTORY
parameter, unless another directory_object
is explicitly specified here. Any existing file that has a name matching the one specified with this parameter is overwritten.
Note that passwords are not included in the SQL file. For example, if a CONNECT
statement is part of the DDL that was executed, then it will be replaced by a comment with only the schema name shown. In the following example, the dashes (--) indicate that a comment follows, and the hr
schema name is shown, but not the password.
-- CONNECT hr
Therefore, before you can execute the SQL file, you must edit it by removing the dashes indicating a comment and adding the password for the hr
schema.
For Streams and other Oracle database options, anonymous PL/SQL blocks may appear within the SQLFILE
output. They should not be executed directly.
If SQLFILE
is specified, then the CONTENT
parameter is ignored if it is set to either ALL
or DATA_ONLY
.
To perform a Data Pump Import to a SQL file using Oracle Automatic Storage Management (Oracle ASM), the SQLFILE
parameter that you specify must include a directory object that does not use the Oracle ASM + notation. That is, the SQL file must be written to a disk file, not into the Oracle ASM storage.
The SQLFILE
parameter cannot be used in conjunction with the QUERY
parameter.
The following is an example of using the SQLFILE
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp SQLFILE=dpump_dir2:expfull.sql
A SQL file named expfull.sql
is written to dpump_dir2
.
Default: 0
Specifies the frequency at which the job status will be displayed.
STATUS[=integer]
If you supply a value for integer
, it specifies how frequently, in seconds, job status should be displayed in logging mode. If no value is entered or if the default value of 0 is used, then no additional information is displayed beyond information about the completion of each object type, table, or partition.
This status information is written only to your standard output device, not to the log file (if one is in effect).
The following is an example of using the STATUS
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr NOLOGFILE=YES STATUS=120 DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp
In this example, the status is shown every two minutes (120 seconds).
Default: YES
Specifies whether to import any Streams metadata that may be present in the export dump file.
STREAMS_CONFIGURATION=[YES | NO]
The following is an example of using the STREAMS_CONFIGURATION
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp STREAMS_CONFIGURATION=NO
Default: SKIP
(Note that if CONTENT=
DATA_ONLY
is specified, then the default is APPEND
, not SKIP
.)
Tells Import what to do if the table it is trying to create already exists.
TABLE_EXISTS_ACTION=[SKIP | APPEND | TRUNCATE | REPLACE]
The possible values have the following effects:
SKIP
leaves the table as is and moves on to the next object. This is not a valid option if the CONTENT
parameter is set to DATA_ONLY
.
APPEND
loads rows from the source and leaves existing rows unchanged.
TRUNCATE
deletes existing rows and then loads rows from the source.
REPLACE
drops the existing table and then creates and loads it from the source. This is not a valid option if the CONTENT
parameter is set to DATA_ONLY
.
The following considerations apply when you are using these options:
When you use TRUNCATE
or REPLACE
, ensure that rows in the affected tables are not targets of any referential constraints.
When you use SKIP
, APPEND
, or TRUNCATE
, existing table-dependent objects in the source, such as indexes, grants, triggers, and constraints, are not modified. For REPLACE
, the dependent objects are dropped and re-created from the source, if they were not explicitly or implicitly excluded (using EXCLUDE
) and they exist in the source dump file or system.
When you use APPEND
or TRUNCATE
, checks are made to ensure that rows from the source are compatible with the existing table before performing any action.
If the existing table has active constraints and triggers, then it is loaded using the external tables access method. If any row violates an active constraint, then the load fails and no data is loaded. You can override this behavior by specifying DATA_OPTIONS=SKIP_CONSTRAINT_ERRORS
on the Import command line.
If you have data that must be loaded, but may cause constraint violations, then consider disabling the constraints, loading the data, and then deleting the problem rows before reenabling the constraints.
When you use APPEND
, the data is always loaded into new space; existing space, even if available, is not reused. For this reason, you may want to compress your data after the load.
Note:
When Data Pump detects that the source table and target table do not match (the two tables do not have the same number of columns or the target table has a column name that is not present in the source table), it compares column names between the two tables. If the tables have at least one column in common, then the data for the common columns is imported into the table (assuming the datatypes are compatible). The following restrictions apply:This behavior is not supported for network imports.
The following types of columns cannot be dropped: column objects, object attributes, nested table columns, and ref columns based on a primary key.
TRUNCATE
cannot be used on clustered tables.
The following is an example of using the TABLE_EXISTS_ACTION
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr TABLES=employees DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp TABLE_EXISTS_ACTION=REPLACE
Default: There is no default
Specifies that you want to perform a table-mode import.
TABLES=[schema_name.]table_name[:partition_name]
In a table-mode import, you can filter the data that is imported from the source by specifying a comma-delimited list of tables and partitions or subpartitions.
If you do not supply a schema_name
, then it defaults to that of the current user. To specify a schema other than your own, you must either have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role or remap the schema to the current user.
The use of filtering can restrict what is imported using this import mode. See "Filtering During Import Operations".
If a partition_name
is specified, then it must be the name of a partition or subpartition in the associated table.
Use of the wildcard character, %, to specify table names and partition names is supported.
The following restrictions apply to table names:
By default, table names in a database are stored as uppercase. If you have a table name in mixed-case or lowercase, and you want to preserve case-sensitivity for the table name, then you must enclose the name in quotation marks. The name must exactly match the table name stored in the database.
Some operating systems require that quotation marks on the command line be preceded by an escape character. The following are examples of how case-sensitivity can be preserved in the different Import modes.
In command-line mode:
TABLES='\"Emp\"'
In parameter file mode:
TABLES='"Emp"'
Table names specified on the command line cannot include a pound sign (#), unless the table name is enclosed in quotation marks. Similarly, in the parameter file, if a table name includes a pound sign (#), then the Import utility interprets the rest of the line as a comment, unless the table name is enclosed in quotation marks.
For example, if the parameter file contains the following line, then Import interprets everything on the line after emp#
as a comment and does not import the tables dept
and mydata:
TABLES=(emp#, dept, mydata)
However, if the parameter file contains the following line, then the Import utility imports all three tables because emp#
is enclosed in quotation marks:
TABLES=('"emp#"', dept, mydata)
Note:
Some operating systems require single quotation marks rather than double quotation marks, or the reverse; see your Oracle operating system-specific documentation. Different operating systems also have other restrictions on table naming.For example, the UNIX C shell attaches a special meaning to a dollar sign ($) or pound sign (#) (or certain other special characters). You must use escape characters to get such characters in the name past the shell and into Import.
The use of synonyms as values for the TABLES
parameter is not supported. For example, if the regions
table in the hr
schema had a synonym of regn
, then it would not be valid to use TABLES=regn
. An error would be returned.
You can only specify partitions from one table if PARTITION_OPTIONS=DEPARTITION
is also specified on the import.
If you specify TRANSPORTABLE=ALWAYS
, then all partitions specified on the TABLES
parameter must be in the same table.
The length of the table name list specified for the TABLES
parameter is limited to a maximum of 4 MB, unless you are using the NETWORK_LINK
parameter to an Oracle Database release 10.2.0.3 or earlier or to a read-only database. In such cases, the limit is 4 KB.
The following example shows a simple use of the TABLES
parameter to import only the employees
and jobs
tables from the expfull.dmp
file. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp TABLES=employees,jobs
The following example shows the use of the TABLES
parameter to import partitions:
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expdat.dmp TABLES=sh.sales:sales_Q1_2008,sh.sales:sales_Q2_2008
This example imports the partitions sales_Q1_2008
and sales_Q2_2008
for the table sales
in the schema sh
.
Default: There is no default
Specifies that you want to perform a tablespace-mode import.
TABLESPACES=tablespace_name [, ...]
Use TABLESPACES
to specify a list of tablespace names whose tables and dependent objects are to be imported from the source (full, schema, tablespace, or table-mode export dump file set or another database).
During the following import situations, Data Pump automatically creates the tablespaces into which the data will be imported:
The import is being done in FULL
or TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES
mode
The import is being done in table mode with TRANSPORTABLE=ALWAYS
In all other cases, the tablespaces for the selected objects must already exist on the import database. You could also use the Import REMAP_TABLESPACE
parameter to map the tablespace name to an existing tablespace on the import database.
The use of filtering can restrict what is imported using this import mode. See "Filtering During Import Operations".
The length of the list of tablespace names specified for the TABLESPACES
parameter is limited to a maximum of 4 MB, unless you are using the NETWORK_LINK
parameter to a 10.2.0.3 or earlier database or to a read-only database. In such cases, the limit is 4 KB.
The following is an example of using the TABLESPACES
parameter. It assumes that the tablespaces already exist. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp TABLESPACES=tbs_1,tbs_2,tbs_3,tbs_4
This example imports all tables that have data in tablespaces tbs_1
, tbs_2
, tbs_3
, and tbs_4
.
Default: the default database edition on the system
Specifies the database edition into which objects should be imported.
TARGET_EDITION=name
If TARGET_EDITION=
name
is specified, then Data Pump Import creates all of the objects found in the dump file. Objects that are not editionable are created in all editions. For example, tables are not editionable, so if there is a table in the dump file, then it will be created, and all editions will see it. Objects in the dump file that are editionable, such as procedures, are created only in the specified target edition.
If this parameter is not specified, then the default edition on the target database is used, even if an edition was specified in the export job. If the specified edition does not exist or is not usable, then an error message is returned.
See Also:
Oracle Database SQL Language Reference for information about how editions are created
Oracle Database Advanced Application Developer's Guide for more information about the editions feature
This parameter is only useful if there are two or more versions of the same versionable objects in the database.
The job version must be 11.2 or higher. See "VERSION".
The following is an example of using the TARGET_EDITION
parameter:
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=exp_dat.dmp TARGET_EDITION=exp_edition
This example assumes the existence of an edition named exp_edition
on the system to which objects are being imported. Because no import mode is specified, the default of schema mode will be used.
Default: There is no default
Enables you to alter object creation DDL for objects being imported.
TRANSFORM = transform_name:value[:object_type]
The transform_name
specifies the name of the transform. The possible options are as follows:
SEGMENT_ATTRIBUTES
- If the value is specified as y
, then segment attributes (physical attributes, storage attributes, tablespaces, and logging) are included, with appropriate DDL. The default is y
.
STORAGE
- If the value is specified as y
, then the storage clauses are included, with appropriate DDL. The default is y
. This parameter is ignored if SEGMENT_ATTRIBUTES
=n
.
OID
- If the value is specified as n
, then the assignment of the exported OID during the creation of object tables and types is inhibited. Instead, a new OID is assigned. This can be useful for cloning schemas, but does not affect referenced objects. The default value is y
.
PCTSPACE
- The value
supplied for this transform must be a number greater than zero. It represents the percentage multiplier used to alter extent allocations and the size of data files.
Note that you can use the PCTSPACE
transform with the Data Pump Export SAMPLE
parameter so that the size of storage allocations matches the sampled data subset. (See "SAMPLE".)
SEGMENT_CREATION
- If set to y
(the default), then this transform causes the SQL SEGMENT CREATION
clause to be added to the CREATE TABLE
statement. That is, the CREATE TABLE
statement will explicitly say either SEGMENT CREATION DEFERRED
or SEGMENT CREATION IMMEDIATE
. If the value is n
, then the SEGMENT CREATION
clause is omitted from the CREATE TABLE
statement. Set this parameter to n
to use the default segment creation attributes for the table(s) being loaded. (This functionality is available starting with Oracle Database 11g release 2 (11.2.0.2).)
The type of value
specified depends on the transform used. Boolean values (y/n) are required for the SEGMENT_ATTRIBUTES
, STORAGE
, and OID
transforms. Integer values are required for the PCTSPACE
transform.
The object_type
is optional. If supplied, it designates the object type to which the transform will be applied. If no object type is specified, then the transform applies to all valid object types. The valid object types for each transform are shown in Table 3-1.
Table 3-1 Valid Object Types For the Data Pump Import TRANSFORM Parameter
SEGMENT_ATTRIBUTES | STORAGE | OID | PCTSPACE | SEGMENT_CREATION | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
X |
X |
X |
||
|
X |
X |
X |
||
|
X |
||||
|
X |
X |
X |
||
|
X |
X |
X |
||
|
X |
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
X |
X |
|||
|
X |
For the following example, assume that you have exported the employees
table in the hr
schema. The SQL CREATE
TABLE
statement that results when you then import the table is similar to the following:
CREATE TABLE "HR"."EMPLOYEES" ( "EMPLOYEE_ID" NUMBER(6,0), "FIRST_NAME" VARCHAR2(20), "LAST_NAME" VARCHAR2(25) CONSTRAINT "EMP_LAST_NAME_NN" NOT NULL ENABLE, "EMAIL" VARCHAR2(25) CONSTRAINT "EMP_EMAIL_NN" NOT NULL ENABLE, "PHONE_NUMBER" VARCHAR2(20), "HIRE_DATE" DATE CONSTRAINT "EMP_HIRE_DATE_NN" NOT NULL ENABLE, "JOB_ID" VARCHAR2(10) CONSTRAINT "EMP_JOB_NN" NOT NULL ENABLE, "SALARY" NUMBER(8,2), "COMMISSION_PCT" NUMBER(2,2), "MANAGER_ID" NUMBER(6,0), "DEPARTMENT_ID" NUMBER(4,0) ) PCTFREE 10 PCTUSED 40 INITRANS 1 MAXTRANS 255 NOCOMPRESS LOGGING STORAGE(INITIAL 10240 NEXT 16384 MINEXTENTS 1 MAXEXTENTS 121 PCTINCREASE 50 FREELISTS 1 FREELIST GROUPS 1 BUFFER_POOL DEFAULT) TABLESPACE "SYSTEM" ;
If you do not want to retain the STORAGE
clause or TABLESPACE
clause, then you can remove them from the CREATE
STATEMENT
by using the Import TRANSFORM
parameter. Specify the value of SEGMENT_ATTRIBUTES
as n
. This results in the exclusion of segment attributes (both storage and tablespace) from the table.
> impdp hr TABLES=hr.employees DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=hr_emp.dmp TRANSFORM=SEGMENT_ATTRIBUTES:n:table
The resulting CREATE
TABLE
statement for the employees
table would then look similar to the following. It does not contain a STORAGE
or TABLESPACE
clause; the attributes for the default tablespace for the HR
schema will be used instead.
CREATE TABLE "HR"."EMPLOYEES" ( "EMPLOYEE_ID" NUMBER(6,0), "FIRST_NAME" VARCHAR2(20), "LAST_NAME" VARCHAR2(25) CONSTRAINT "EMP_LAST_NAME_NN" NOT NULL ENABLE, "EMAIL" VARCHAR2(25) CONSTRAINT "EMP_EMAIL_NN" NOT NULL ENABLE, "PHONE_NUMBER" VARCHAR2(20), "HIRE_DATE" DATE CONSTRAINT "EMP_HIRE_DATE_NN" NOT NULL ENABLE, "JOB_ID" VARCHAR2(10) CONSTRAINT "EMP_JOB_NN" NOT NULL ENABLE, "SALARY" NUMBER(8,2), "COMMISSION_PCT" NUMBER(2,2), "MANAGER_ID" NUMBER(6,0), "DEPARTMENT_ID" NUMBER(4,0) );
As shown in the previous example, the SEGMENT_ATTRIBUTES
transform applies to both storage and tablespace attributes. To omit only the STORAGE
clause and retain the TABLESPACE
clause, you can use the STORAGE
transform, as follows:
> impdp hr TABLES=hr.employees DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=hr_emp.dmp TRANSFORM=STORAGE:n:table
The SEGMENT_ATTRIBUTES
and STORAGE
transforms can be applied to all applicable table and index objects by not specifying the object type on the TRANSFORM
parameter, as shown in the following command:
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=hr.dmp SCHEMAS=hr TRANSFORM=SEGMENT_ATTRIBUTES:n
Default: There is no default
Specifies a list of data files to be imported into the target database by a transportable-tablespace mode import, or by a table-mode import if TRANSPORTABLE=ALWAYS
was set during the export. The data files must already exist on the target database system.
TRANSPORT_DATAFILES=datafile_name
The datafile_name
must include an absolute directory path specification (not a directory object name) that is valid on the system where the target database resides.
At some point before the import operation, you must copy the data files from the source system to the target system. You can do this using any copy method supported by your operating stem. If desired, you can rename the files when you copy them to the target system (see Example 2).
If you already have a dump file set generated by a transportable-tablespace mode export, then you can perform a transportable-mode import of that dump file, by specifying the dump file (which contains the metadata) and the TRANSPORT_DATAFILES
parameter. The presence of the TRANSPORT_DATAFILES
parameter tells import that it is a transportable-mode import and where to get the actual data.
Depending on your operating system, the use of quotation marks when you specify a value for this parameter may also require that you use escape characters. Oracle recommends that you place this parameter in a parameter file, which can reduce the number of escape characters that might otherwise be needed on the command line.
The TRANSPORT_DATAFILES
parameter cannot be used in conjunction with the QUERY
parameter.
The following is an example of using the TRANSPORT_DATAFILES
parameter. Assume you have a parameter file, trans_datafiles.par,
with the following content:
DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=tts.dmp TRANSPORT_DATAFILES='/user01/data/tbs1.dbf'
You can then issue the following command:
> impdp hr PARFILE=trans_datafiles.par
This example illustrates the renaming of data files as part of a transportable tablespace export and import operation. Assume that you have a data file named employees.dat
on your source system.
Using a method supported by your operating system, manually copy the data file named employees.dat
from your source system to the system where your target database resides. As part of the copy operation, rename it to workers.dat
.
Perform a transportable tablespace export of tablespace tbs_1
.
> expdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=tts.dmp TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES=tbs_1
The metadata only (no data) for tbs_1
is exported to a dump file named tts.dmp
. The actual data was copied over to the target database in step 1.
Perform a transportable tablespace import, specifying an absolute directory path for the data file named workers.dat
:
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=tts.dmp TRANSPORT_DATAFILES='/user01/data/workers.dat'
The metadata contained in tts.dmp
is imported and Data Pump then assigns the information in the workers.dat
file to the correct place in the database.
Default: NO
Specifies whether to verify that the specified transportable tablespace set is being referenced by objects in other tablespaces.
TRANSPORT_FULL_CHECK=[YES | NO]
If TRANSPORT_FULL_CHECK=
YES
, then Import verifies that there are no dependencies between those objects inside the transportable set and those outside the transportable set. The check addresses two-way dependencies. For example, if a table is inside the transportable set but its index is not, then a failure is returned and the import operation is terminated. Similarly, a failure is also returned if an index is in the transportable set but the table is not.
If TRANSPORT_FULL_CHECK=NO
,
then Import verifies only that there are no objects within the transportable set that are dependent on objects outside the transportable set. This check addresses a one-way dependency. For example, a table is not dependent on an index, but an index is dependent on a table, because an index without a table has no meaning. Therefore, if the transportable set contains a table, but not its index, then this check succeeds. However, if the transportable set contains an index, but not the table, then the import operation is terminated.
In addition to this check, Import always verifies that all storage segments of all tables (and their indexes) defined within the tablespace set specified by TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES
are actually contained within the tablespace set.
This parameter is valid for transportable mode (or table mode when TRANSPORTABLE=ALWAYS
was specified on the export) only when the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is specified.
In the following example, source_database_link
would be replaced with the name of a valid database link. The example also assumes that a data file named tbs6.dbf
already exists.
Assume you have a parameter file, full_check.par
, with the following content:
DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1
TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES=tbs_6
NETWORK_LINK=source_database_link
TRANSPORT_FULL_CHECK=YES
TRANSPORT_DATAFILES='/wkdir/data/tbs6.dbf'
You can then issue the following command:
> impdp hr PARFILE=full_check.par
Default: There is no default.
Specifies that you want to perform an import in transportable-tablespace mode over a database link (as specified with the NETWORK_LINK
parameter.)
TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES=tablespace_name [, ...]
Use the TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES
parameter to specify a list of tablespace names for which object metadata will be imported from the source database into the target database.
Because this is a transportable-mode import, the tablespaces into which the data is imported are automatically created by Data Pump.You do not need to pre-create them. However, the data files should be copied to the target database before starting the import.
When you specify TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES
on the import command line, you must also use the NETWORK_LINK
parameter to specify a database link. A database link is a connection between two physical database servers that allows a client to access them as one logical database. Therefore, the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is required because the object metadata is exported from the source (the database being pointed to by NETWORK_LINK
) and then imported directly into the target (database from which the impdp command is issued), using that database link. There are no dump files involved in this situation. You would also need to specify the TRANSPORT_DATAFILES
parameter to let the import know where to find the actual data, which had been copied to the target in a separate operation using some other means.
Note:
If you already have a dump file set generated by a transportable-tablespace mode export, then you can perform a transportable-mode import of that dump file, but in this case you do not specifyTRANSPORT_TABLESPACES
or NETWORK_LINK
. Doing so would result in an error. Rather, you specify the dump file (which contains the metadata) and the TRANSPORT_DATAFILES
parameter. The presence of the TRANSPORT_DATAFILES
parameter tells import that it's a transportable-mode import and where to get the actual data.Depending on your operating system, the use of quotation marks when you specify a value for this parameter may also require that you use escape characters. Oracle recommends that you place this parameter in a parameter file, which can reduce the number of escape characters that might otherwise be needed on the command line.
See Also:
Oracle Database Administrator's Guide for more information about database links
"Considerations for Time Zone File Versions in Transportable Tablespace Mode"
You cannot export transportable tablespaces and then import them into a database at a lower release level. The target database into which you are importing must be at the same or higher release level as the source database.
The TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES
parameter is valid only when the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is also specified.
Transportable mode does not support encrypted columns.
In the following example, the source_database_link
would be replaced with the name of a valid database link. The example also assumes that a data file named tbs6.dbf
has already been copied from the source database to the local system. Suppose you have a parameter file, tablespaces.par,
with the following content:
DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1
NETWORK_LINK=source_database_link
TRANSPORT_TABLESPACES=tbs_6
TRANSPORT_FULL_CHECK=NO
TRANSPORT_DATAFILES='user01/data/tbs6.dbf'
You can then issue the following command:
> impdp hr PARFILE=tablespaces.par
Default: NEVER
Specifies whether the transportable option should be used during a table mode import (specified with the TABLES
parameter) to import only metadata for specific tables, partitions, and subpartitions.
TRANSPORTABLE = [ALWAYS | NEVER]
The definitions of the allowed values are as follows:
ALWAYS
- Instructs the import job to use the transportable option. If transportable is not possible, then the job will fail. The transportable option imports only metadata for the specified tables, partitions, or subpartitions specified by the TABLES
parameter. You must copy the actual data files to the target database. See "Using Data File Copying to Move Data".
NEVER
- Instructs the import job to use either the direct path or external table method to load data rather than the transportable option. This is the default.
If only a subset of a table's partitions are imported and the TRANSPORTABLE=ALWAYS
parameter is used, then each partition becomes a non-partitioned table.
If only a subset of a table's partitions are imported and the TRANSPORTABLE
parameter is not used or is set to NEVER
(the default), then:
If PARTITION_OPTIONS=DEPARTITION
is used, then each partition is created as a non-partitioned table.
If PARTITION_OPTIONS
is not used, then the complete table is created. That is, all the metadata for the complete table is present so that the table definition looks the same on the target system as it did on the source. But only the data for the specified partitions is inserted into the table.
The Import TRANSPORTABLE
parameter is valid only if the NETWORK_LINK
parameter is also specified.
The TRANSPORTABLE
parameter is only valid in table mode imports (the tables do not have to be partitioned or subpartitioned).
The user performing a transportable import requires the DATAPUMP_EXP_FULL_DATABASE
role on the source database and the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role on the target database.
To make full use of the TRANSPORTABLE
parameter, the COMPATIBLE
initialization parameter must be set to at least 11.0.0.
The following example shows the use of the TRANSPORTABLE
parameter during a network link import.
> impdp system TABLES=hr.sales TRANSPORTABLE=ALWAYS
DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 NETWORK_LINK=dbs1 PARTITION_OPTIONS=DEPARTITION
TRANSPORT_DATAFILES=datafile_name
Default: COMPATIBLE
Specifies the version of database objects to be imported (that is, only database objects and attributes that are compatible with the specified release will be imported). Note that this does not mean that Data Pump Import can be used with releases of Oracle Database earlier than 10.1. Data Pump Import only works with Oracle Database 10g release 1 (10.1) or later. The VERSION
parameter simply allows you to identify the version of the objects being imported.
VERSION=[COMPATIBLE | LATEST | version_string]
This parameter can be used to load a target system whose Oracle database is at an earlier compatibility release than that of the source system. Database objects or attributes on the source system that are incompatible with the specified release will not be moved to the target. For example, tables containing new datatypes that are not supported in the specified release will not be imported. Legal values for this parameter are as follows:
COMPATIBLE
- This is the default value. The version of the metadata corresponds to the database compatibility level. Database compatibility must be set to 9.2.0 or higher.
LATEST
- The version of the metadata corresponds to the database release.
version_string
- A specific database release (for example, 11.2.0). In Oracle Database 11g, this value must be 9.2.0 or higher.
The following is an example of using the VERSION
parameter. You can create the expfull.dmp
dump file used in this example by running the example provided for the Export FULL
parameter. See "FULL".
> impdp hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expfull.dmp TABLES=employees VERSION=LATEST
In interactive-command mode, the current job continues running, but logging to the terminal is suspended and the Import prompt (Import>
) is displayed.
To start interactive-command mode, do one of the following:
From an attached client, press Ctrl+C.
From a terminal other than the one on which the job is running, use the ATTACH
parameter to attach to the job. This is a useful feature in situations in which you start a job at one location and need to check on it at a later time from a different location.
Table 3-2 lists the activities you can perform for the current job from the Data Pump Import prompt in interactive-command mode.
Table 3-2 Supported Activities in Data Pump Import's Interactive-Command Mode
Activity | Command Used |
---|---|
Exit interactive-command mode. |
|
Stop the import client session, but leave the current job running. |
|
Display a summary of available commands. |
|
Detach all currently attached client sessions and terminate the current job. |
|
Increase or decrease the number of active worker processes for the current job. This command is valid only in Oracle Database Enterprise Edition. |
|
Restart a stopped job to which you are attached. |
|
Display detailed status for the current job. |
|
Stop the current job. |
The following are descriptions of the commands available in the interactive-command mode of Data Pump Import.
Changes the mode from interactive-command mode to logging mode.
CONTINUE_CLIENT
In logging mode, the job status is continually output to the terminal. If the job is currently stopped, then CONTINUE_CLIENT
will also cause the client to attempt to start the job.
Import> CONTINUE_CLIENT
Stops the import client session, exits Import, and discontinues logging to the terminal, but leaves the current job running.
EXIT_CLIENT
Because EXIT_CLIENT
leaves the job running, you can attach to the job at a later time if it is still executing or in a stopped state. To see the status of the job, you can monitor the log file for the job or you can query the USER_DATAPUMP_JOBS
view or the V$SESSION_LONGOPS
view.
Import> EXIT_CLIENT
Provides information about Data Pump Import commands available in interactive-command mode.
HELP
Displays information about the commands available in interactive-command mode.
Import> HELP
Detaches all currently attached client sessions and then terminates the current job. It exits Import and returns to the terminal prompt.
KILL_JOB
A job that is terminated using KILL_JOB
cannot be restarted. All attached clients, including the one issuing the KILL_JOB
command, receive a warning that the job is being terminated by the current user and are then detached. After all clients are detached, the job's process structure is immediately run down and the master table and dump files are deleted. Log files are not deleted.
Import> KILL_JOB
Enables you to increase or decrease the number of active worker processes and/or PQ slaves for the current job.
PARALLEL=integer
PARALLEL
is available as both a command-line parameter and an interactive-mode parameter. You set it to the desired number of parallel processes. An increase takes effect immediately if there are enough resources and if there is enough work requiring parallelization. A decrease does not take effect until an existing process finishes its current task. If the integer value is decreased, then workers are idled but not deleted until the job exits.
See Also:
"PARALLEL" for more information about parallelismThis parameter is valid only in the Enterprise Edition of Oracle Database 11g.
Import> PARALLEL=10
Starts the current job to which you are attached.
START_JOB[=SKIP_CURRENT=YES]
The START_JOB
command restarts the job to which you are currently attached (the job cannot be currently executing). The job is restarted with no data loss or corruption after an unexpected failure or after you issue a STOP_JOB
command, provided the dump file set and master table remain undisturbed.
The SKIP_CURRENT
option allows you to restart a job that previously failed to restart because execution of some DDL statement failed. The failing statement is skipped and the job is restarted from the next work item.
Neither SQLFILE jobs nor imports done in transportable-tablespace mode are restartable.
Import> START_JOB
Displays cumulative status of the job, a description of the current operation, and an estimated completion percentage. It also allows you to reset the display interval for logging mode status.
STATUS[=integer]
You have the option of specifying how frequently, in seconds, this status should be displayed in logging mode. If no value is entered or if the default value of 0
is used, then the periodic status display is turned off and status is displayed only once.
This status information is written only to your standard output device, not to the log file (even if one is in effect).
The following example will display the current job status and change the logging mode display interval to two minutes (120 seconds).
Import> STATUS=120
Stops the current job either immediately or after an orderly shutdown, and exits Import.
STOP_JOB[=IMMEDIATE]
If the master table and dump file set are not disturbed when or after the STOP_JOB
command is issued, then the job can be attached to and restarted at a later time with the START_JOB
command.
To perform an orderly shutdown, use STOP_JOB
(without any associated value). A warning requiring confirmation will be issued. An orderly shutdown stops the job after worker processes have finished their current tasks.
To perform an immediate shutdown, specify STOP_JOB
=IMMEDIATE
. A warning requiring confirmation will be issued. All attached clients, including the one issuing the STOP_JOB
command, receive a warning that the job is being stopped by the current user and they will be detached. After all clients are detached, the process structure of the job is immediately run down. That is, the master process will not wait for the worker processes to finish their current tasks. There is no risk of corruption or data loss when you specify STOP_JOB=IMMEDIATE
. However, some tasks that were incomplete at the time of shutdown may have to be redone at restart time.
Import> STOP_JOB=IMMEDIATE
This section provides examples of the following ways in which you might use Data Pump Import:
For information that will help you to successfully use these examples, see "Using the Import Parameter Examples".
Example 3-1 shows how to perform a data-only table-mode import of the table named employees
. It uses the dump file created in Example 2-1.
Example 3-1 Performing a Data-Only Table-Mode Import
> impdp hr TABLES=employees CONTENT=DATA_ONLY DUMPFILE=dpump_dir1:table.dmp NOLOGFILE=YES
The CONTENT=DATA_ONLY
parameter filters out any database object definitions (metadata). Only table row data is loaded.
Example 3-2 shows a schema-mode import of the dump file set created in Example 2-4.
Example 3-2 Performing a Schema-Mode Import
> impdp hr SCHEMAS=hr DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 DUMPFILE=expschema.dmp EXCLUDE=CONSTRAINT,REF_CONSTRAINT,INDEX TABLE_EXISTS_ACTION=REPLACE
The EXCLUDE
parameter filters the metadata that is imported. For the given mode of import, all the objects contained within the source, and all their dependent objects, are included except those specified in an EXCLUDE
statement. If an object is excluded, then all of its dependent objects are also excluded.The TABLE_EXISTS_ACTION=REPLACE
parameter tells Import to drop the table if it already exists and to then re-create and load it using the dump file contents.
Example 3-3 performs a network-mode import where the source is the database specified by the NETWORK_LINK
parameter.
Example 3-3 Network-Mode Import of Schemas
> impdp hr TABLES=employees REMAP_SCHEMA=hr:scott DIRECTORY=dpump_dir1 NETWORK_LINK=dblink
This example imports the employees
table from the hr
schema into the scott
schema. The dblink
references a source database that is different than the target database.
To remap the schema, user hr
must have the DATAPUMP_IMP_FULL_DATABASE
role on the local database and the DATAPUMP_EXP_FULL_DATABASE
role on the source database.
REMAP_SCHEMA
loads all the objects from the source schema into the target schema.
See Also:
"NETWORK_LINK" for more information about database linksThis section provides syntax diagrams for Data Pump Import. These diagrams use standard SQL syntax notation. For more information about SQL syntax notation, see Oracle Database SQL Language Reference.