On Fri, 2007-12-14 at 18:22 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com> writes:
> > By modifying COPY: COPY IGNORE ERRORS or some such would instruct COPY
> > to drop (and log) rows that contain malformed data. That is, rows with
> > too many or too few columns, rows that result in constraint violations,
> > and rows containing columns where the data type's input function raises
> > an error. The last case is the only thing that would be a bit tricky to
> > implement, I think: you could use PG_TRY() around the InputFunctionCall,
> > but I guess you'd need a subtransaction to ensure that you reset your
> > state correctly after catching an error.
>
> Yeah. It's the subtransaction per row that's daunting --- not only the
> cycles spent for that, but the ensuing limitation to 4G rows imported
> per COPY.
I'd suggest doing everything at block level
- wrap each new block of data in a subtransaction
- apply data to the table block by block (can still work with FSM).
- apply indexes in bulk for each block, unique ones first.
That then gives you a limit of more than 500 trillion rows, which should
be enough for anyone.
-- Simon Riggs 2ndQuadrant http://www.2ndQuadrant.com