On October 25, 2007 03:16:59 pm Fernando Hevia wrote:
>
> As I understand it when a line starts with $ you would like to merge it
> with the previous line.
>
No, it appears the data file I am attempting to COPY has some records with
fields that contain a CR/LF in the data of that field. Postgres COPY fails
like this:
ERROR: literal carriage return found in data
HINT: Use "\r" to represent carriage return.
CONTEXT: COPY orig_city_world, line 1071850
I tried this, which I found on the web from Tom Lane:
sed 's/^M/\\r/g' geonames.txt > geonames_fixed.txt
But still get the same error. I used ctrl-v ctrl-m to reproduce the ^M. Not
sure why it is kicking out those lines still.