March 4, 2014 at 2:02 pm
Hello, Is there a way to run a BCP utility to read excel file and copy into Sql table? I am aware of Import Export wizard but do not wish to use one. Can format files be used just how they are used to transfer flat files into sql table? How such bcp program be scheduled to be run at a certain time? Can we write SSIS package? Any help appreciated
March 4, 2014 at 2:15 pm
I'm not sure you can read Excel with bcp (you can write to Excel with bcp though).
You can use FROM OPENROWSET to read an excel file, or just use SSIS (with is the same as the import wizard).
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March 4, 2014 at 3:03 pm
Koen Verbeeck (3/4/2014)
I'm not sure you can read Excel with bcp (you can write to Excel with bcp though).You can use FROM OPENROWSET to read an excel file, or just use SSIS (with is the same as the import wizard).
I don't know of anyway that BCP can write to an Excel file. I know it can write to a CSV or TSV file, which Excel attaches and Excel icon to in Explorer, but it's not an actual Excel file. If you know of a way to write to an actual .xlsx or .xls file from BCP, I'm all ears. (and no... not being sarcastic... I've just never heard of such a thing and would like to learn the method if there's a way).
--Jeff Moden
Change is inevitable... Change for the better is not.
March 4, 2014 at 3:15 pm
Jeff Moden (3/4/2014)
Koen Verbeeck (3/4/2014)
I'm not sure you can read Excel with bcp (you can write to Excel with bcp though).You can use FROM OPENROWSET to read an excel file, or just use SSIS (with is the same as the import wizard).
I don't know of anyway that BCP can write to an Excel file. I know it can write to a CSV or TSV file, which Excel attaches and Excel icon to in Explorer, but it's not an actual Excel file. If you know of a way to write to an actual .xlsx or .xls file from BCP, I'm all ears. (and no... not being sarcastic... I've just never heard of such a thing and would like to learn the method if there's a way).
You're right. bcp can write to a .xls file, but it is actually just a .csv file behind the scenes.
Googling at this late hour had me jump to conclusions.
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MCSE Business Intelligence - Microsoft Data Platform MVP
March 7, 2014 at 6:53 am
Thanks for information. Is there a way to write an SSIS which reads a table columns from one SQL server and transfers into another SQL server? I do not wish to use linked server. Can a query be used to join table columns across databases from 1 sql server and input as 1 table into db of 2nd sql server? Any thoughts appreciated
March 7, 2014 at 7:01 am
tracmonali (3/7/2014)
Thanks for information. Is there a way to write an SSIS which reads a table columns from one SQL server and transfers into another SQL server? I do not wish to use linked server. Can a query be used to join table columns across databases from 1 sql server and input as 1 table into db of 2nd sql server? Any thoughts appreciated
This question deserves a new topic, but anyway...
You can use a data flow for that. Put the query of server1 in the source, and write the results to server2.
Need an answer? No, you need a question
My blog at https://sqlkover.com.
MCSE Business Intelligence - Microsoft Data Platform MVP
March 7, 2014 at 5:03 pm
tracmonali (3/7/2014)
Thanks for information. Is there a way to write an SSIS which reads a table columns from one SQL server and transfers into another SQL server? I do not wish to use linked server. Can a query be used to join table columns across databases from 1 sql server and input as 1 table into db of 2nd sql server? Any thoughts appreciated
Although there's no real performance penalty for joining across databases, there's a huge penalty for joining across databases on different servers. As Koen implied, the tables/data really need to be on 1 server and then you can push the data to another server much more quickly than doing a common join between tables on two different servers.
--Jeff Moden
Change is inevitable... Change for the better is not.
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