What is the easiest way to save PL/pgSQL output from a PostgreSQL database to a CSV file?
I’m using PostgreSQL 8.4 with pgAdmin III and PSQL plugin where I run queries from.
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Do you want the resulting file on the server, or on the client?
Server side
If you want something easy to re-use or automate, you can use Postgresql’s built in COPY command. e.g.
This approach runs entirely on the remote server – it can’t write to your local PC. It also needs to be run as a Postgres "superuser" (normally called "root") because Postgres can’t stop it doing nasty things with that machine’s local filesystem.
That doesn’t actually mean you have to be connected as a superuser (automating that would be a security risk of a different kind), because you can use the
SECURITY DEFINERoption toCREATE FUNCTIONto make a function which runs as though you were a superuser.The crucial part is that your function is there to perform additional checks, not just by-pass the security – so you could write a function which exports the exact data you need, or you could write something which can accept various options as long as they meet a strict whitelist. You need to check two things:
GRANTs in the database, but the function is now running as a superuser, so tables which would normally be "out of bounds" will be fully accessible. You probably don’t want to let someone invoke your function and add rows on the end of your “users” table…I’ve written a blog post expanding on this approach, including some examples of functions that export (or import) files and tables meeting strict conditions.
Client side
The other approach is to do the file handling on the client side, i.e. in your application or script. The Postgres server doesn’t need to know what file you’re copying to, it just spits out the data and the client puts it somewhere.
The underlying syntax for this is the
COPY TO STDOUTcommand, and graphical tools like pgAdmin will wrap it for you in a nice dialog.The
psqlcommand-line client has a special "meta-command" called\copy, which takes all the same options as the "real"COPY, but is run inside the client:Note that there is no terminating
;, because meta-commands are terminated by newline, unlike SQL commands.From the docs:
Your application programming language may also have support for pushing or fetching the data, but you cannot generally use
COPY FROM STDIN/TO STDOUTwithin a standard SQL statement, because there is no way of connecting the input/output stream. PHP’s PostgreSQL handler (not PDO) includes very basicpg_copy_fromandpg_copy_tofunctions which copy to/from a PHP array, which may not be efficient for large data sets.