Re: Eliminating bad characters from a database for upgrading from 7.4 to 8.1

From: "Gregory S(dot) Williamson" <gsw(at)globexplorer(dot)com>
To: "mike" <mike(at)thegodshalls(dot)com>
Cc: "Russell Smith" <mr-russ(at)pws(dot)com(dot)au>, <pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org>
Subject: Re: Eliminating bad characters from a database for upgrading from 7.4 to 8.1
Date: 2006-11-17 14:17:02
Message-ID: 71E37EF6B7DCC1499CEA0316A256832802B3E8BB@loki.wc.globexplorer.net
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Thanks to you and Russell -- the iconv trick had eluded me for some reason. Serious pain on such a large file, but at least it works (test of the small 22 gig sample)! A little splitting, a little converting, some diff-ing, reassmbly and load. piece o' cake!

Thanks again ... sorry for wasting bandwidth for what seems to have an RFTM question!

G

-----Original Message-----
From: mike [mailto:mike(at)thegodshalls(dot)com]
Sent: Thu 11/16/2006 7:49 PM
To: Gregory S. Williamson
Cc: Russell Smith; pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org
Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Eliminating bad characters from a database for upgrading from 7.4 to 8.1

The manual suggests: iconv -c -f UTF-8 -t UTF-8 -o cleanfile.sql
dumpfile.sql. The -c option removes invalid character sequences. A diff
of the two files will show the sequences that are invalid. iconv reads
the entire input file into memory so it might be necessary to use split
to break up the dump into multiple smaller files for processing.

On Thu, 2006-11-16 at 19:38 -0800, Gregory S. Williamson wrote:
> Thanks for the suggestion ... since the data involved came from different source, I suspect there may be more than one encoding, but this has great promise.
>
> Greg
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Russell Smith [mailto:mr-russ(at)pws(dot)com(dot)au]
> Sent: Thu 11/16/2006 7:27 PM
> To: Gregory S. Williamson
> Cc: pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org
> Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Eliminating bad characters from a database for upgrading from 7.4 to 8.1
>
> Gregory S. Williamson wrote:
> > Dear list,
> >
> > I have been banging my head against a problem for a few days now, and although I am making progress it is painfully slow, and I am hoping that some one out there can steer me in a better way.
> >
> > I've got a medium size database (7.4), about 64 gigs of data, about 1/3rd of which is in one table, which has ~32 million rows (22 gigs when dumped). This largish table has about 20 different columns of varchar or text.
> >
> > There are some records that have illegal characters in them, according to postgres 8.1.5, which imposes stricter standards on UTF encoding.
> >
> > I've been using copy to dump the big table to disk, then try to load it into my new table. When it fails, I use split to break the file into managable chunks and then use ""vi" to find the offending line, then figure out the column. Then I use something like:
> >
> > create table bad_char_gids as select gid from parcels where position('Ñ' in s_street) > 0;
> >
> > And so create a table with the ids of the bad records; and then use replace to either replace or eliminate the offending characters from that column. This example got 5001 records, but often it is one record in the whole DB will have some other offending character. I fix the problem in the loaddata as well, and continue.
> >
> > The problem is that there are errors in quite a few of the columns (but only a few tens of thousands of records), and the offending characters are all quite different (wierd diacritics and characters, upper and lower case). And so this is a very slow process.
> >
> > Is there any way to get a list of records, even if done repeatedly for each column, that would let me find the offending records in 7.4 which have any invalid UTF chars? I am feeling stupid for not seeing one ... I can find any individual bad character, but I want to find them all at once, if possible.
> >
> Try converting the dump files encoding to UTF-8. before 8.1 you could
> insert invalid characters into the DB because it accepted other
> encodings. It will also dump other encoding. For example, converting
> something with windows characters in it.
>
> iconv -f "WINDOWS-1251" -t "UTF-8" dump_file > converted_dump_file
>
> And import the converted file. you may need to try a couple of
> different input encodings if you aren't sure what encoding was used when
> inserting data into the DB.
>
> Russell.
>
> > TIA,
> >
> > Greg Williamson
> > DBA
> > GlobeXplorer LLC
> >
> >
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