EXTERNAL TABLES
You can user external
table feature to access external files as if they are tables inside the
database. When you create an external table, you define its structure and
location with in oracle.When you query the table, oracle reads the external
table and returns the results just as if the data had been stored with in the
database.
ACCESSING EXTERNAL TABLE
DATA
To access external files
from within oracle, you must first use the create directory command to define a
directory object pointing to the external file locationUsers who will access
the external files must have the read and write privilege on the directory.
Ex:
CREATING DIRECTORY AND OS
LEVEL FILE
SQL> Sqlplus system/manager
SQL> Create directory saketh_dir as ‘/Visdb/visdb/9.2.0/external’;
SQL> Grant all on directory saketh_dir to saketh;
SQL> Conn saketh/saketh
SQL> Spool dept.lst
SQL> Select deptno || ‘,’ || dname || ‘,’ || loc from dept;
SQL> Spool off
CREATING EXTERNAL TABLE
SQL> Create table dept_ext
(deptno number(2),
Dname varchar(14),
Loc varchar(13))
Organization external ( type oracle_loader
Default directory saketh_dir
Access parameters
( records delimited by newline
Fields terminated by “,”
( deptno number(2),
Dname
varchar(14),
Loc varchar(13)))
Location
(‘/Visdb/visdb/9.2.0/dept.lst’));
SELECTING DATA FROM EXTERNAL
TABLE
SQL> select * from dept_ext;
This will read from
dept.lst which is a operating system level file.
LIMITATIONS ON EXTERNAL
TABLES
a) You can not perform
insert, update, and delete operations
a) Indexing not possible
b) Constraints not possible
BENEFITS OF EXTERNAL TABLES
a) Queries of external
tables complete very quickly even though a full table scan id required with
each access
b) You can join external
tables to each other or to standard tables
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