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I have a Windows Service application that receives a stream of data with the following format

IDX|20120512|075659|00000002|3|AALI                 |Astra Agro Lestari Tbk.                                     |0|ORDI_PREOPEN|12  |00000001550.00|00000001291.67|00001574745000|00001574745000|00500|XDS1BXO1|                                        |00001574745000|ݤ
IDX|20120512|075659|00000022|3|ALMI                 |Alumindo Light Metal Industry Tbk.                          |0|ORDI        |33  |00000001300.00|00000001300.00|00000308000000|00000308000000|00500|--U3---2|                                        |00000308000000|õÄ

This data comes in millions of rows and in sequence 00000002....00198562 and I have to parse and insert them according to the sequence into a database table.

My question is, what is the best way (the most effective) to insert these data into my database? I have tried to use a simple method as to open a SqlConnection object then generate a string of SQL insert script and then execute the script using SqlCommand object, however this method is taking too long.

I read that I can use Sql BULK INSERT but it has to read from a textfile, is it possible for this scenario to use BULK INSERT? (I have never used it before).

Thank you

update: I'm aware of SqlBulkCopy but it requires me to have DataTable first, is this good for performance? If possible I want to insert directly from my data source to SQL Server without having to use in memory DataTable.

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    What do you mean by "insert them according to the sequence"? Why does it matter what order you insert rows? They are stored in the order specified in the clustered index, regardless of insertion order.
    – Mark Byers
    May 24, 2012 at 5:03

3 Answers 3

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If you are writing this in C# you might want to look at the SqlBulkCopy class.

Lets you efficiently bulk load a SQL Server table with data from another source.

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    ;) Amazing how people supposedly never look at the documentation - SqlBUlkCopy sort of springs out to at least check. Note: It is trivial (an hour) to write a converter that allows SqlBulkCopy to use an enumeration of objects as data source ;)
    – TomTom
    May 24, 2012 at 4:42
  • Hi Mark, thanks for your answer, I have updated my question. Could you comment on that please? thanks.
    – Arief
    May 24, 2012 at 4:53
3

First, download free LumenWorks.Framework.IO.Csv library.

Second, use the code like this

StreamReader sr = new TextReader(yourStream);
var sbc = new SqlBulkCopy(connectionString);
sbc.WriteToServer(new LumenWorks.Framework.IO.Csv.CsvReader(sr));

Yeah, it is really that easy.

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    I was looking for a library that copes with CSV fields with embedded quotation marks and newlines. This CSVReader is perfect, and easily plugs into SqlBulkCopy. I can now load millions of rows per minute using only a few lines of code. Thanks for sharing.
    – Martin
    May 7, 2014 at 14:08
  • Hi, How to insert values with check? e.g. I want to check whether the record exists or not in the db, if exists I want to append to other table Sep 24, 2014 at 12:54
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    @NitinSawant It won't gonna be bulk insert any more. But a regular one-by-one. Sep 29, 2014 at 8:23
  • @NitinSawant You need to change the processing idea - use bulk insert to push into Table A, you can then perform a join on your other table to drive the decision where to put it; databases should be used for set based operations, they perform really poorly on row based Jun 20, 2015 at 10:41
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You can use SSIS "Sql Server Integration Service" for converting data from source data flow to destination data flow. The source can be a text file and destination can be a SQL Server table. Your conversion executes in bulk insert mode.

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  • Why is every word capitalised?!
    – Liam
    Jul 31, 2015 at 9:01

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