143

I have .sql files which have the following content:

#cat db.sql
create table server(name varchar(50),ipaddress varchar(15),id init)
create table client(name varchar(50),ipaddress varchar(15),id init)

How do I import this file into SQLite so that these are created automatically?

1
  • sqlite3 DB.db < db.sql Error: incomplete SQL: create table server(name varchar(50),ipaddress varchar(15),id init) create table client(name varchar(50),ipaddress varchar(15),id init) what's this error mean? I tried both methods >.read db.sql and sqlite3 DB.db < db.sql Jan 12, 2010 at 13:22

5 Answers 5

228

From a sqlite prompt:

sqlite> .read db.sql

Or:

cat db.sql | sqlite3 database.db

Also, your SQL is invalid - you need ; on the end of your statements:

create table server(name varchar(50),ipaddress varchar(15),id init);
create table client(name varchar(50),ipaddress varchar(15),id init);
5
  • sqlite3 DB.db < db.sql Error: incomplete SQL: create table server(name varchar(50),ipaddress varchar(15),id init) create table client(name varchar(50),ipaddress varchar(15),id init) what's this error mean? I tried both methods >.read db.sql and sqlite3 DB.db < db.sql...Thanks Jan 12, 2010 at 13:28
  • 1
    thanks It's working now. I missed out ; and included invalid chars like "-". Now it's fine.Thanks !!! Jan 13, 2010 at 5:19
  • @lakshmipathi, if it's working you can mark one of the two answers that answered your question as accepted by clicking the tick under the vote count next to the answer. Jan 13, 2010 at 6:51
  • For postgresql you can use pg2sqlite for that, see my answer
    – caiiiycuk
    Sep 23, 2021 at 2:21
  • Does the .dump command produce an sql file that will drop all tables etc if I do .read <file>?
    – chovy
    Sep 15, 2022 at 13:16
93

Use sqlite3 database.sqlite3 < db.sql. You'll need to make sure that your files contain valid SQL for SQLite.

2
  • Me too (Windows command line syntax). Thanks. Sure is slow, though.
    – Barton
    Apr 12, 2013 at 20:05
  • 4
    I got impatient building from a 40+Mb .sql file, terminated sqlite3 database.sqlite3 < db.sql in favor of sqlite> .read db.sql. The alternative is just as slow, it turns out.
    – Barton
    Apr 12, 2013 at 20:56
33

Alternatively, you can do this from a Windows commandline prompt/batch file:

sqlite3.exe DB.db ".read db.sql"

Where DB.db is the database file, and db.sql is the SQL file to run/import.

2
  • this worked for me, although i ran sqlite3 as a command in the terminal so: sqlite3 DB.db ".read db.sql"
    – Bugbeeb
    Mar 3, 2020 at 1:18
  • Use .\sqlite.exe to load from the current directory when using Powershell on Windows 11
    – MT1
    Sep 11, 2023 at 13:04
28

You can also do:

sqlite3 database.db -init dump.sql
1
0

For example, you export apple.db to backup.sql with .dump or .schema as shown below. *backup.sql is created if it doesn't exist and .dump can export schema with data and .schema can export only schema and my answer explains how to export a database:

sqlite3 apple.db .dump > backup.sql

Or:

sqlite3 apple.db .schema > backup.sql

Now, you can import backup.sql into orange.db as shown below. *orange.db is created if it doesn't exist:

sqlite3 orange.db < backup.sql

Or:

sqlite3 orange.db
...
sqlite> .read backup.sql

Be careful, if you directly import apple.db into orange.db as shown below:

sqlite3 orange.db < apple.db

Or:

sqlite3 orange.db
...
sqlite> .read apple.db

Then, you get the error below:

Parse error near line 1: near "SQLite": syntax error

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