I've been playing with mysqlimport and I've run into the restriction where the filename has to be the same as the table name. Is there any way to work round this?

I can't rename the file as it is used by other processes and I don't want to copy the file as there will be many of them, some being very large.

I want to use mysqlimport not LOAD INFILE.

EDIT: Unfortunately this needs to run on windows so no tricks with symbolic links I'm afraid.

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Why don't you want to use LOAD DATA INFILE, when it is the same as what mysqlimport does and it allows you to specify a different table name for a given input file? – a'r Mar 24 '10 at 14:46
I'm using Java/JDBC and invoking the LOAD INFILE doesn't seem to produce any error when there is a problem loading the file in some situations. You get warnings displayed if you run it through the Workbench but the JDBC driver gives me nothing back. – Mike Q Mar 24 '10 at 18:03
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3 Answers

You didn't say what platform you are on. On unix you can create a symbolic link to the file:

ln -s filename.txt tablename.txt

Then use that in the mysqlimport command.

But mysqlimport is just a command line interface to LOAD INFILE so you could also do this on the command line:

mysql -e "load data infile 'filename' into table TBL_NAME" dbname
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Afraid I'm on windows. – Mike Q Mar 24 '10 at 18:04
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Have you tried using the alias command, assuming you are on a Linux system?

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Just create a symbolic link:

ln -s /tmp/real_file.txt /tmp/your_table_name.txt
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