33

What is the fastest way to do Bulk insert to Oracle using .NET? I need to transfer about 160K records using .NET to Oracle. Currently, I'm using insert statement and execute it 160K times.It takes about 25 minutes to complete. The source data is stored in a DataTable, as a result of query from another database (MySQL),

Is there any better way to do this?

EDIT : I'm currently using System.Data.OracleClient, but willing to accept solutions using another provider (ODP.NET, DevArt, etc..)

2
  • What's wrong with a utility like SQL*Loader?
    – S.Lott
    Apr 28, 2009 at 12:30
  • Have you tried DevArt? I was wondering if Devart has OracleBulkCopy.
    – SleepNot
    Feb 19, 2013 at 9:28

10 Answers 10

29

I'm loading 50,000 records in 15 or so seconds using Array Binding in ODP.NET

It works by repeatedly invoking a stored procedure you specify (and in which you can do updates/inserts/deletes), but it passes the multiple parameter values from .NET to the database in bulk.

Instead of specifying a single value for each parameter to the stored procedure you specify an array of values for each parameter.

Oracle passes the parameter arrays from .NET to the database in one go, and then repeatedly invokes the stored procedure you specify using the parameter values you specified.

http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/issue-archive/2009/09-sep/o59odpnet-085168.html

/Damian

10
  • That works great with arrays but he is writing a datatable back to the database. How does one use array bindings to a datatable in ODP.Net?
    – mcauthorn
    Jan 6, 2010 at 17:27
  • 2
    That link doesn't seem to work anymore. I search oracle forums for array binding and it has the same non-functional link. Is there a new location?
    – RonnBlack
    Aug 17, 2012 at 17:23
  • 2
    I've updated the post to include a working link to an example from Oracle.
    – Damian
    Sep 9, 2013 at 9:28
  • 1
    Try this link c-sharpcorner.com/article/…. This worked for me importing data from sql server 2012 to Oracle 11c with .NET framework 4.5.1 Oct 5, 2018 at 23:24
  • 1
    Another reference about array-binding blogs.oracle.com/oraclemagazine/put-your-arrays-in-a-bind
    – Rohim Chou
    Jul 21, 2021 at 23:57
27

I recently discovered a specialized class that's awesome for a bulk insert (ODP.NET). Oracle.DataAccess.Client.OracleBulkCopy! It takes a datatable as a parameter, then you call WriteTOServer method...it is very fast and effective, good luck!!

3
  • Although this should be the go-to solution, it has a very annoying limitation: it does not support double-quoted table and column names. Apr 21, 2023 at 6:41
  • This works very well and support cancellation
    – KornMuffin
    Jul 6, 2023 at 14:25
  • Please note: this also avoids the PK check, index check during insertion. And then rebuilds the index at the end. So if there's any dupe data during this bulk insert, it will make the index unusable after it creates the dupes.
    – Ak777
    Nov 14, 2023 at 21:08
17

The solution of Rob Stevenson-Legget is slow because he doesn't bind his values but he uses string.Format( ).

When you ask Oracle to execute a sql statement it starts with calculating the has value of this statement. After that it looks in a hash table whether it already knows this statement. If it already knows it statement it can retrieve its execution path from this hash table and execute this statement really fast because Oracle has executed this statement before. This is called the library cache and it doesn't work properly if you don't bind your sql statements.

For example don't do:

for (int n = 0; n < 100000; n ++)
{
    mycommand.CommandText = String.Format("INSERT INTO [MyTable] ([MyId]) VALUES({0})", n + 1);
    mycommand.ExecuteNonQuery();
}

but do:

OracleParameter myparam = new OracleParameter();
mycommand.CommandText = "INSERT INTO [MyTable] ([MyId]) VALUES(?)";
mycommand.Parameters.Add(myparam);
    
for (int n = 0; n < 100000; n ++)
{
    myparam.Value = n + 1;
    mycommand.ExecuteNonQuery();
}

Not using parameters can also cause sql injection.

1
  • Great answer posted almost 5 years ago! :) Where's Theo?! Sep 22, 2013 at 23:03
9

SQL Server's SQLBulkCopy is blindingly fast. Unfortunately, I found that OracleBulkCopy is far slower. Also it has problems:

  • You must be very sure that your input data is clean if you plan to use OracleBulkCopy. If a primary key violation occurs, an ORA-26026 is raised and it appears to be unrecoverable. Trying to rebuild the index does not help and any subsequent insert on the table fails, also normal inserts.
  • Even if the data is clean, I found that OracleBulkCopy sometimes gets stuck inside WriteToServer. The problem seems to depend on the batch size. In my test data, the problem would happen at the exact same point in my test when I repeat is. Use a larger or smaller batch size, and the problem does not happen. I see that the speed is more irregular on larger batch sizes, this points to problems related to memory management.

Actually System.Data.OracleClient.OracleDataAdapter is faster than OracleBulkCopy if you want to fill a table with small records but many rows. You need to tune the batch size though, the optimum BatchSize for OracleDataAdapter is smaller than for OracleBulkCopy.

I ran my test on a Windows 7 machine with an x86 executable and the 32 bits ODP.Net client 2.112.1.0. . The OracleDataAdapter is part of System.Data.OracleClient 2.0.0.0. My test set is about 600,000 rows with a record size of max. 102 bytes (average size 43 chars). Data source is a 25 MB text file, read in line by line as a stream.

In my test I built up the input data table to a fixed table size and then used either OracleBulkCopy or OracleDataAdapter to copy the data block to the server. I left BatchSize as 0 in OracleBulkCopy (so that the current table contents is copied as one batch) and set it to the table size in OracleDataAdapter (again that should create a single batch internally). Best results:

  • OracleBulkCopy: table size = 500, total duration 4'22"
  • OracleDataAdapter: table size = 100, total duration 3'03"

For comparison:

  • SqlBulkCopy: table size = 1000, total duration 0'15"
  • SqlDataAdapter: table size = 1000, total duration 8'05"

Same client machine, test server is SQL Server 2008 R2. For SQL Server, bulk copy is clearly the best way to go. Not only is it overall fastest, but server load is also lower than when using data adapter. It is a pity that OracleBulkCopy does not offer quite the same experience - the BulkCopy API is much easier to use than DataAdapter.

2
  • You are absolutely right about the flakiness of the memory management in the Oracle data driver. I experienced exactly the same problems when the number of insert rows is varied. Additionally, when I iterate through large batches of inserts, the performance degrades over time until simple batches of 10 inserts can take up to 5 minutes.
    – grenade
    Jul 11, 2012 at 7:52
  • 1
    And one thing more to tell - when It's performing Insert It disables indexes. Meaning that If you try to Insert duplicate row, you'll end with ORA-01502 - dba-oracle.com/…. Very nasty error.
    – Lucy82
    Dec 22, 2020 at 8:01
5

A really fast way to solve this problem is to make a database link from the Oracle database to the MySQL database. You can create database links to non-Oracle databases. After you have created the database link you can retrieve your data from the MySQL database with a ... create table mydata as select * from ... statement. This is called heterogeneous connectivity. This way you don't have to do anything in your .net application to move the data.

Another way is to use ODP.NET. In ODP.NET you can use the OracleBulkCopy-class.

But I don't think that inserting 160k records in an Oracle table with System.Data.OracleClient should take 25 minutes. I think you commit too many times. And do you bind your values to the insert statement with parameters or do you concatenate your values. Binding is much faster.

2
  • Deleted my Answer because this is a much better solution. Dec 5, 2008 at 13:48
  • I actually has setup the dblink in our dev environemnt, but when it comes to production, it turns out that the oracle and MySQL didn't even resides in the same network, hence my quick and dirty workaround using .net uploader. I really need to look at that OracleBulkCopy. Any pointer? Dec 5, 2008 at 16:08
4

Finding the linked examples somewhat confusing, I worked out some code that demonstrates a working array insert into a test table (jkl_test). Here's the table:

create table jkl_test (id number(9));

Here is .Net code for a simple Console application that connects to Oracle using ODP.Net and inserts an array of 5 integers:

using Oracle.DataAccess.Client;

namespace OracleArrayInsertExample
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            // Open a connection using ODP.Net
            var connection = new OracleConnection("Data Source=YourDatabase; Password=YourPassword; User Id=YourUser");
            connection.Open();

            // Create an insert command
            var command = connection.CreateCommand();
            command.CommandText = "insert into jkl_test values (:ids)";

            // Set up the parameter and provide values
            var param = new OracleParameter("ids", OracleDbType.Int32);
            param.Value = new int[] { 22, 55, 7, 33, 11 };

            // This is critical to the process; in order for the command to 
            // recognize and bind arrays, an array bind count must be specified.
            // Set it to the length of the array.
            command.ArrayBindCount = 5;
            command.Parameters.Add(param);
            command.ExecuteNonQuery();
        }
    }
}
3

To follow up on Theo's suggestion with my findings (apologies - I don't currently have enough reputation to post this as a comment)

First, this is how to use several named parameters:

String commandString = "INSERT INTO Users (Name, Desk, UpdateTime) VALUES (:Name, :Desk, :UpdateTime)";
using (OracleCommand command = new OracleCommand(commandString, _connection, _transaction))
{
    command.Parameters.Add("Name", OracleType.VarChar, 50).Value = strategy;
    command.Parameters.Add("Desk", OracleType.VarChar, 50).Value = deskName ?? OracleString.Null;
    command.Parameters.Add("UpdateTime", OracleType.DateTime).Value = updated;
    command.ExecuteNonQuery();
}

However, I saw no variation in speed between:

  • constructing a new commandString for each row (String.Format)
  • constructing a now parameterized commandString for each row
  • using a single commandString and changing the parameters

I'm using System.Data.OracleClient, deleting and inserting 2500 rows inside a transaction

2

Oracle says (http://www.oracle.com/technology/products/database/utilities/htdocs/sql_loader_overview.html)

SQL*Loader is the primary method for quickly populating Oracle tables with data from external files

My experience is that their loader loads their tables faster than anything else.

2
  • 3
    Not sure that it has a .NET API though - I think the original question was re .NET. Also it wasn't sufficient for my purposes because it just does inserts - I wanted to UPDATE/INSERT depending on whether records existed already. Might be sufficient for the questioner though.
    – Damian
    Apr 28, 2009 at 13:01
  • SQL*Loader is an oracle data loading tool. It can handle large amount of data stored in csv, txt or other files. Export your data from mysql into csv format and write a loader script to pump the data into oracle. Aug 6, 2009 at 22:26
2

If you are using unmanaged oracle client (Oracle.DataAccess) then the fastest way is to use OracleBulkCopy, as was pointed by Tarik.

If you are using latest managed oracle client (Oracle.ManagedDataAccess) then the fastest way is to use array binding, as was pointed by Damien. If you wish keep your application code clean from array binding specifics, you could write your own implementation of OracleBulkCopy using array binding.

Here is usage example from real project:

var bulkWriter = new OracleDbBulkWriter();
    bulkWriter.Write(
        connection,
        "BULK_WRITE_TEST",
        Enumerable.Range(1, 10000).Select(v => new TestData { Id = v, StringValue=v.ToString() }).ToList());

10K records are inserted in 500ms!

Here is implementation:

public class OracleDbBulkWriter : IDbBulkWriter
{
    public void Write<T>(IDbConnection connection, string targetTableName, IList<T> data, IList<ColumnToPropertyMapping> mappings = null)
    {
        if (connection == null)
        {
            throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(connection));
        }
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(targetTableName))
        {
            throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(targetTableName));
        }
        if (data == null)
        {
            throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(data));
        }
        if (mappings == null)
        {
            mappings = GetGenericMappings<T>();
        }

        mappings = GetUniqueMappings<T>(mappings);
        Dictionary<string, Array> parameterValues = InitializeParameterValues<T>(mappings, data.Count);
        FillParameterValues(parameterValues, data);

        using (var command = CreateCommand(connection, targetTableName, mappings, parameterValues))
        {
            command.ExecuteNonQuery();
        }
    }

    private static IDbCommand CreateCommand(IDbConnection connection, string targetTableName, IList<ColumnToPropertyMapping> mappings, Dictionary<string, Array> parameterValues)
    {
        var command = (OracleCommandWrapper)connection.CreateCommand();
        command.ArrayBindCount = parameterValues.First().Value.Length;

        foreach(var mapping in mappings)
        {
            var parameter = command.CreateParameter();
            parameter.ParameterName = mapping.Column;
            parameter.Value = parameterValues[mapping.Property];

            command.Parameters.Add(parameter);
        }

        command.CommandText = $@"insert into {targetTableName} ({string.Join(",", mappings.Select(m => m.Column))}) values ({string.Join(",", mappings.Select(m => $":{m.Column}")) })";
        return command;
    }

    private IList<ColumnToPropertyMapping> GetGenericMappings<T>()
    {
        var accessor = TypeAccessor.Create(typeof(T));

        var mappings = accessor.GetMembers()
            .Select(m => new ColumnToPropertyMapping(m.Name, m.Name))
            .ToList();

        return mappings;
    }

    private static IList<ColumnToPropertyMapping> GetUniqueMappings<T>(IList<ColumnToPropertyMapping> mappings)
    {
        var accessor = TypeAccessor.Create(typeof(T));
        var members = new HashSet<string>(accessor.GetMembers().Select(m => m.Name));

        mappings = mappings
                        .Where(m => m != null && members.Contains(m.Property))
                        .GroupBy(m => m.Column)
                        .Select(g => g.First())
                        .ToList();
        return mappings;
    }

    private static Dictionary<string, Array> InitializeParameterValues<T>(IList<ColumnToPropertyMapping> mappings, int numberOfRows)
    {
        var values = new Dictionary<string, Array>(mappings.Count);
        var accessor = TypeAccessor.Create(typeof(T));
        var members = accessor.GetMembers().ToDictionary(m => m.Name);

        foreach(var mapping in mappings)
        {
            var member = members[mapping.Property];

            values[mapping.Property] = Array.CreateInstance(member.Type, numberOfRows);
        }

        return values;
    }

    private static void FillParameterValues<T>(Dictionary<string, Array> parameterValues, IList<T> data)
    {
        var accessor = TypeAccessor.Create(typeof(T));
        for (var rowNumber = 0; rowNumber < data.Count; rowNumber++)
        {
            var row = data[rowNumber];
            foreach (var pair in parameterValues)
            {
                Array parameterValue = pair.Value;
                var propertyValue = accessor[row, pair.Key];
                parameterValue.SetValue(propertyValue, rowNumber);
            }
        }
    }
}

NOTE: this implementation uses Fastmember package for optimized access to properties(much faster than reflection)

1
  • 2
    Your code-example is not useable because the example misses some classes. * ColumnToPropertyMapping, * OracleCommandWrapper, * IDbBulkWriter Aug 10, 2017 at 8:41
1

I guess that OracleBulkCopy is one of the fastest ways. I had some trouble to learn, that I needed a new ODAC version. Cf. Where is type [Oracle.DataAccess.Client.OracleBulkCopy] ?

Here is the complete PowerShell code to copy from a query into a suited existing Oracle table. I tried Sql-Server a datasource, but other valid OLE-DB sources will go to.

if ($ora_dll -eq $null)
{
    "Load Oracle dll"
    $ora_dll = [System.Reflection.Assembly]::LoadWithPartialName("Oracle.DataAccess") 
    $ora_dll
}

# sql-server or Oracle source example is sql-server
$ConnectionString ="server=localhost;database=myDatabase;trusted_connection=yes;Provider=SQLNCLI10;"

# Oracle destination
$oraClientConnString = "Data Source=myTNS;User ID=myUser;Password=myPassword"

$tableName = "mytable"
$sql = "select * from $tableName"

$OLEDBConn = New-Object System.Data.OleDb.OleDbConnection($ConnectionString)
$OLEDBConn.open()
$readcmd = New-Object system.Data.OleDb.OleDbCommand($sql,$OLEDBConn)
$readcmd.CommandTimeout = '300'
$da = New-Object system.Data.OleDb.OleDbDataAdapter($readcmd)
$dt = New-Object system.Data.datatable
[void]$da.fill($dt)
$OLEDBConn.close()
#Write-Output $dt

if ($dt)
{
    try
    {
        $bulkCopy = new-object ("Oracle.DataAccess.Client.OracleBulkCopy") $oraClientConnString
        $bulkCopy.DestinationTableName = $tableName
        $bulkCopy.BatchSize = 5000
        $bulkCopy.BulkCopyTimeout = 10000
        $bulkCopy.WriteToServer($dt)
        $bulkcopy.close()
        $bulkcopy.Dispose()
    }
    catch
    {
        $ex = $_.Exception
        Write-Error "Write-DataTable$($connectionName):$ex.Message"
        continue
    }
}

BTW: I use this to copy table with CLOB columns. I didn't get that to work using linked servers cf. question on dba. I didn't retry linked serves with the new ODAC.

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