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I get the following error when inserting data from mysql into postgres.

Do I have to manually remove all null characters from my input data? Is there a way to get postgres to do this for me?

ERROR: invalid byte sequence for encoding "UTF8": 0x00

7 Answers 7

101

PostgreSQL doesn't support storing NULL (\0x00) characters in text fields (this is obviously different from the database NULL value, which is fully supported).

Source: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/sql-syntax-lexical.html#SQL-SYNTAX-STRINGS-UESCAPE

If you need to store the NULL character, you must use a bytea field - which should store anything you want, but won't support text operations on it.

Given that PostgreSQL doesn't support it in text values, there's no good way to get it to remove it. You could import your data into bytea and later convert it to text using a special function (in perl or something, maybe?), but it's likely going to be easier to do that in preprocessing before you load it.

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  • 1
    Example: CREATE TABLE store_bytes ( key INTEGER NOT NULL, data bytea NOT NULL );
    – zengr
    Oct 5, 2015 at 23:45
36

If you are using Java, you could just replace the x00 characters before the insert like following:

myValue.replaceAll("\u0000", "")

The solution was provided and explained by Csaba in following post:

https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/1171970019.3101.328.camel%40coppola.muc.ecircle.de

Respectively:

in Java you can actually have a "0x0" character in your string, and that's valid unicode. So that's translated to the character 0x0 in UTF8, which in turn is not accepted because the server uses null terminated strings... so the only way is to make sure your strings don't contain the character '\u0000'.

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  • 10
    So, postgres is not UTF-8 compliant. Looks like I'll be up all night fixing a production issue because they lied. Nov 2, 2020 at 1:30
  • 3
    it is better to use myValue.replace("\u0000", ""). It will do exactly the same, but it doesn't use regexp. It will be faster.
    – V.S.
    Jan 31 at 15:04
22

Just regex out null bytes:

s/\x00//g;
2
  • 1
    is empty string considered as a null byte? Won't replaceAll("s/\x00//g","") result in replacing them with other nulls? Jan 20, 2016 at 11:03
  • 3
    Empty strings are not considered as null bytes. Null byte values are actual characters, but invisible. May 2, 2017 at 16:35
2

You can first insert data into blob field and then copy to text field with the folloing function

CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION blob2text() RETURNS void AS $$
Declare
    ref record;
    i integer;
Begin
    FOR ref IN SELECT id, blob_field FROM table LOOP

          --  find 0x00 and replace with space    
      i := position(E'\\000'::bytea in ref.blob_field);
      WHILE i > 0 LOOP
        ref.bob_field := set_byte(ref.blob_field, i-1, 20);
        i := position(E'\\000'::bytea in ref.blobl_field);
      END LOOP

    UPDATE table SET field = encode(ref.blob_field, 'escape') WHERE id = ref.id;
    END LOOP;

End; $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql; 

--

SELECT blob2text();
2

Only this regex worked for me:

sed 's/\\0//g'

So as you get your data do this: $ get_data | sed 's/\\0//g' which will output your data without 0x00

2

If you need to store null characters in text fields and don't want to change your data type other than text then you can follow my solution too:

Before insert:

myValue = myValue.replaceAll("\u0000", "SomeVerySpecialText")

After select:

myValue = myValue.replaceAll("SomeVerySpecialText","\u0000")

I've used "null" as my SomeVerySpecialText which I am sure that there will be no any "null" string in my values at all.

0

If anyone is arriving here looking how to remove the 0x00 in Python:

new_row = row.replace("\x00", "")

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