darold / ora2pg

Ora2Pg is a free tool used to migrate an Oracle database to a PostgreSQL compatible schema. It connects your Oracle database, scan it automatically and extracts its structure or data, it then generates SQL scripts that you can load into PostgreSQL.
http://www.ora2pg.com/
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NAME Ora2Pg - Oracle to PostgreSQL database schema converter

DESCRIPTION Ora2Pg is a free tool used to migrate an Oracle database to a PostgreSQL compatible schema. It connects your Oracle database, scans it automatically and extracts its structure or data, then generates SQL scripts that you can load into your PostgreSQL database.

Ora2Pg can be used for anything from reverse engineering Oracle database
to huge enterprise database migration or simply replicating some Oracle
data into a PostgreSQL database. It is really easy to use and doesn't
require any Oracle database knowledge other than providing the
parameters needed to connect to the Oracle database.

FEATURES Ora2Pg consist of a Perl script (ora2pg) and a Perl module (Ora2Pg.pm), the only thing you have to modify is the configuration file ora2pg.conf by setting the DSN to the Oracle database and optionally the name of a schema. Once that's done you just have to set the type of export you want: TABLE with constraints, VIEW, MVIEW, TABLESPACE, SEQUENCE, INDEXES, TRIGGER, GRANT, FUNCTION, PROCEDURE, PACKAGE, PARTITION, TYPE, INSERT or COPY, FDW, QUERY, KETTLE, SYNONYM.

By default Ora2Pg exports to a file that you can load into PostgreSQL
with the psql client, but you can also import directly into a PostgreSQL
database by setting its DSN into the configuration file. With all
configuration options of ora2pg.conf you have full control of what
should be exported and how.

Features included:

        - Export full database schema (tables, views, sequences, indexes), with
          unique, primary, foreign key and check constraints.
        - Export grants/privileges for users and groups.
        - Export range/list partitions and sub partitions.
        - Export a table selection (by specifying the table names).
        - Export Oracle schema to a PostgreSQL 8.4+ schema.
        - Export predefined functions, triggers, procedures, packages and
          package bodies.
        - Export full data or following a WHERE clause.
        - Full support of Oracle BLOB object as PG BYTEA.
        - Export Oracle views as PG tables.
        - Export Oracle user defined types.
        - Provide some basic automatic conversion of PLSQL code to PLPGSQL.
        - Works on any platform.
        - Export Oracle tables as foreign data wrapper tables.
        - Export materialized view.
        - Show a  report of an Oracle database content.
        - Migration cost assessment of an Oracle database.
        - Migration difficulty level assessment of an Oracle database.
        - Migration cost assessment of PL/SQL code from a file.
        - Migration cost assessment of Oracle SQL queries stored in a file.
        - Generate XML ktr files to be used with Penthalo Data Integrator (Kettle)
        - Export Oracle locator and spatial geometries into PostGis.
        - Export DBLINK as Oracle FDW.
        - Export SYNONYMS as views.
        - Export DIRECTORY as external table or directory for external_file extension.
        - Dispatch a list of SQL orders over multiple PostgreSQL connections
        - Perform a diff between Oracle and PostgreSQL database for test purpose.
        - MySQL/MariaDB and Microsoft SQL Server migration.

Ora2Pg does its best to automatically convert your Oracle database to
PostgreSQL but there's still manual works to do. The Oracle specific
PL/SQL code generated for functions, procedures, packages and triggers
has to be reviewed to match the PostgreSQL syntax. You will find some
useful recommendations on porting Oracle PL/SQL code to PostgreSQL
PL/PGSQL at "Converting from other Databases to PostgreSQL", section:
Oracle (http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Main_Page).

See http://ora2pg.darold.net/report.html for a HTML sample of an Oracle
database migration report.

INSTALLATION All Perl modules can always be found at CPAN (http://search.cpan.org/). Just type the full name of the module (ex: DBD::Oracle) into the search input box, it will brings you the page for download.

Releases of Ora2Pg stay at SF.net
(https://sourceforge.net/projects/ora2pg/).

Under Windows you should install Strawberry Perl
(http://strawberryperl.com/) and the OSes corresponding Oracle clients.
Since version 5.32 this Perl distribution include pre-compiled driver of
DBD::Oracle and DBD::Pg.

Requirement The Oracle Instant Client or a full Oracle installation must be installed on the system. You can download the RPM from Oracle download center:

    rpm -ivh oracle-instantclient12.2-basic-12.2.0.1.0-1.x86_64.rpm
    rpm -ivh oracle-instantclient12.2-devel-12.2.0.1.0-1.x86_64.rpm
    rpm -ivh oracle-instantclient12.2-jdbc-12.2.0.1.0-1.x86_64.rpm
    rpm -ivh oracle-instantclient12.2-sqlplus-12.2.0.1.0-1.x86_64.rpm

or simply download the corresponding ZIP archives from Oracle download
center and install them where you want, for example:
/opt/oracle/instantclient_12_2/

You also need a modern Perl distribution (perl 5.10 and more). To
connect to a database and proceed to his migration you need the DBI Perl
module > 1.614. To migrate an Oracle database you need the DBD::Oracle
Perl modules to be installed.

To install DBD::Oracle and have it working you need to have the Oracle
client libraries installed and the ORACLE_HOME environment variable must
be defined.

If you plan to export a MySQL database you need to install the Perl
module DBD::MySQL which requires that the mysql client libraries are
installed.

If you plan to export a SQL Server database you need to install the Perl
module DBD::ODBC which requires that the unixODBC package is installed.

On some Perl distribution you may need to install the Time::HiRes Perl
module.

If your distribution doesn't include these Perl modules you can install
them using CPAN:

        perl -MCPAN -e 'install DBD::Oracle'
        perl -MCPAN -e 'install DBD::MySQL'
        perl -MCPAN -e 'install DBD::ODBC'
        perl -MCPAN -e 'install Time::HiRes'

otherwise use the packages provided by your distribution.

Optional By default Ora2Pg dumps export to flat files, to load them into your PostgreSQL database you need the PostgreSQL client (psql). If you don't have it on the host running Ora2Pg you can always transfer these files to a host with the psql client installed. If you prefer to load export 'on the fly', the perl module DBD::Pg is required.

Ora2Pg allows you to dump all output in a compressed gzip file, to do
that you need the Compress::Zlib Perl module or if you prefer using
bzip2 compression, the program bzip2 must be available in your PATH.

If your distribution doesn't include these Perl modules you can install
them using CPAN:

        perl -MCPAN -e 'install DBD::Pg'
        perl -MCPAN -e 'install Compress::Zlib'

otherwise use the packages provided by your distribution.

Instruction for SQL Server For SQL Server you need to install the unixodbc package and the Perl DBD::ODBC driver:

        sudo apt install unixodbc
        sudo apt install libdbd-odbc-perl

or

        sudo yum install unixodbc
        sudo yum install perl-DBD-ODBC
        sudo yum install perl-DBD-Pg

then install the Microsoft ODBC Driver for SQL Server. Follow the
instructions relative to your operating system from here:

        https://docs.microsoft.com/fr-fr/sql/connect/odbc/linux-mac/installing-the-microsoft-odbc-driver-for-sql-server?view=sql-server-ver16

Once it is done set the following in the /etc/odbcinst.ini file by
adjusting the SQL Server ODBC driver version:

        [msodbcsql18]
        Description=Microsoft ODBC Driver 18 for SQL Server
        Driver=/opt/microsoft/msodbcsql18/lib64/libmsodbcsql-18.0.so.1.1
        UsageCount=1

See ORACLE_DSN to know how to use the driver to connect to your MSSQL
database.

Installing Ora2Pg Like any other Perl Module Ora2Pg can be installed with the following commands:

        tar xjf ora2pg-x.x.tar.bz2
        cd ora2pg-x.x/
        perl Makefile.PL
        make && make install

This will install Ora2Pg.pm into your site Perl repository, ora2pg into
/usr/local/bin/ and ora2pg.conf into /etc/ora2pg/.

On Windows(tm) OSes you may use instead:

        perl Makefile.PL
        gmake && gmake install

This will install scripts and libraries into your Perl site installation
directory and the ora2pg.conf file as well as all documentation files
into C:\ora2pg\

To install ora2pg in a different directory than the default one, simply
use this command:

        perl Makefile.PL PREFIX=<your_install_dir>
        make && make install

then set PERL5LIB to the path to your installation directory before
using Ora2Pg.

        export PERL5LIB=<your_install_dir>
        ora2pg -c config/ora2pg.conf -t TABLE -b outdir/

Packaging If you want to build the binary package for your preferred Linux distribution take a look at the packaging/ directory of the source tarball. There is everything to build RPM, Slackware and Debian packages. See README file in that directory.

Installing DBD::Oracle Ora2Pg needs the Perl module DBD::Oracle for connectivity to an Oracle database from perl DBI. To get DBD::Oracle get it from CPAN a perl module repository.

After setting ORACLE_HOME and LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variables as
root user, install DBD::Oracle. Proceed as follow:

        export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/oracle/12.2/client64/lib
        export ORACLE_HOME=/usr/lib/oracle/12.2/client64
        perl -MCPAN -e 'install DBD::Oracle'

If you are running for the first time it will ask many questions; you
can keep defaults by pressing ENTER key, but you need to give one
appropriate mirror site for CPAN to download the modules. Install
through CPAN manually if the above doesn't work:

        #perl -MCPAN -e shell
        cpan> get DBD::Oracle
        cpan> quit
        cd ~/.cpan/build/DBD-Oracle*
        export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/oracle/11.2/client64/lib
        export ORACLE_HOME=/usr/lib/oracle/11.2/client64
        perl Makefile.PL
        make
        make install

Installing DBD::Oracle require that the three Oracle packages:
instant-client, SDK and SQLplus are installed as well as the libaio1
library.

If you are using Instant Client from ZIP archives, the LD_LIBRARY_PATH
and ORACLE_HOME will be the same and must be set to the directory where
you have installed the files. For example:
/opt/oracle/instantclient_12_2/

CONFIGURATION Ora2Pg configuration can be as simple as choosing the Oracle database to export and choose the export type. This can be done in a minute.

By reading this documentation you will also be able to:

        - Select only certain tables and/or column for export.
        - Rename some tables and/or column during export.
        - Select data to export following a WHERE clause per table.
        - Delay database constraints during data loading.
        - Compress exported data to save disk space.
        - and much more.

The full control of the Oracle database migration is taken though a
single configuration file named ora2pg.conf. The format of this file
consist in a directive name in upper case followed by tab character and
a value. Comments are lines beginning with a #.

There's no specific order to place the configuration directives, they
are set at the time they are read in the configuration file.

For configuration directives that just take a single value, you can use
them multiple time in the configuration file but only the last
occurrence found in the file will be used. For configuration directives
that allow a list of value, you can use it multiple time, the values
will be appended to the list. If you use the IMPORT directive to load a
custom configuration file, directives defined in this file will be
stores from the place the IMPORT directive is found, so it is better to
put it at the end of the configuration file.

Values set in command line options will override values from the
configuration file.

Ora2Pg usage First of all be sure that libraries and binaries path include the Oracle Instant Client installation:

        export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/oracle/11.2/client64/lib
        export PATH="/usr/lib/oracle/11.2/client64/bin:$PATH"

By default Ora2Pg will look for /etc/ora2pg/ora2pg.conf configuration
file, if the file exist you can simply execute:

        /usr/local/bin/ora2pg

or under Windows(tm) run ora2pg.bat file, located in your perl bin
directory. Windows(tm) users may also find a template configuration file
in C:\ora2pg

If you want to call another configuration file, just give the path as
command line argument:

        /usr/local/bin/ora2pg -c /etc/ora2pg/new_ora2pg.conf

Here are all command line parameters available when using ora2pg:

Usage: ora2pg [-dhpqv --estimate_cost --dump_as_html] [--option value]

    -a | --allow str  : Comma separated list of objects to allow from export.
                        Can be used with SHOW_COLUMN too.
    -b | --basedir dir: Set the default output directory, where files
                        resulting from exports will be stored.
    -c | --conf file  : Set an alternate configuration file other than the
                        default /etc/ora2pg/ora2pg.conf.
    -C | --cdc_file file: File used to store/read SCN per table during export.
                        default: TABLES_SCN.log in the current directory. This
                        is the file written by the --cdc_ready option.
    -d | --debug      : Enable verbose output.
    -D | --data_type str : Allow custom type replacement at command line.
    -e | --exclude str: Comma separated list of objects to exclude from export.
                        Can be used with SHOW_COLUMN too.
    -h | --help       : Print this short help.
    -g | --grant_object type : Extract privilege from the given object type.
                        See possible values with GRANT_OBJECT configuration.
    -i | --input file : File containing Oracle PL/SQL code to convert with
                        no Oracle database connection initiated.
    -j | --jobs num   : Number of parallel process to send data to PostgreSQL.
    -J | --copies num : Number of parallel connections to extract data from Oracle.
    -l | --log file   : Set a log file. Default is stdout.
    -L | --limit num  : Number of tuples extracted from Oracle and stored in
                        memory before writing, default: 10000.
    -m | --mysql      : Export a MySQL database instead of an Oracle schema.
    -M | --mssql      : Export a Microsoft SQL Server database.
    -n | --namespace schema : Set the Oracle schema to extract from.
    -N | --pg_schema schema : Set PostgreSQL's search_path.
    -o | --out file   : Set the path to the output file where SQL will
                        be written. Default: output.sql in running directory.
    -O | --options    : Used to override any configuration parameter, it can
                        be used multiple time. Syntax: -O "PARAM_NAME=value"
    -p | --plsql      : Enable PLSQL to PLPGSQL code conversion.
    -P | --parallel num: Number of parallel tables to extract at the same time.
    -q | --quiet      : Disable progress bar.
    -r | --relative   : use \ir instead of \i in the psql scripts generated.
    -s | --source DSN : Allow to set the Oracle DBI datasource.
    -S | --scn    SCN : Allow to set the Oracle System Change Number (SCN) to
                        use to export data. It will be used in the WHERE clause
                        to get the data. It is used with action COPY or INSERT.
    -t | --type export: Set the export type. It will override the one
                        given in the configuration file (TYPE).
    -T | --temp_dir dir: Set a distinct temporary directory when two
                        or more ora2pg are run in parallel.
    -u | --user name  : Set the Oracle database connection user.
                        ORA2PG_USER environment variable can be used instead.
    -v | --version    : Show Ora2Pg Version and exit.
    -w | --password pwd : Set the password of the Oracle database user.
                        ORA2PG_PASSWD environment variable can be used instead.
    -W | --where clause : Set the WHERE clause to apply to the Oracle query to
                        retrieve data. Can be used multiple time.
    --forceowner      : Force ora2pg to set tables and sequences owner like in
                  Oracle database. If the value is set to a username this one
                  will be used as the objects owner. By default it's the user
                  used to connect to the Pg database that will be the owner.
    --nls_lang code: Set the Oracle NLS_LANG client encoding.
    --client_encoding code: Set the PostgreSQL client encoding.
    --view_as_table str: Comma separated list of views to export as table.
    --estimate_cost   : Activate the migration cost evaluation with SHOW_REPORT
    --cost_unit_value minutes: Number of minutes for a cost evaluation unit.
                  default: 5 minutes, corresponds to a migration conducted by a
                  PostgreSQL expert. Set it to 10 if this is your first migration.
   --dump_as_html     : Force ora2pg to dump report in HTML, used only with
                        SHOW_REPORT. Default is to dump report as simple text.
   --dump_as_csv      : As above but force ora2pg to dump report in CSV.
   --dump_as_json     : As above but force ora2pg to dump report in JSON.
   --dump_as_sheet    : Report migration assessment with one CSV line per database.
   --init_project name: Initialise a typical ora2pg project tree. Top directory
                        will be created under project base dir.
   --project_base dir : Define the base dir for ora2pg project trees. Default
                        is current directory.
   --print_header     : Used with --dump_as_sheet to print the CSV header
                        especially for the first run of ora2pg.
   --human_days_limit num : Set the number of person-days limit where the migration
                        assessment level switch from B to C. Default is set to
                        5 person-days.
   --audit_user list  : Comma separated list of usernames to filter queries in
                        the DBA_AUDIT_TRAIL table. Used only with SHOW_REPORT
                        and QUERY export type.
   --pg_dsn DSN       : Set the datasource to PostgreSQL for direct import.
   --pg_user name     : Set the PostgreSQL user to use.
   --pg_pwd password  : Set the PostgreSQL password to use.
   --count_rows       : Force ora2pg to perform a real row count in TEST,
                        TEST_COUNT and SHOW_TABLE actions.
   --no_header        : Do not append Ora2Pg header to output file
   --oracle_speed     : Use to know at which speed Oracle is able to send
                        data. No data will be processed or written.
   --ora2pg_speed     : Use to know at which speed Ora2Pg is able to send
                        transformed data. Nothing will be written.
   --blob_to_lo       : export BLOB as large objects, can only be used with
                        action SHOW_COLUMN, TABLE and INSERT.
   --cdc_ready        : use current SCN per table to export data and register
                        them into a file named TABLES_SCN.log per default. It
                        can be changed using -C | --cdc_file.
   --lo_import        : use psql \lo_import command to import BLOB as large
                        object. Can be use to import data with COPY and import
                        large object manually in a second pass. It is recquired
                        for BLOB > 1GB. See documentation for more explanation.
   --mview_as_table str: Comma separated list of materialized views to export
                        as regular table.
   --drop_if_exists   : Drop the object before creation if it exists.
   --delete clause    : Set the DELETE clause to apply to the Oracle query to
                        be applied before importing data. Can be used multiple
                        time.
   --oracle_fdw_prefetch: Set the oracle_fdw prefetch value. Larger values
                        generally result in faster data transfer at the cost
                        of greater memory utilisation at the destination.

See full documentation at https://ora2pg.darold.net/ for more help or
see manpage with 'man ora2pg'.

ora2pg will return 0 on success, 1 on error. It will return 2 when a
child process has been interrupted and you've gotten the warning
message: "WARNING: an error occurs during data export. Please check
what's happen." Most of the time this is an OOM issue, first try
reducing DATA_LIMIT value.

For developers, it is possible to add your own custom option(s) in the
Perl script ora2pg as any configuration directive from ora2pg.conf can
be passed in lower case to the new Ora2Pg object instance. See ora2pg
code on how to add your own option.

Note that performance might be improved by updating stats on oracle:

        BEGIN
        DBMS_STATS.GATHER_SCHEMA_STATS
        DBMS_STATS.GATHER_DATABASE_STATS 
        DBMS_STATS.GATHER_DICTIONARY_STATS
        END;

Generate a migration template The two options --project_base and --init_project when used indicate to ora2pg that he has to create a project template with a work tree, a configuration file and a script to export all objects from the Oracle database. Here a sample of the command usage:

        ora2pg --project_base /app/migration/ --init_project test_project
        Creating project test_project.
        /app/migration/test_project/
                schema/
                        dblinks/
                        directories/
                        functions/
                        grants/
                        mviews/
                        packages/
                        partitions/
                        procedures/
                        sequences/
                        synonyms/
                        tables/
                        tablespaces/
                        triggers/
                        types/
                        views/
                sources/
                        functions/
                        mviews/
                        packages/
                        partitions/
                        procedures/
                        triggers/
                        types/
                        views/
                data/
                config/
                reports/

        Generating generic configuration file
        Creating script export_schema.sh to automate all exports.
        Creating script import_all.sh to automate all imports.

It create a generic config file where you just have to define the Oracle
database connection and a shell script called export_schema.sh. The
sources/ directory will contains the Oracle code, the schema/ will
contains the code ported to PostgreSQL. The reports/ directory will
contains the html reports with the migration cost assessment.

If you want to use your own default config file, use the -c option to
give the path to that file. Rename it with .dist suffix if you want
ora2pg to apply the generic configuration values otherwise, the
configuration file will be copied untouched.

Once you have set the connection to the Oracle Database you can execute
the script export_schema.sh that will export all object type from your
Oracle database and output DDL files into the schema's subdirectories.
At end of the export it will give you the command to export data later
when the import of the schema will be done and verified.

You can choose to load the DDL files generated manually or use the
second script import_all.sh to import those file interactively. If this
kind of migration is not something current for you it's recommended you
to use those scripts.

Oracle database connection There's 5 configuration directives to control the access to the Oracle database.

ORACLE_HOME
    Used to set ORACLE_HOME environment variable to the Oracle libraries
    required by the DBD::Oracle Perl module.

ORACLE_DSN
    This directive is used to set the data source name in the form
    standard DBI DSN. For example:

            dbi:Oracle:host=oradb_host.myhost.com;sid=DB_SID;port=1521

    or

            dbi:Oracle:DB_SID

    On 18c this could be for example:

            dbi:Oracle:host=192.168.1.29;service_name=pdb1;port=1521

    for the second notation the SID should be declared in the well known
    file $ORACLE_HOME/network/admin/tnsnames.ora or in the path given to
    the TNS_ADMIN environment variable.

    For MySQL the DSN will lool like this:

            dbi:mysql:host=192.168.1.10;database=sakila;port=3306

    the 'sid' part is replaced by 'database'.

    For MS SQL Server it will look like this:

            dbi:ODBC:driver=msodbcsql18;server=mydb.database.windows.net;database=testdb;TrustServerCertificate=yes

ORACLE_USER et ORACLE_PWD
    These two directives are used to define the user and password for
    the Oracle database connection. Note that if you can it is better to
    login as Oracle super admin to avoid grants problem during the
    database scan and be sure that nothing is missing.

    If you do not supply a credential with ORACLE_PWD and you have
    installed the Term::ReadKey Perl module, Ora2Pg will ask for the
    password interactively. If ORACLE_USER is not set it will be asked
    interactively too.

    To connect to a local ORACLE instance with connections "as sysdba"
    you have to set ORACLE_USER to "/" and an empty password.

    To make a connection using an Oracle Secure External Password Store
    (SEPS), first configure the Oracle Wallet and then set both the
    ORACLE_USER and ORACLE_PWD directives to the special value of
    "__SEPS__" (without the quotes but with the double underscore).

USER_GRANTS
    Set this directive to 1 if you connect the Oracle database as simple
    user and do not have enough grants to extract things from the
    DBA_... tables. It will use tables ALL_... instead.

    Warning: if you use export type GRANT, you must set this
    configuration option to 0 or it will not work.

TRANSACTION
    This directive may be used if you want to change the default
    isolation level of the data export transaction. Default is now to
    set the level to a serializable transaction to ensure data
    consistency. The allowed values for this directive are:

            readonly: 'SET TRANSACTION READ ONLY',
            readwrite: 'SET TRANSACTION READ WRITE',
            serializable: 'SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE'
            committed: 'SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED',

    Releases before 6.2 used to set the isolation level to READ ONLY
    transaction but in some case this was breaking data consistency so
    now default is set to SERIALIZABLE.

INPUT_FILE
    This directive did not control the Oracle database connection or
    unless it purely disables the use of any Oracle database by
    accepting a file as argument. Set this directive to a file
    containing PL/SQL Oracle Code like function, procedure or full
    package body to prevent Ora2Pg from connecting to an Oracle database
    and just apply his conversion tool to the content of the file. This
    can be used with the most of export types: TABLE, TRIGGER,
    PROCEDURE, VIEW, FUNCTION or PACKAGE, etc.

ORA_INITIAL_COMMAND
    This directive can be used to send an initial command to Oracle,
    just after the connection. For example to unlock a policy before
    reading objects or to set some session parameters. This directive
    can be used multiple times.

Data encryption with Oracle server If your Oracle Client config file already includes the encryption method, then DBD:Oracle uses those settings to encrypt the connection while you extract the data. For example if you have configured the Oracle Client config file (sqlnet.ora or .sqlnet) with the following information:

        # Configure encryption of connections to Oracle
        SQLNET.ENCRYPTION_CLIENT = required
        SQLNET.ENCRYPTION_TYPES_CLIENT = (AES256, RC4_256)
        SQLNET.CRYPTO_SEED = 'should be 10-70 random characters'

Any tool that uses the Oracle client to talk to the database will be
encrypted if you setup session encryption like above.

For example, Perl's DBI uses DBD-Oracle, which uses the Oracle client
for actually handling database communication. If the installation of
Oracle client used by Perl is setup to request encrypted connections,
then your Perl connection to an Oracle database will also be encrypted.

Full details at
https://kb.berkeley.edu/jivekb/entry.jspa?externalID=1005

Testing connection Once you have set the Oracle database DSN you can execute ora2pg to see if it works:

        ora2pg -t SHOW_VERSION -c config/ora2pg.conf

will show the Oracle database server version. Take some time here to
test your installation as most problems take place here, the other
configuration steps are more technical.

Troubleshooting If the output.sql file has not exported anything other than the Pg transaction header and footer there's two possible reasons. The perl script ora2pg dump an ORA-XXX error, that mean that your DSN or login information are wrong, check the error and your settings and try again. The perl script says nothing and the output file is empty: the user lacks permission to extract something from the database. Try to connect to Oracle as super user or take a look at directive USER_GRANTS above and at next section, especially the SCHEMA directive.

LOGFILE
    By default all messages are sent to the standard output. If you give
    a file path to that directive, all output will be appended to this
    file.

Oracle schema to export The Oracle database export can be limited to a specific Schema or Namespace, this can be mandatory following the database connection user.

SCHEMA
    This directive is used to set the schema name to use during export.
    For example:

            SCHEMA  APPS

    will extract objects associated to the APPS schema.

    When no schema name is provided and EXPORT_SCHEMA is enabled, Ora2Pg
    will export all objects from all schema of the Oracle instance with
    their names prefixed with the schema name.

EXPORT_SCHEMA
    By default the Oracle schema is not exported into the PostgreSQL
    database and all objects are created under the default Pg namespace.
    If you want to also export this schema and create all objects under
    this namespace, set the EXPORT_SCHEMA directive to 1. This will set
    the schema search_path at top of export SQL file to the schema name
    set in the SCHEMA directive with the default pg_catalog schema. If
    you want to change this path, use the directive PG_SCHEMA.

CREATE_SCHEMA
    Enable/disable the CREATE SCHEMA SQL order at starting of the output
    file. It is enable by default and concern on TABLE export type.

COMPILE_SCHEMA
    By default Ora2Pg will only export valid PL/SQL code. You can force
    Oracle to compile again the invalidated code to get a chance to have
    it obtain the valid status and then be able to export it.

    Enable this directive to force Oracle to compile schema before
    exporting code. When this directive is enabled and SCHEMA is set to
    a specific schema name, only invalid objects in this schema will be
    recompiled. If SCHEMA is not set then all schema will be recompiled.
    To force recompile invalid object in a specific schema, set
    COMPILE_SCHEMA to the schema name you want to recompile.

    This will ask to Oracle to validate the PL/SQL that could have been
    invalidate after a export/import for example. The 'VALID' or
    'INVALID' status applies to functions, procedures, packages and user
    defined types. It also concern disabled triggers.

EXPORT_INVALID
    If the above configuration directive is not enough to validate your
    PL/SQL code enable this configuration directive to allow export of
    all PL/SQL code even if it is marked as invalid. The 'VALID' or
    'INVALID' status applies to functions, procedures, packages,
    triggers and user defined types.

PG_SCHEMA
    Allow you to defined/force the PostgreSQL schema to use. By default
    if you set EXPORT_SCHEMA to 1 the PostgreSQL search_path will be set
    to the schema name exported set as value of the SCHEMA directive.

    The value can be a comma delimited list of schema name but not when
    using TABLE export type because in this case it will generate the
    CREATE SCHEMA statement and it doesn't support multiple schema name.
    For example, if you set PG_SCHEMA to something like "user_schema,
    public", the search path will be set like this:

            SET search_path = user_schema, public;

    forcing the use of an other schema (here user_schema) than the one
    from Oracle schema set in the SCHEMA directive.

    You can also set the default search_path for the PostgreSQL user you
    are using to connect to the destination database by using:

            ALTER ROLE username SET search_path TO user_schema, public;

    in this case you don't have to set PG_SCHEMA.

SYSUSERS
    Without explicit schema, Ora2Pg will export all objects that not
    belongs to system schema or role:

            SYSTEM,CTXSYS,DBSNMP,EXFSYS,LBACSYS,MDSYS,MGMT_VIEW,
            OLAPSYS,ORDDATA,OWBSYS,ORDPLUGINS,ORDSYS,OUTLN,
            SI_INFORMTN_SCHEMA,SYS,SYSMAN,WK_TEST,WKSYS,WKPROXY,
            WMSYS,XDB,APEX_PUBLIC_USER,DIP,FLOWS_020100,FLOWS_030000,
            FLOWS_040100,FLOWS_010600,FLOWS_FILES,MDDATA,ORACLE_OCM,
            SPATIAL_CSW_ADMIN_USR,SPATIAL_WFS_ADMIN_USR,XS$NULL,PERFSTAT,
            SQLTXPLAIN,DMSYS,TSMSYS,WKSYS,APEX_040000,APEX_040200,
            DVSYS,OJVMSYS,GSMADMIN_INTERNAL,APPQOSSYS,DVSYS,DVF,
            AUDSYS,APEX_030200,MGMT_VIEW,ODM,ODM_MTR,TRACESRV,MTMSYS,
            OWBSYS_AUDIT,WEBSYS,WK_PROXY,OSE$HTTP$ADMIN,
            AURORA$JIS$UTILITY$,AURORA$ORB$UNAUTHENTICATED,
            DBMS_PRIVILEGE_CAPTURE,CSMIG,MGDSYS,SDE,DBSFWUSER

    Following your Oracle installation you may have several other system
    role defined. To append these users to the schema exclusion list,
    just set the SYSUSERS configuration directive to a comma-separated
    list of system user to exclude. For example:

            SYSUSERS        INTERNAL,SYSDBA,BI,HR,IX,OE,PM,SH

    will add users INTERNAL and SYSDBA to the schema exclusion list.

FORCE_OWNER
    By default the owner of the database objects is the one you're using
    to connect to PostgreSQL using the psql command. If you use an other
    user (postgres for example) you can force Ora2Pg to set the object
    owner to be the one used in the Oracle database by setting the
    directive to 1, or to a completely different username by setting the
    directive value to that username.

FORCE_SECURITY_INVOKER
    Ora2Pg use the function's security privileges set in Oracle and it
    is often defined as SECURITY DEFINER. If you want to override those
    security privileges for all functions and use SECURITY DEFINER
    instead, enable this directive.

USE_TABLESPACE
    When enabled this directive force ora2pg to export all tables,
    indexes constraint and indexes using the tablespace name defined in
    Oracle database. This works only with tablespace that are not TEMP,
    USERS and SYSTEM.

WITH_OID
    Activating this directive will force Ora2Pg to add WITH (OIDS) when
    creating tables or views as tables. Default is same as PostgreSQL,
    disabled.

LOOK_FORWARD_FUNCTION
    List of schema to get functions/procedures meta information that are
    used in the current schema export. When replacing call to function
    with OUT parameters, if a function is declared in an other package
    then the function call rewriting can not be done because Ora2Pg only
    knows about functions declared in the current schema. By setting a
    comma separated list of schema as value of this directive, Ora2Pg
    will look forward in these packages for all
    functions/procedures/packages declaration before proceeding to
    current schema export.

NO_FUNCTION_METADATA
    Force Ora2Pg to not look for function declaration. Note that this
    will prevent Ora2Pg to rewrite function replacement call if needed.
    Do not enable it unless looking forward at function breaks other
    export.

Export type The export action is perform following a single configuration directive 'TYPE', some other add more control on what should be really exported.

TYPE
    Here are the different values of the TYPE directive, default is
    TABLE:

            - TABLE: Extract all tables with indexes, primary keys, unique keys,
              foreign keys and check constraints.
            - VIEW: Extract only views.
            - GRANT: Extract roles converted to Pg groups, users and grants on all
              objects.
            - SEQUENCE: Extract all sequence and their last position.
            - TABLESPACE: Extract storage spaces for tables and indexes (Pg >= v8).
            - TRIGGER: Extract triggers defined following actions.
            - FUNCTION: Extract functions.
            - PROCEDURE: Extract procedures.
            - PACKAGE: Extract packages and package bodies.
            - INSERT: Extract data as INSERT statement.
            - COPY: Extract data as COPY statement.
            - PARTITION: Extract range and list Oracle partitions with subpartitions.
            - TYPE: Extract user defined Oracle type.
            - FDW: Export Oracle tables as foreign table for Oracle, MySQL and SQL Server FDW.
            - MVIEW: Export materialized view.
            - QUERY: Try to automatically convert Oracle SQL queries.
            - KETTLE: Generate XML ktr template files to be used by Kettle.
            - DBLINK: Generate oracle foreign data wrapper server to use as dblink.
            - SYNONYM: Export Oracle's synonyms as views on other schema's objects.
            - DIRECTORY: Export Oracle's directories as external_file extension objects.
            - LOAD: Dispatch a list of queries over multiple PostgreSQl connections.
            - TEST: perform a diff between Oracle and PostgreSQL database.
            - TEST_COUNT: perform a row count diff between Oracle and PostgreSQL table.
            - TEST_VIEW: perform a count on both side of number of rows returned by views.
            - TEST_DATA: perform data validation check on rows at both sides.
            - SEQUENCE_VALUES: export DDL to set the last values of sequences

    Only one type of export can be perform at the same time so the TYPE
    directive must be unique. If you have more than one only the last
    found in the file will be registered.

    Some export type can not or should not be load directly into the
    PostgreSQL database and still require little manual editing. This is
    the case for GRANT, TABLESPACE, TRIGGER, FUNCTION, PROCEDURE, TYPE,
    QUERY and PACKAGE export types especially if you have PLSQL code or
    Oracle specific SQL in it.

    For TABLESPACE you must ensure that file path exist on the system
    and for SYNONYM you may ensure that the object's owners and schemas
    correspond to the new PostgreSQL database design.

    Note that you can chained multiple export by giving to the TYPE
    directive a comma-separated list of export type, but in this case
    you must not use COPY or INSERT with other export type.

    Ora2Pg will convert Oracle partition using table inheritance,
    trigger and functions. See document at Pg site:
    http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/interactive/ddl-partitioning.
    html

    The TYPE export allow export of user defined Oracle type. If you
    don't use the --plsql command line parameter it simply dump Oracle
    user type asis else Ora2Pg will try to convert it to PostgreSQL
    syntax.

    The KETTLE export type requires that the Oracle and PostgreSQL DNS
    are defined.

    Since Ora2Pg v8.1 there's three new export types:

            SHOW_VERSION : display Oracle version
            SHOW_SCHEMA  : display the list of schema available in the database.
            SHOW_TABLE   : display the list of tables available.
            SHOW_COLUMN  : display the list of tables columns available and the
                    Ora2PG conversion type from Oracle to PostgreSQL that will be
                    applied. It will also warn you if there's PostgreSQL reserved
                    words in Oracle object names.

    Here is an example of the SHOW_COLUMN output:

            [2] TABLE CURRENT_SCHEMA (1 rows) (Warning: 'CURRENT_SCHEMA' is a reserved word in PostgreSQL)
                    CONSTRAINT : NUMBER(22) => bigint (Warning: 'CONSTRAINT' is a reserved word in PostgreSQL)
                    FREEZE : VARCHAR2(25) => varchar(25) (Warning: 'FREEZE' is a reserved word in PostgreSQL)
            ...
            [6] TABLE LOCATIONS (23 rows)
                    LOCATION_ID : NUMBER(4) => smallint
                    STREET_ADDRESS : VARCHAR2(40) => varchar(40)
                    POSTAL_CODE : VARCHAR2(12) => varchar(12)
                    CITY : VARCHAR2(30) => varchar(30)
                    STATE_PROVINCE : VARCHAR2(25) => varchar(25)
                    COUNTRY_ID : CHAR(2) => char(2)

    Those extraction keywords are use to only display the requested
    information and exit. This allows you to quickly know on what you
    are going to work.

    The SHOW_COLUMN allow an other ora2pg command line option: '--allow
    relname' or '-a relname' to limit the displayed information to the
    given table.

    The SHOW_ENCODING export type will display the NLS_LANG and
    CLIENT_ENCODING values that Ora2Pg will used and the real encoding
    of the Oracle database with the corresponding client encoding that
    could be used with PostgreSQL

    Ora2Pg allow you to export your Oracle, MySQL or MSSQL table
    definition to be use with the oracle_fdw, mysql_fdw or tds_fdw
    foreign data wrapper. By using type FDW your tables will be exported
    as follow:

            CREATE FOREIGN TABLE oratab (
                    id        integer           NOT NULL,
                    text      character varying(30),
                    floating  double precision  NOT NULL
            ) SERVER oradb OPTIONS (table 'ORATAB');

    Now you can use the table like a regular PostgreSQL table.

    Release 10 adds a new export type destined to evaluate the content
    of the database to migrate, in terms of objects and cost to end the
    migration:

            SHOW_REPORT  : show a detailed report of the Oracle database content.

    Here is a sample of report: http://ora2pg.darold.net/report.html

    There also a more advanced report with migration cost. See the
    dedicated chapter about Migration Cost Evaluation.

ESTIMATE_COST
    Activate the migration cost evaluation. Must only be used with
    SHOW_REPORT, FUNCTION, PROCEDURE, PACKAGE and QUERY export type.
    Default is disabled. You may want to use the --estimate_cost command
    line option instead to activate this functionality. Note that
    enabling this directive will force PLSQL_PGSQL activation.

COST_UNIT_VALUE
    Set the value in minutes of the migration cost evaluation unit.
    Default is five minutes per unit. See --cost_unit_value to change
    the unit value at command line.

DUMP_AS_HTML
    By default when using SHOW_REPORT the migration report is generated
    as simple text, enabling this directive will force ora2pg to create
    a report in HTML format.

    See http://ora2pg.darold.net/report.html for a sample report.

HUMAN_DAYS_LIMIT
    Use this directive to redefined the number of person-days limit
    where the migration assessment level must switch from B to C.
    Default is set to 10 person-days.

JOBS
    This configuration directive adds multiprocess support to COPY,
    FUNCTION and PROCEDURE export type, the value is the number of
    process to use. Default is multiprocess disable.

    This directive is used to set the number of cores to used to
    parallelize data import into PostgreSQL. During FUNCTION or
    PROCEDURE export type each function will be translated to plpgsql
    using a new process, the performances gain can be very important
    when you have tons of function to convert.

    There's no limitation in parallel processing than the number of
    cores and the PostgreSQL I/O performance capabilities.

    Doesn't work under Windows Operating System, it is simply disabled.

ORACLE_COPIES
    This configuration directive adds multiprocess support to extract
    data from Oracle. The value is the number of process to use to
    parallelize the select query. Default is parallel query disable.

    The parallelism is built on splitting the query following of the
    number of cores given as value to ORACLE_COPIES as follow:

            SELECT * FROM MYTABLE WHERE ABS(MOD(COLUMN, ORACLE_COPIES)) = CUR_PROC

    where COLUMN is a technical key like a primary or unique key where
    split will be based and the current core used by the query
    (CUR_PROC). You can also force the column name to use using the
    DEFINED_PK configuration directive.

    Doesn't work under Windows Operating System, it is simply disabled.

DEFINED_PK
    This directive is used to defined the technical key to used to split
    the query between number of cores set with the ORACLE_COPIES
    variable. For example:

            DEFINED_PK      EMPLOYEES:employee_id

    The parallel query that will be used supposing that -J or
    ORACLE_COPIES is set to 8:

            SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEES WHERE ABS(MOD(employee_id, 8)) = N

    where N is the current process forked starting from 0.

PARALLEL_TABLES
    This directive is used to defined the number of tables that will be
    processed in parallel for data extraction. The limit is the number
    of cores on your machine. Ora2Pg will open one database connection
    for each parallel table extraction. This directive, when upper than
    1, will invalidate ORACLE_COPIES but not JOBS, so the real number of
    process that will be used is PARALLEL_TABLES * JOBS.

    Note that this directive when set upper that 1 will also
    automatically enable the FILE_PER_TABLE directive if your are
    exporting to files. This is used to export tables and views in
    separate files.

    Use PARALLEL_TABLES to use parallelism with COPY, INSERT and
    TEST_DATA actions. It is also useful with TEST, TEST_COUNT, and
    SHOW_TABLE if --count_rows is used for real row count.

DEFAULT_PARALLELISM_DEGREE
    You can force Ora2Pg to use /*+ PARALLEL(tbname, degree) */ hint in
    each query used to export data from Oracle by setting a value upper
    than 1 to this directive. A value of 0 or 1 disable the use of
    parallel hint. Default is disabled.

FDW_SERVER
    This directive is used to set the name of the foreign data server
    that is used in the "CREATE SERVER name FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER
    <fdw_extension> ..." command. This name will then be used in the
    "CREATE FOREIGN TABLE ..." SQL commands and to import data using
    oracle_fdw. Default is no foreign server defined. This only concerns
    export type FDW, COPY and INSERT. For export type FDW the default
    value is orcl.

FDW_IMPORT_SCHEMA
    Schema where foreign tables for data migration will be created. If
    you use several instances of ora2pg for data migration through the
    foreign data wrapper, you might need to change the name of the
    schema for each instance. Default: ora2pg_fdw_import

ORACLE_FDW_PREFETCH
    The default behaviour of Ora2Pg is to NOT set the "prefetch" option
    for oracle_fdw when used for COPY and INSERT. This directive allows
    the prefetch to be set. See oracle_fdw documentation for the current
    default.

ORACLE_FDW_COPY_MODE
    When using Ora2Pg COPY with oracle_fdw it is possible to use two
    different modes: 1) "local", which uses psql on the host running
    Ora2Pg for the "TO" binary stream; 2) "server", which uses
    PostgreSQL server-side COPY for the "TO" binary stream. Both modes
    use psql for the "FROM STDIN BINARY". However, "local" runs the psql
    "FROM STDIN BINARY" on host Ora2Pg is run from, whereas "server"
    runs the psql "FROM STDIN BINARY" on the PostgreSQL server. "local"
    mode should work on any PostgreSQL-based system, including managed
    offerings, which are not expected to support use of "server" mode
    due to permissions. The default is "local" as this is compatible
    with more configurations.

ORACLE_FDW_COPY_FORMAT
    When using Ora2Pg COPY with oracle_fdw it is possible to use either
    BINARY or CSV data format. BINARY provides better performance,
    however, requires exact data type matching between the FDW and
    destination table. CSV provides greater flexibiliity with respect to
    data type matching: if the FDW and destination data types are
    functionally-compatible the columns can be copied. The default is
    "binary".

DROP_FOREIGN_SCHEMA
    By default Ora2Pg drops the temporary schema ora2pg_fdw_import used
    to import the Oracle foreign schema before each new import. If you
    want to preserve the existing schema because of modifications or the
    use of a third party server, disable this directive.

EXTERNAL_TO_FDW
    This directive, enabled by default, allow to export Oracle's
    External Tables as file_fdw foreign tables. To not export these
    tables at all, set the directive to 0.

INTERNAL_DATE_MAX
    Internal timestamp retrieves from custom type are extracted in the
    following format: 01-JAN-77 12.00.00.000000 AM. It is impossible to
    know the exact century that must be used, so by default any year
    below 49 will be added to 2000 and others to 1900. You can use this
    directive to change the default value 49. this is only relevant if
    you have user defined type with a column timestamp.

AUDIT_USER
    Set the comma separated list of username that must be used to filter
    queries from the DBA_AUDIT_TRAIL table. Default is to not scan this
    table and to never look for queries. This parameter is used only
    with SHOW_REPORT and QUERY export type with no input file for
    queries. Note that queries will be normalized before output unlike
    when a file is given at input using the -i option or INPUT
    directive.

FUNCTION_CHECK
    Disable this directive if you want to disable check_function_bodies.

            SET check_function_bodies = false;

    It disables validation of the function body string during CREATE
    FUNCTION. Default is to use de postgresql.conf setting that enable
    it by default.

ENABLE_BLOB_EXPORT
    Exporting BLOB takes time, in some circumstances you may want to
    export all data except the BLOB columns. In this case disable this
    directive and the BLOB columns will not be included into data
    export. Take care that the target bytea column do not have a NOT
    NULL constraint.

ENABLE_CLOB_EXPORT
    Same behavior as ENABLE_BLOB_EXPORT but for CLOB.

DATA_EXPORT_ORDER
    By default data export order will be done by sorting on table name.
    If you have huge tables at end of alphabetic order and you are using
    multiprocess, it can be better to set the sort order on size so that
    multiple small tables can be processed before the largest tables
    finish. In this case set this directive to size. Possible values are
    name and size. Note that export type SHOW_TABLE and SHOW_COLUMN will
    use this sort order too, not only COPY or INSERT export type. If you
    want to give you custom export order, just give a filename as value
    that contains the ordered list of table to export. Must be a list of
    one table per line, in uppercase for Oracle.

Limiting objects to export You may want to export only a part of an Oracle database, here are a set of configuration directives that will allow you to control what parts of the database should be exported.

ALLOW
    This directive allows you to set a list of objects on which the
    export must be limited, excluding all other objects in the same type
    of export. The value is a space or comma-separated list of objects
    name to export. You can include valid regex into the list. For
    example:

            ALLOW           EMPLOYEES SALE_.* COUNTRIES .*_GEOM_SEQ

    will export objects with name EMPLOYEES, COUNTRIES, all objects
    beginning with 'SALE_' and all objects with a name ending by
    '_GEOM_SEQ'. The object depends of the export type. Note that regex
    will not works with 8i database, you must use the % placeholder
    instead, Ora2Pg will use the LIKE operator.

    This is the manner to declare global filters that will be used with
    the current export type. You can also use extended filters that will
    be applied on specific objects or only on their related export type.
    For example:

            ora2pg -p -c ora2pg.conf -t TRIGGER -a 'TABLE[employees]'

    will limit export of trigger to those defined on table employees. If
    you want to extract all triggers but not some INSTEAD OF triggers:

            ora2pg -c ora2pg.conf -t TRIGGER -e 'VIEW[trg_view_.*]'

    Or a more complex form:

            ora2pg -p -c ora2pg.conf -t TABLE -a 'TABLE[EMPLOYEES]' \
                    -e 'INDEX[emp_.*];CKEY[emp_salary_min]'

    This command will export the definition of the employee table but
    will exclude all index beginning with 'emp_' and the CHECK
    constraint called 'emp_salary_min'.

    When exporting partition you can exclude some partition tables by
    using

            ora2pg -p -c ora2pg.conf -t PARTITION -e 'PARTITION[PART_199.* PART_198.*]'

    This will exclude partitioned tables for year 1980 to 1999 from the
    export but not the main partition table. The trigger will also be
    adapted to exclude those table.

    With GRANT export you can use this extended form to exclude some
    users from the export or limit the export to some others:

            ora2pg -p -c ora2pg.conf -t GRANT -a 'USER1 USER2'

    or

            ora2pg -p -c ora2pg.conf -t GRANT -a 'GRANT[USER1 USER2]'

    will limit export grants to users USER1 and USER2. But if you don't
    want to export grants on some functions for these users, for
    example:

            ora2pg -p -c ora2pg.conf -t GRANT -a 'USER1 USER2' -e 'FUNCTION[adm_.*];PROCEDURE[adm_.*]'

    Advanced filters may need some learning.

    Oracle doesn't allow the use of lookahead expression so you may want
    to exclude some object that match the ALLOW regexp you have defined.
    For example if you want to export all table starting with E but not
    those starting with EXP it is not possible to do that in a single
    expression. This is why you can start a regular expression with the
    ! character to exclude object matching the regexp given just after.
    Our previous example can be written as follow:

            ALLOW   E.* !EXP.*

    it will be translated into:

             REGEXP_LIKE(..., '^E.*$') AND NOT REGEXP_LIKE(..., '^EXP.*$')

    in the object search expression.

EXCLUDE
    This directive is the opposite of the previous, it allow you to
    define a space or comma-separated list of object name to exclude
    from the export. You can include valid regex into the list. For
    example:

            EXCLUDE         EMPLOYEES TMP_.* COUNTRIES

    will exclude object with name EMPLOYEES, COUNTRIES and all tables
    beginning with 'tmp_'.

    For example, you can ban from export some unwanted function with
    this directive:

            EXCLUDE         write_to_.* send_mail_.*

    this example will exclude all functions, procedures or functions in
    a package with the name beginning with those regex. Note that regex
    will not work with 8i database, you must use the % placeholder
    instead, Ora2Pg will use the NOT LIKE operator.

    See above (directive 'ALLOW') for the extended syntax.

NO_EXCLUDED_TABLE
    By default Ora2Pg exclude from export some Oracle "garbage" tables
    that should never be part of an export. This behavior generates a
    lot of REGEXP_LIKE expressions which are slowing down the export
    when looking at tables. To disable this behavior enable this
    directive, you will have to exclude or clean up later by yourself
    the unwanted tables. The regexp used to exclude the table are
    defined in the array @EXCLUDED_TABLES in lib/Ora2Pg.pm. Note this is
    behavior is independant to the EXCLUDE configuration directive.

VIEW_AS_TABLE
    Set which view to export as table. By default none. Value must be a
    list of view name or regexp separated by space or comma. If the
    object name is a view and the export type is TABLE, the view will be
    exported as a create table statement. If export type is COPY or
    INSERT, the corresponding data will be exported.

    See chapter "Exporting views as PostgreSQL table" for more details.

MVIEW_AS_TABLE
    Set which materialized view to export as table. By default none.
    Value must be a list of materialized view name or regexp separated
    by space or comma. If the object name is a materialized view and the
    export type is TABLE, the view will be exported as a create table
    statement. If export type is COPY or INSERT, the corresponding data
    will be exported.

NO_VIEW_ORDERING
    By default Ora2Pg try to order views to avoid error at import time
    with nested views. With a huge number of views this can take a very
    long time, you can bypass this ordering by enabling this directive.

GRANT_OBJECT
    When exporting GRANTs you can specify a comma separated list of
    objects for which privilege will be exported. Default is export for
    all objects. Here are the possibles values TABLE, VIEW, MATERIALIZED
    VIEW, SEQUENCE, PROCEDURE, FUNCTION, PACKAGE BODY, TYPE, SYNONYM,
    DIRECTORY. Only one object type is allowed at a time. For example
    set it to TABLE if you just want to export privilege on tables. You
    can use the -g option to overwrite it.

    When used this directive prevent the export of users unless it is
    set to USER. In this case only users definitions are exported.

WHERE
    This directive allows you to specify a WHERE clause filter when
    dumping the contents of tables. Value is constructs as follows:
    TABLE_NAME[WHERE_CLAUSE], or if you have only one where clause for
    each table just put the where clause as the value. Both are possible
    too. Here are some examples:

            # Global where clause applying to all tables included in the export
            WHERE  1=1

            # Apply the where clause only on table TABLE_NAME
            WHERE  TABLE_NAME[ID1='001']

            # Applies two different clause on tables TABLE_NAME and OTHER_TABLE
            # and a generic where clause on DATE_CREATE to all other tables
            WHERE  TABLE_NAME[ID1='001' OR ID1='002] DATE_CREATE > '2001-01-01' OTHER_TABLE[NAME='test']

    Any where clause not included into a table name bracket clause will
    be applied to all exported table including the tables defined in the
    where clause. These WHERE clauses are very useful if you want to
    archive some data or at the opposite only export some recent data.

    To be able to quickly test data import it is useful to limit data
    export to the first thousand tuples of each table. For Oracle define
    the following clause:

            WHERE   ROWNUM < 1000

    and for MySQL, use the following:

            WHERE   1=1 LIMIT 1,1000

    This can also be restricted to some tables data export.

    Command line option -W or --where will override this directive for
    the global part and per table if the table names is the same.

TOP_MAX
    This directive is used to limit the number of item shown in the top
    N lists like the top list of tables per number of rows and the top
    list of largest tables in megabytes. By default it is set to 10
    items.

LOG_ON_ERROR
    Enable this directive if you want to continue direct data import on
    error. When Ora2Pg received an error in the COPY or INSERT statement
    from PostgreSQL it will log the statement to a file called
    TABLENAME_error.log in the output directory and continue to next
    bulk of data. Like this you can try to fix the statement and
    manually reload the error log file. Default is disabled: abort
    import on error.

REPLACE_QUERY
    Sometime you may want to extract data from an Oracle table but you
    need a custom query for that. Not just a "SELECT * FROM table" like
    Ora2Pg do but a more complex query. This directive allows you to
    overwrite the query used by Ora2Pg to extract data. The format is
    TABLENAME[SQL_QUERY]. If you have multiple table to extract by
    replacing the Ora2Pg query, you can define multiple REPLACE_QUERY
    lines.

            REPLACE_QUERY   EMPLOYEES[SELECT e.id,e.fisrtname,lastname FROM EMPLOYEES e JOIN EMP_UPDT u ON (e.id=u.id AND u.cdate>'2014-08-01 00:00:00')]

Control of Full Text Search export Several directives can be used to control the way Ora2Pg will export the Oracle's Text search indexes. By default CONTEXT indexes will be exported to PostgreSQL FTS indexes but CTXCAT indexes will be exported as indexes using the pg_trgm extension.

CONTEXT_AS_TRGM
    Force Ora2Pg to translate Oracle Text indexes into PostgreSQL
    indexes using pg_trgm extension. Default is to translate CONTEXT
    indexes into FTS indexes and CTXCAT indexes using pg_trgm. Most of
    the time using pg_trgm is enough, this is why this directive stand
    for. You need to create the pg_trgm extension into the destination
    database before importing the objects:

            CREATE EXTENSION pg_trgm;

FTS_INDEX_ONLY
    By default Ora2Pg creates a function-based index to translate Oracle
    Text indexes.

            CREATE INDEX ON t_document
                    USING gin(to_tsvector('pg_catalog.french', title));

    You will have to rewrite the CONTAIN() clause using to_tsvector(),
    example:

            SELECT id,title FROM t_document
                    WHERE to_tsvector(title)) @@ to_tsquery('search_word');

    To force Ora2Pg to create an extra tsvector column with a dedicated
    triggers for FTS indexes, disable this directive. In this case,
    Ora2Pg will add the column as follow: ALTER TABLE t_document ADD
    COLUMN tsv_title tsvector; Then update the column to compute FTS
    vectors if data have been loaded before UPDATE t_document SET
    tsv_title = to_tsvector('pg_catalog.french', coalesce(title,'')); To
    automatically update the column when a modification in the title
    column appears, Ora2Pg adds the following trigger:

            CREATE FUNCTION tsv_t_document_title() RETURNS trigger AS $$
            BEGIN
                   IF TG_OP = 'INSERT' OR new.title != old.title THEN
                           new.tsv_title :=
                           to_tsvector('pg_catalog.french', coalesce(new.title,''));
                   END IF;
                   return new;
            END
            $$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
            CREATE TRIGGER trig_tsv_t_document_title BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE
             ON t_document
             FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE tsv_t_document_title();

    When the Oracle text index is defined over multiple column, Ora2Pg
    will use setweight() to set a weight in the order of the column
    declaration.

FTS_CONFIG
    Use this directive to force text search configuration to use. When
    it is not set, Ora2Pg will autodetect the stemmer used by Oracle for
    each index and pg_catalog.english if the information is not found.

USE_UNACCENT
    If you want to perform your text search in an accent insensitive
    way, enable this directive. Ora2Pg will create an helper function
    over unaccent() and creates the pg_trgm indexes using this function.
    With FTS Ora2Pg will redefine your text search configuration, for
    example:

          CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION fr (COPY = french); 
          ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION fr
                  ALTER MAPPING FOR hword, hword_part, word WITH unaccent, french_stem;

    then set the FTS_CONFIG ora2pg.conf directive to fr instead of
    pg_catalog.english.

    When enabled, Ora2pg will create the wrapper function:

          CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION unaccent_immutable(text)
          RETURNS text AS
          $$
              SELECT public.unaccent('public.unaccent', $1);
          $$ LANGUAGE sql IMMUTABLE
             COST 1;

    the indexes are exported as follow:

          CREATE INDEX t_document_title_unaccent_trgm_idx ON t_document 
              USING gin (unaccent_immutable(title) gin_trgm_ops);

    In your queries you will need to use the same function in the search
    to be able to use the function-based index. Example:

            SELECT * FROM t_document
                    WHERE unaccent_immutable(title) LIKE '%donnees%';

USE_LOWER_UNACCENT
    Same as above but call lower() in the unaccent_immutable() function:

          CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION unaccent_immutable(text)
          RETURNS text AS
          $$
              SELECT lower(public.unaccent('public.unaccent', $1));
          $$ LANGUAGE sql IMMUTABLE;

Modifying object structure One of the great usage of Ora2Pg is its flexibility to replicate Oracle database into PostgreSQL database with a different structure or schema. There's three configuration directives that allow you to map those differences.

REORDERING_COLUMNS
    Enable this directive to reordering columns and minimized the
    footprint on disc, so that more rows fit on a data page, which is
    the most important factor for speed. Default is disabled, that mean
    the same order than in Oracle tables definition, that's should be
    enough for most usage. This directive is only used with TABLE
    export.

MODIFY_STRUCT
    This directive allows you to limit the columns to extract for a
    given table. The value consist in a space-separated list of table
    name with a set of column between parenthesis as follow:

            MODIFY_STRUCT   NOM_TABLE(nomcol1,nomcol2,...) ...

    for example:

            MODIFY_STRUCT   T_TEST1(id,dossier) T_TEST2(id,fichier)

    This will only extract columns 'id' and 'dossier' from table T_TEST1
    and columns 'id' and 'fichier' from the T_TEST2 table. This
    directive can only be used with TABLE, COPY or INSERT export. With
    TABLE export create table DDL will respect the new list of columns
    and all indexes or foreign key pointing to or from a column removed
    will not be exported.

EXCLUDE_COLUMNS
    Instead of redefining the table structure with MODIFY_STRUCT you may
    want to exclude some columns from the table export. The value
    consist in a space-separated list of table name with a set of column
    between parenthesis as follow:

            EXCLUDE_COLUMNS NOM_TABLE(nomcol1,nomcol2,...) ...

    for example:

            EXCLUDE_COLUMNS T_TEST1(id,dossier) T_TEST2(id,fichier)

    This will exclude from the export columns 'id' and 'dossier' from
    table T_TEST1 and columns 'id' and 'fichier' from the T_TEST2 table.
    This directive can only be used with TABLE, COPY or INSERT export.
    With TABLE export create table DDL will respect the new list of
    columns and all indexes or foreign key pointing to or from a column
    removed will not be exported.

REPLACE_TABLES
    This directive allows you to remap a list of Oracle table name to a
    PostgreSQL table name during export. The value is a list of
    space-separated values with the following structure:

            REPLACE_TABLES  ORIG_TBNAME1:DEST_TBNAME1 ORIG_TBNAME2:DEST_TBNAME2

    Oracle tables ORIG_TBNAME1 and ORIG_TBNAME2 will be respectively
    renamed into DEST_TBNAME1 and DEST_TBNAME2

REPLACE_COLS
    Like table name, the name of the column can be remapped to a
    different name using the following syntax:

            REPLACE_COLS    ORIG_TBNAME(ORIG_COLNAME1:NEW_COLNAME1,ORIG_COLNAME2:NEW_COLNAME2)

    For example:

            REPLACE_COLS    T_TEST(dico:dictionary,dossier:folder)

    will rename Oracle columns 'dico' and 'dossier' from table T_TEST
    into new name 'dictionary' and 'folder'.

REPLACE_AS_BOOLEAN
    If you want to change the type of some Oracle columns into
    PostgreSQL boolean during the export you can define here a list of
    tables and column separated by space as follow.

            REPLACE_AS_BOOLEAN     TB_NAME1:COL_NAME1 TB_NAME1:COL_NAME2 TB_NAME2:COL_NAME2

    The values set in the boolean columns list will be replaced with the
    't' and 'f' following the default replacement values and those
    additionally set in directive BOOLEAN_VALUES.

    Note that if you have modified the table name with REPLACE_TABLES
    and/or the column's name, you need to use the name of the original
    table and/or column.

            REPLACE_COLS            TB_NAME1(OLD_COL_NAME1:NEW_COL_NAME1)
            REPLACE_AS_BOOLEAN      TB_NAME1:OLD_COL_NAME1

    You can also give a type and a precision to automatically convert
    all fields of that type as a boolean. For example:

            REPLACE_AS_BOOLEAN      NUMBER:1 CHAR:1 TB_NAME1:COL_NAME1 TB_NAME1:COL_NAME2

    will also replace any field of type number(1) or char(1) as a
    boolean in all exported tables.

BOOLEAN_VALUES
    Use this to add additional definition of the possible boolean values
    used in Oracle fields. You must set a space-separated list of
    TRUE:FALSE values. By default here are the values recognized by
    Ora2Pg:

            BOOLEAN_VALUES          yes:no y:n 1:0 true:false enabled:disabled

    Any values defined here will be added to the default list.

REPLACE_ZERO_DATE
    When Ora2Pg find a "zero" date: 0000-00-00 00:00:00 it is replaced
    by a NULL. This could be a problem if your column is defined with
    NOT NULL constraint. If you can not remove the constraint, use this
    directive to set an arbitral date that will be used instead. You can
    also use -INFINITY if you don't want to use a fake date.

INDEXES_SUFFIX
    Add the given value as suffix to indexes names. Useful if you have
    indexes with same name as tables. For example:

            INDEXES_SUFFIX          _idx

    will add _idx at ed of all index name. Not so common but can help.

INDEXES_RENAMING
    Enable this directive to rename all indexes using
    tablename_columns_names. Could be very useful for database that have
    multiple time the same index name or that use the same name than a
    table, which is not allowed by PostgreSQL Disabled by default.

USE_INDEX_OPCLASS
    Operator classes text_pattern_ops, varchar_pattern_ops, and
    bpchar_pattern_ops support B-tree indexes on the corresponding
    types. The difference from the default operator classes is that the
    values are compared strictly character by character rather than
    according to the locale-specific collation rules. This makes these
    operator classes suitable for use by queries involving pattern
    matching expressions (LIKE or POSIX regular expressions) when the
    database does not use the standard "C" locale. If you enable, with
    value 1, this will force Ora2Pg to export all indexes defined on
    varchar2() and char() columns using those operators. If you set it
    to a value greater than 1 it will only change indexes on columns
    where the character limit is greater or equal than this value. For
    example, set it to 128 to create these kind of indexes on columns of
    type varchar2(N) where N >= 128.

RENAME_PARTITION
    Enable this directive if you want that your partition tables will be
    renamed. Disabled by default. If you have multiple partitioned
    table, when exported to PostgreSQL some partitions could have the
    same name but different parent tables. This is not allowed, table
    name must be unique, in this case enable this directive. A partition
    will be renamed following the rule: "tablename"_part"pos" where
    "pos" is the partition number. For subpartition this is:
    "tablename"_part"pos"_subpart"pos" If this is partition/subpartition
    default: "tablename"_part_default
    "tablename"_part"pos"_subpart_default

DISABLE_PARTITION
    If you don't want to reproduce the partitioning like in Oracle and
    want to export all partitioned Oracle data into the main single
    table in PostgreSQL enable this directive. Ora2Pg will export all
    data into the main table name. Default is to use partitioning,
    Ora2Pg will export data from each partition and import them into the
    PostgreSQL dedicated partition table.

PARTITION_BY_REFERENCE
    How to export partition by reference. Possible values are none,
    duplicate or the number of hash partition to create. Default is none
    to not export the partitions by reference.

    Value none mean no translation and export of partition by reference
    like before. Value 'duplicate' will duplicate the referenced column
    in the partitioned table and apply the same partitioning from the
    referenced table to the partitioned table. If the value is a number,
    the table will be partitioned with the HASH method using the value
    as the modulo. For example if you set it to 4 it will create 4 HASH
    partitions.

DISABLE_UNLOGGED
    By default Ora2Pg export Oracle tables with the NOLOGGING attribute
    as UNLOGGED tables. You may want to fully disable this feature
    because you will lose all data from unlogged tables in case of a
    PostgreSQL crash. Set it to 1 to export all tables as normal tables.

DOUBLE_MAX_VARCHAR
    Increase varchar max character constraints to support PostgreSQL two
    bytes character encoding when the source database applies the length
    constraint on characters not bytes. Default disabled.

Oracle Spatial to PostGis Ora2Pg fully export Spatial object from Oracle database. There's some configuration directives that could be used to control the export.

AUTODETECT_SPATIAL_TYPE
    By default Ora2Pg is looking at indexes to see the spatial
    constraint type and dimensions defined under Oracle. Those
    constraints are passed as at index creation using for example:

            CREATE INDEX ... INDEXTYPE IS MDSYS.SPATIAL_INDEX
            PARAMETERS('sdo_indx_dims=2, layer_gtype=point');

    If those Oracle constraints parameters are not set, the default is
    to export those columns as generic type GEOMETRY to be able to
    receive any spatial type.

    The AUTODETECT_SPATIAL_TYPE directive allows to force Ora2Pg to
    autodetect the real spatial type and dimension used in a spatial
    column otherwise a non- constrained "geometry" type is used.
    Enabling this feature will force Ora2Pg to scan a sample of 50000
    column to look at the GTYPE used. You can increase or reduce the
    sample size by setting the value of AUTODETECT_SPATIAL_TYPE to the
    desired number of line to scan. The directive is enabled by default.

    For example, in the case of a column named shape and defined with
    Oracle type SDO_GEOMETRY, with AUTODETECT_SPATIAL_TYPE disabled it
    will be converted as:

        shape geometry(GEOMETRY) or shape geometry(GEOMETRYZ, 4326)

    and if the directive is enabled and the column just contains a
    single geometry type that use a single dimension:

        shape geometry(POLYGON, 4326) or shape geometry(POLYGONZ, 4326)

    with a two or three dimensional polygon.

CONVERT_SRID
    This directive allows you to control the automatically conversion of
    Oracle SRID to standard EPSG. If enabled, Ora2Pg will use the Oracle
    function sdo_cs.map_oracle_srid_to_epsg() to convert all SRID.
    Enabled by default.

    If the SDO_SRID returned by Oracle is NULL, it will be replaced by
    the default value 8307 converted to its EPSG value: 4326 (see
    DEFAULT_SRID).

    If the value is upper than 1, all SRID will be forced to this value,
    in this case DEFAULT_SRID will not be used when Oracle returns a
    null value and the value will be forced to CONVERT_SRID.

    Note that it is also possible to set the EPSG value on Oracle side
    when sdo_cs.map_oracle_srid_to_epsg() return NULL if your want to
    force the value:

      system@db> UPDATE sdo_coord_ref_sys SET legacy_code=41014 WHERE srid = 27572;

DEFAULT_SRID
    Use this directive to override the default EPSG SRID to used: 4326.
    Can be overwritten by CONVERT_SRID, see above.

GEOMETRY_EXTRACT_TYPE
    This directive can take three values: WKT (default), WKB and
    INTERNAL. When it is set to WKT, Ora2Pg will use
    SDO_UTIL.TO_WKTGEOMETRY() to extract the geometry data. When it is
    set to WKB, Ora2Pg will use the binary output using
    SDO_UTIL.TO_WKBGEOMETRY(). If those two extract type are calls at
    Oracle side, they are slow and you can easily reach Out Of Memory
    when you have lot of rows. Also WKB is not able to export 3D
    geometry and some geometries like CURVEPOLYGON. In this case you may
    use the INTERNAL extraction type. It will use a Pure Perl library to
    convert the SDO_GEOMETRY data into a WKT representation, the
    translation is done on Ora2Pg side. This is a work in progress,
    please validate your exported data geometries before use. Default
    spatial object extraction type is INTERNAL.

POSTGIS_SCHEMA
    Use this directive to add a specific schema to the search path to
    look for PostGis functions.

ST_SRID_FUNCTION
    Oracle function to use to extract the srid from ST_Geometry meta
    information. Default: ST_SRID, for example it should be set to
    sde.st_srid for ArcSDE.

ST_DIMENSION_FUNCTION
    Oracle function to use to extract the dimension from ST_Geometry
    meta information. Default: ST_DIMENSION, for example it should be
    set to sde.st_dimention for ArcSDE.

ST_GEOMETRYTYPE_FUNCTION
    Oracle function to use to extract the geometry type from a
    ST_Geometry column Default: ST_GEOMETRYTYPE, for example it should
    be set to sde.st_geometrytype for ArcSDE.

ST_ASBINARY_FUNCTION
    Oracle function to used to convert an ST_Geometry value into WKB
    format. Default: ST_ASBINARY, for example it should be set to
    sde.st_asbinary for ArcSDE.

ST_ASTEXT_FUNCTION
    Oracle function to used to convert an ST_Geometry value into WKT
    format. Default: ST_ASTEXT, for example it should be set to
    sde.st_astext for ArcSDE.

PostgreSQL Import By default conversion to PostgreSQL format is written to file 'output.sql'. The command:

        psql mydb < output.sql

will import content of file output.sql into PostgreSQL mydb database.

DATA_LIMIT
    When you are performing INSERT/COPY export Ora2Pg proceed by chunks
    of DATA_LIMIT tuples for speed improvement. Tuples are stored in
    memory before being written to disk, so if you want speed and have
    enough system resources you can grow this limit to an upper value
    for example: 100000 or 1000000. Before release 7.0 a value of 0 mean
    no limit so that all tuples are stored in memory before being
    flushed to disk. In 7.x branch this has been remove and chunk will
    be set to the default: 10000

BLOB_LIMIT
    When Ora2Pg detect a table with some BLOB it will automatically
    reduce the value of this directive by dividing it by 10 until his
    value is below 1000. You can control this value by setting
    BLOB_LIMIT. Exporting BLOB use lot of resources, setting it to a too
    high value can produce OOM.

CLOB_AS_BLOB
    Apply same behavior on CLOB than BLOB with BLOB_LIMIT settings. This
    is especially useful if you have large CLOB data. Default: enabled

OUTPUT
    The Ora2Pg output filename can be changed with this directive.
    Default value is output.sql. if you set the file name with extension
    .gz or .bz2 the output will be automatically compressed. This
    require that the Compress::Zlib Perl module is installed if the
    filename extension is .gz and that the bzip2 system command is
    installed for the .bz2 extension.

OUTPUT_DIR
    Since release 7.0, you can define a base directory where the file
    will be written. The directory must exists.

BZIP2
    This directive allows you to specify the full path to the bzip2
    program if it can not be found in the PATH environment variable.

FILE_PER_CONSTRAINT
    Allow object constraints to be saved in a separate file during
    schema export. The file will be named CONSTRAINTS_OUTPUT, where
    OUTPUT is the value of the corresponding configuration directive.
    You can use .gz xor .bz2 extension to enable compression. Default is
    to save all data in the OUTPUT file. This directive is usable only
    with TABLE export type.

    The constraints can be imported quickly into PostgreSQL using the
    LOAD export type to parallelize their creation over multiple (-j or
    JOBS) connections.

FILE_PER_INDEX
    Allow indexes to be saved in a separate file during schema export.
    The file will be named INDEXES_OUTPUT, where OUTPUT is the value of
    the corresponding configuration directive. You can use .gz xor .bz2
    file extension to enable compression. Default is to save all data in
    the OUTPUT file. This directive is usable only with TABLE AND
    TABLESPACE export type. With the TABLESPACE export, it is used to
    write "ALTER INDEX ... TABLESPACE ..." into a separate file named
    TBSP_INDEXES_OUTPUT that can be loaded at end of the migration after
    the indexes creation to move the indexes.

    The indexes can be imported quickly into PostgreSQL using the LOAD
    export type to parallelize their creation over multiple (-j or JOBS)
    connections.

FILE_PER_FKEYS
    Allow foreign key declaration to be saved in a separate file during
    schema export. By default foreign keys are exported into the main
    output file or in the CONSTRAINT_output.sql file. When enabled
    foreign keys will be exported into a file named FKEYS_output.sql

FILE_PER_TABLE
    Allow data export to be saved in one file per table/view. The files
    will be named as tablename_OUTPUT, where OUTPUT is the value of the
    corresponding configuration directive. You can still use .gz xor
    .bz2 extension in the OUTPUT directive to enable compression.
    Default 0 will save all data in one file, set it to 1 to enable this
    feature. This is usable only during INSERT or COPY export type.

FILE_PER_FUNCTION
    Allow functions, procedures and triggers to be saved in one file per
    object. The files will be named as objectname_OUTPUT. Where OUTPUT
    is the value of the corresponding configuration directive. You can
    still use .gz xor .bz2 extension in the OUTPUT directive to enable
    compression. Default 0 will save all in one single file, set it to 1
    to enable this feature. This is usable only during the corresponding
    export type, the package body export has a special behavior.

    When export type is PACKAGE and you've enabled this directive,
    Ora2Pg will create a directory per package, named with the lower
    case name of the package, and will create one file per
    function/procedure into that directory. If the configuration
    directive is not enabled, it will create one file per package as
    packagename_OUTPUT, where OUTPUT is the value of the corresponding
    directive.

TRUNCATE_TABLE
    If this directive is set to 1, a TRUNCATE TABLE instruction will be
    add before loading data. This is usable only during INSERT or COPY
    export type.

    When activated, the instruction will be added only if there's no
    global DELETE clause or not one specific to the current table (see
    below).

DELETE
    Support for include a DELETE FROM ... WHERE clause filter before
    importing data and perform a delete of some lines instead of
    truncating tables. Value is construct as follow:
    TABLE_NAME[DELETE_WHERE_CLAUSE], or if you have only one where
    clause for all tables just put the delete clause as single value.
    Both are possible too. Here are some examples:

            DELETE  1=1    # Apply to all tables and delete all tuples
            DELETE  TABLE_TEST[ID1='001']   # Apply only on table TABLE_TEST
            DELETE  TABLE_TEST[ID1='001' OR ID1='002] DATE_CREATE > '2001-01-01' TABLE_INFO[NAME='test']

    The last applies two different delete where clause on tables
    TABLE_TEST and TABLE_INFO and a generic delete where clause on
    DATE_CREATE to all other tables. If TRUNCATE_TABLE is enabled it
    will be applied to all tables not covered by the DELETE definition.

    These DELETE clauses might be useful with regular "updates".

STOP_ON_ERROR
    Set this parameter to 0 to not include the call to \set
    ON_ERROR_STOP ON in all SQL scripts generated by Ora2Pg. By default
    this order is always present so that the script will immediately
    abort when an error is encountered.

COPY_FREEZE
    Enable this directive to use COPY FREEZE instead of a simple COPY to
    export data with rows already frozen. This is intended as a
    performance option for initial data loading. Rows will be frozen
    only if the table being loaded has been created or truncated in the
    current sub-transaction. This will only work with export to file and
    when -J or ORACLE_COPIES is not set or default to 1. It can be used
    with direct import into PostgreSQL under the same condition but -j
    or JOBS must also be unset or default to 1.

CREATE_OR_REPLACE
    By default Ora2Pg uses CREATE OR REPLACE in functions and views DDL,
    if you need not to override existing functions or views disable this
    configuration directive, DDL will not include OR REPLACE.

DROP_IF_EXISTS
    To add a DROP <OBJECT> IF EXISTS before creating the object, enable
    this directive. Can be useful in an iterative work. Default is
    disabled.

EXPORT_GTT
    PostgreSQL do not supports Global Temporary Table natively but you
    can use the pgtt extension to emulate this behavior. Enable this
    directive to export global temporary table.

PGTT_NOSUPERUSER
    By default the pgtt extension is loaded using the superuser
    privilege. Enabled it if you run the SQL scripts generated using a
    non superuser user. It will use:

        LOAD '$libdir/plugins/pgtt';

    instead of default:

        LOAD 'pgtt';

NO_HEADER
    Enabling this directive will prevent Ora2Pg to print his header into
    output files. Only the translated code will be written.

PSQL_RELATIVE_PATH
    By default Ora2Pg use \i psql command to execute generated SQL files
    if you want to use a relative path following the script execution
    file enabling this option will use \ir. See psql help for more
    information.

DATA_VALIDATION_ROWS
    Number of rows that must be retrieved on both side for data
    validation. Default it to compare the 10000 first rows. A value of 0
    mean compare all rows.

DATA_VALIDATION_ORDERING
    Order of rows between both sides are different once the data have
    been modified. In this case data must be ordered using a primary key
    or a unique index, that mean that a table without such object can
    not be compared. If the validation is done just after the data
    migration without any data modification the validation can be done
    on all tables without any ordering.

DATA_VALIDATION_ERROR
    Stop validating data from a table after a certain amount of row
    mistmatch. Default is to stop after 10 rows validation errors.

TRANSFORM_VALUE
    Use this directive to precise which transformation should be applied
    to a column when exporting data. Value must be a semicolon separated
    list of

       TABLE[COLUMN_NAME, <replace code in SELECT target list>]

    For example to replace string 'Oracle' by 'PostgreSQL' in a varchar2
    column use the following.

       TRANSFORM_VALUE   ERROR_LOG_SAMPLE[DBMS_TYPE:regexp_replace("DBMS_TYPE",'Oracle','PostgreSQL')]

    or to replace all Oracle char(0) in a string by a space character:

        TRANSFORM_VALUE   CLOB_TABLE[CHARDATA:translate("CHARDATA", chr(0), ' ')]

    The expression will be applied in the SQL statemeent used to extract
    data from the source database.

When using Ora2Pg export type INSERT or COPY to dump data to file and
that FILE_PER_TABLE is enabled, you will be warned that Ora2Pg will not
export data again if the file already exists. This is to prevent
downloading twice table with huge amount of data. To force the download
of data from these tables you have to remove the existing output file
first.

If you want to import data on the fly to the PostgreSQL database you
have three configuration directives to set the PostgreSQL database
connection. This is only possible with COPY or INSERT export type as for
database schema there's no real interest to do that.

PG_DSN
    Use this directive to set the PostgreSQL data source namespace using
    DBD::Pg Perl module as follow:

            dbi:Pg:dbname=pgdb;host=localhost;port=5432

    will connect to database 'pgdb' on localhost at tcp port 5432.

    Note that this directive is only used for data export, other export
    need to be imported manually through the use og psql or any other
    PostgreSQL client.

    To use SSL encrypted connection you must add sslmode=require to the
    connection string like follow:

            dbi:Pg:dbname=pgdb;host=localhost;port=5432;sslmode=require

PG_USER and PG_PWD
    These two directives are used to set the login user and password.

    If you do not supply a credential with PG_PWD and you have installed
    the Term::ReadKey Perl module, Ora2Pg will ask for the password
    interactively. If PG_USER is not set it will be asked interactively
    too.

SYNCHRONOUS_COMMIT
    Specifies whether transaction commit will wait for WAL records to be
    written to disk before the command returns a "success" indication to
    the client. This is the equivalent to set synchronous_commit
    directive of postgresql.conf file. This is only used when you load
    data directly to PostgreSQL, the default is off to disable
    synchronous commit to gain speed at writing data. Some modified
    version of PostgreSQL, like greenplum, do not have this setting, so
    in this set this directive to 1, ora2pg will not try to change the
    setting.

PG_INITIAL_COMMAND
    This directive can be used to send an initial command to PostgreSQL,
    just after the connection. For example to set some session
    parameters. This directive can be used multiple times.

INSERT_ON_CONFLICT
    When enabled this instruct Ora2Pg to add an ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING
    clause to all INSERT statements generated for this type of data
    export.

Column type control PG_NUMERIC_TYPE If set to 1 replace portable numeric type into PostgreSQL internal type. Oracle data type NUMBER(p,s) is approximatively converted to real and float PostgreSQL data type. If you have monetary fields or don't want rounding issues with the extra decimals you should preserve the same numeric(p,s) PostgreSQL data type. Do that only if you need exactness because using numeric(p,s) is slower than using real or double.

PG_INTEGER_TYPE
    If set to 1 replace portable numeric type into PostgreSQL internal
    type. Oracle data type NUMBER(p) or NUMBER are converted to
    smallint, integer or bigint PostgreSQL data type following the value
    of the precision. If NUMBER without precision are set to
    DEFAULT_NUMERIC (see below).

DEFAULT_NUMERIC
    NUMBER without precision are converted by default to bigint only if
    PG_INTEGER_TYPE is true. You can overwrite this value to any PG
    type, like integer or float.

DATA_TYPE
    If you're experiencing any problem in data type schema conversion
    with this directive you can take full control of the correspondence
    between Oracle and PostgreSQL types to redefine data type
    translation used in Ora2pg. The syntax is a comma-separated list of
    "Oracle datatype:Postgresql datatype". Here are the default list
    used:

            DATA_TYPE       VARCHAR2:varchar,NVARCHAR2:varchar,NVARCHAR:varchar,NCHAR:char,DATE:timestamp(0),LONG:text,LONG RAW:bytea,CLOB:text,NCLOB:text,BLOB:bytea,BFILE:bytea,RAW(16):uuid,RAW(32):uuid,RAW:bytea,UROWID:oid,ROWID:oid,FLOAT:double precision,DEC:decimal,DECIMAL:decimal,DOUBLE PRECISION:double precision,INT:integer,INTEGER:integer,REAL:real,SMALLINT:smallint,BINARY_FLOAT:double precision,BINARY_DOUBLE:double precision,TIMESTAMP:timestamp,XMLTYPE:xml,BINARY_INTEGER:integer,PLS_INTEGER:integer,TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE:timestamp with time zone,TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE:timestamp with time zone

    The directive and the list definition must be a single line.

    Note that when a RAW(16) and RAW(32) columns is found or that the
    RAW column has "SYS_GUID()" as default value Ora2Pg will
    automatically translate the type of the column into uuid which might
    be the right translation in most of the case. In this case data will
    be automatically migrated as PostgreSQL uuid data type provided by
    the "uuid-ossp" extension.

    If you want to replace a type with a precision and scale you need to
    escape the coma with a backslash. For example, if you want to
    replace all NUMBER(*,0) into bigint instead of numeric(38) add the
    following:

           DATA_TYPE       NUMBER(*\,0):bigint

    You don't have to recopy all default type conversion but just the
    one you want to rewrite.

    There's a special case with BFILE when they are converted to type
    TEXT, they will just contains the full path to the external file. If
    you set the destination type to BYTEA, the default, Ora2Pg will
    export the content of the BFILE as bytea. The third case is when you
    set the destination type to EFILE, in this case, Ora2Pg will export
    it as an EFILE record: (DIRECTORY, FILENAME). Use the DIRECTORY
    export type to export the existing directories as well as privileges
    on those directories.

    There's no SQL function available to retrieve the path to the BFILE.
    Ora2Pg have to create one using the DBMS_LOB package.

            CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION ora2pg_get_bfilename( p_bfile IN BFILE )
            RETURN VARCHAR2
            AS
                l_dir   VARCHAR2(4000);
                l_fname VARCHAR2(4000);
                l_path  VARCHAR2(4000);
            BEGIN
                dbms_lob.FILEGETNAME( p_bfile, l_dir, l_fname );
                SELECT directory_path INTO l_path FROM all_directories
                    WHERE directory_name = l_dir;
                l_dir := rtrim(l_path,'/');
                RETURN l_dir || '/' || l_fname;
            END;

    This function is only created if Ora2Pg found a table with a BFILE
    column and that the destination type is TEXT. The function is
    dropped at the end of the export. This concern both, COPY and INSERT
    export type.

    There's no SQL function available to retrieve BFILE as an EFILE
    record, then Ora2Pg have to create one using the DBMS_LOB package.

            CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION ora2pg_get_efile( p_bfile IN BFILE )
            RETURN VARCHAR2
            AS
                l_dir   VARCHAR2(4000);
                l_fname VARCHAR2(4000);
            BEGIN
                dbms_lob.FILEGETNAME( p_bfile, l_dir, l_fname );
                RETURN '(' || l_dir || ',' || l_fnamei || ')';
            END;

    This function is only created if Ora2Pg found a table with a BFILE
    column and that the destination type is EFILE. The function is
    dropped at the end of the export. This concern both, COPY and INSERT
    export type.

    To set the destination type, use the DATA_TYPE configuration
    directive:

            DATA_TYPE       BFILE:EFILE

    for example.

    The EFILE type is a user defined type created by the PostgreSQL
    extension external_file that can be found here:
    https://github.com/darold/external_file This is a port of the BFILE
    Oracle type to PostgreSQL.

    There's no SQL function available to retrieve the content of a
    BFILE. Ora2Pg have to create one using the DBMS_LOB package.

            CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION ora2pg_get_bfile( p_bfile IN BFILE ) RETURN
            BLOB
              AS
                    filecontent BLOB := NULL;
                    src_file BFILE := NULL;
                    l_step PLS_INTEGER := 12000;
                    l_dir   VARCHAR2(4000);
                    l_fname VARCHAR2(4000);
                    offset NUMBER := 1;
              BEGIN
                IF p_bfile IS NULL THEN
                  RETURN NULL;
                END IF;

                DBMS_LOB.FILEGETNAME( p_bfile, l_dir, l_fname );
                src_file := BFILENAME( l_dir, l_fname );
                IF src_file IS NULL THEN
                    RETURN NULL;
                END IF;

                DBMS_LOB.FILEOPEN(src_file, DBMS_LOB.FILE_READONLY);
                DBMS_LOB.CREATETEMPORARY(filecontent, true);
                DBMS_LOB.LOADBLOBFROMFILE (filecontent, src_file, DBMS_LOB.LOBMAXSIZE, offset, offset);
                DBMS_LOB.FILECLOSE(src_file);
                RETURN filecontent;
            END;

    This function is only created if Ora2Pg found a table with a BFILE
    column and that the destination type is bytea (the default). The
    function is dropped at the end of the export. This concern both,
    COPY and INSERT export type.

    About the ROWID and UROWID, they are converted into OID by "logical"
    default but this will through an error at data import. There is no
    equivalent data type so you might want to use the DATA_TYPE
    directive to change the corresponding type in PostgreSQL. You should
    consider replacing this data type by a bigserial (autoincremented
    sequence), text or uuid data type.

MODIFY_TYPE
    Sometimes you need to force the destination type, for example a
    column exported as timestamp by Ora2Pg can be forced into type date.
    Value is a comma-separated list of TABLE:COLUMN:TYPE structure. If
    you need to use comma or space inside type definition you will have
    to backslash them.

            MODIFY_TYPE     TABLE1:COL3:varchar,TABLE1:COL4:decimal(9\,6)

    Type of table1.col3 will be replaced by a varchar and table1.col4 by
    a decimal with precision and scale.

    If the column's type is a user defined type Ora2Pg will autodetect
    the composite type and will export its data using ROW(). Some Oracle
    user defined types are just array of a native type, in this case you
    may want to transform this column in simple array of a PostgreSQL
    native type. To do so, just redefine the destination type as wanted
    and Ora2Pg will also transform the data as an array. For example,
    with the following definition in Oracle:

            CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE mem_type IS VARRAY(10) of VARCHAR2(15);
            CREATE TABLE club (Name VARCHAR2(10),
                    Address VARCHAR2(20),
                    City VARCHAR2(20),
                    Phone VARCHAR2(8),
                    Members mem_type
            );

    custom type "mem_type" is just a string array and can be translated
    into the following in PostgreSQL:

            CREATE TABLE club (
                    name varchar(10),
                    address varchar(20),
                    city varchar(20),
                    phone varchar(8),
                    members text[]
            ) ;

    To do so, just use the directive as follow:

            MODIFY_TYPE     CLUB:MEMBERS:text[]

    Ora2Pg will take care to transform all data of this column in the
    correct format. Only arrays of characters and numerics types are
    supported.

TO_NUMBER_CONVERSION
    By default Oracle call to function TO_NUMBER will be translated as a
    cast into numeric. For example, TO_NUMBER('10.1234') is converted
    into PostgreSQL call to_number('10.1234')::numeric. If you want you
    can cast the call to integer or bigint by changing the value of the
    configuration directive. If you need better control of the format,
    just set it as value, for example: TO_NUMBER_CONVERSION
    99999999999999999999.9999999999 will convert the code above as:
    TO_NUMBER('10.1234', '99999999999999999999.9999999999') Any value of
    the directive that it is not numeric, integer or bigint will be
    taken as a mask format. If set to none, no conversion will be done.

VARCHAR_TO_TEXT
    By default varchar2 without size constraint are tranlated into text.
    If you want to keep the varchar name, disable this directive.

FORCE_IDENTITY_BIGINT
    Usually identity column must be bigint to correspond to an auto
    increment sequence so Ora2Pg always force it to be a bigint. If, for
    any reason you want Ora2Pg to respect the DATA_TYPE you have set for
    identity column then disable this directive.

TO_CHAR_NOTIMEZONE
    If you want Ora2Pg to remove any timezone information into the
    format part of the TO_CHAR() function, enable this directive.
    Disabled by default.

Taking export under control The following other configuration directives interact directly with the export process and give you fine granularity in database export control.

SKIP
    For TABLE export you may not want to export all schema constraints,
    the SKIP configuration directive allows you to specify a
    space-separated list of constraints that should not be exported.
    Possible values are:

            - fkeys: turn off foreign key constraints
            - pkeys: turn off primary keys
            - ukeys: turn off unique column constraints
            - indexes: turn off all other index types
            - checks: turn off check constraints

    For example:

            SKIP    indexes,checks

    will removed indexes and check constraints from export.

PKEY_IN_CREATE
    Enable this directive if you want to add primary key definition
    inside the create table statement. If disabled (the default) primary
    key definition will be added with an alter table statement. Enable
    it if you are exporting to GreenPlum PostgreSQL database.

KEEP_PKEY_NAMES
    By default names of the primary and unique key in the source Oracle
    database are ignored and key names are autogenerated in the target
    PostgreSQL database with the PostgreSQL internal default naming
    rules. If you want to preserve Oracle primary and unique key names
    set this option to 1.

FKEY_ADD_UPDATE
    This directive allows you to add an ON UPDATE CASCADE option to a
    foreign key when a ON DELETE CASCADE is defined or always. Oracle do
    not support this feature, you have to use trigger to operate the ON
    UPDATE CASCADE. As PostgreSQL has this feature, you can choose how
    to add the foreign key option. There are three values to this
    directive: never, the default that mean that foreign keys will be
    declared exactly like in Oracle. The second value is delete, that
    mean that the ON UPDATE CASCADE option will be added only if the ON
    DELETE CASCADE is already defined on the foreign Keys. The last
    value, always, will force all foreign keys to be defined using the
    update option.

FKEY_DEFERRABLE
    When exporting tables, Ora2Pg normally exports constraints as they
    are, if they are non-deferrable they are exported as non-deferrable.
    However, non-deferrable constraints will probably cause problems
    when attempting to import data to Pg. The FKEY_DEFERRABLE option set
    to 1 will cause all foreign key constraints to be exported as
    deferrable.

DEFER_FKEY
    In addition to exporting data when the DEFER_FKEY option set to 1,
    it will add a command to defer all foreign key constraints during
    data export and the import will be done in a single transaction.
    This will work only if foreign keys have been exported as deferrable
    and you are not using direct import to PostgreSQL (PG_DSN is not
    defined). Constraints will then be checked at the end of the
    transaction.

    This directive can also be enabled if you want to force all foreign
    keys to be created as deferrable and initially deferred during
    schema export (TABLE export type).

DROP_FKEY
    If deferring foreign keys is not possible due to the amount of data
    in a single transaction, you've not exported foreign keys as
    deferrable or you are using direct import to PostgreSQL, you can use
    the DROP_FKEY directive.

    It will drop all foreign keys before all data import and recreate
    them at the end of the import.

DROP_INDEXES
    This directive allows you to gain lot of speed improvement during
    data import by removing all indexes that are not an automatic index
    (indexes of primary keys) and recreate them at the end of data
    import. Of course it is far better to not import indexes and
    constraints before having imported all data.

DISABLE_TRIGGERS
    This directive is used to disable triggers on all tables in COPY or
    INSERT export modes. Available values are USER (disable user-defined
    triggers only) and ALL (includes RI system triggers). Default is 0:
    do not add SQL statements to disable trigger before data import.

    If you want to disable triggers during data migration, set the value
    to USER if your are connected as non superuser and ALL if you are
    connected as PostgreSQL superuser. A value of 1 is equal to USER.

DISABLE_SEQUENCE
    If set to 1 it disables alter of sequences on all tables during COPY
    or INSERT export mode. This is used to prevent the update of
    sequence during data migration. Default is 0, alter sequences.

NOESCAPE
    By default all data that are not of type date or time are escaped.
    If you experience any problem with that you can set it to 1 to
    disable character escaping during data export. This directive is
    only used during a COPY export. See STANDARD_CONFORMING_STRINGS for
    enabling/disabling escape with INSERT statements.

STANDARD_CONFORMING_STRINGS
    This controls whether ordinary string literals ('...') treat
    backslashes literally, as specified in SQL standard. This was the
    default before Ora2Pg v8.5 so that all strings was escaped first,
    now this is currently on, causing Ora2Pg to use the escape string
    syntax (E'...') if this parameter is not set to 0. This is the exact
    behavior of the same option in PostgreSQL. This directive is only
    used during data export to build INSERT statements. See NOESCAPE for
    enabling/disabling escape in COPY statements.

TRIM_TYPE
    If you want to convert CHAR(n) from Oracle into varchar(n) or text
    on PostgreSQL using directive DATA_TYPE, you might want to do some
    trimming on the data. By default Ora2Pg will auto-detect this
    conversion and remove any whitespace at both leading and trailing
    position. If you just want to remove the leadings character set the
    value to LEADING. If you just want to remove the trailing character,
    set the value to TRAILING. Default value is BOTH.

TRIM_CHAR
    The default trimming character is space, use this directive if you
    need to change the character that will be removed. For example, set
    it to - if you have leading - in the char(n) field. To use space as
    trimming charger, comment this directive, this is the default value.

PRESERVE_CASE
    If you want to preserve the case of Oracle object name set this
    directive to 1. By default Ora2Pg will convert all Oracle object
    names to lower case. I do not recommend to enable this unless you
    will always have to double-quote object names on all your SQL
    scripts.

ORA_RESERVED_WORDS
    Allow escaping of column name using Oracle reserved words. Value is
    a list of comma-separated reserved word. Default:
    audit,comment,references.

USE_RESERVED_WORDS
    Enable this directive if you have table or column names that are a
    reserved word for PostgreSQL. Ora2Pg will double quote the name of
    the object.

GEN_USER_PWD
    Set this directive to 1 to replace default password by a random
    password for all extracted user during a GRANT export.

PG_SUPPORTS_MVIEW
    Since PostgreSQL 9.3, materialized view are supported with the SQL
    syntax 'CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW'. To force Ora2Pg to use the native
    PostgreSQL support you must enable this configuration - enable by
    default. If you want to use the old style with table and a set of
    function, you should disable it.

PG_SUPPORTS_IFEXISTS
    PostgreSQL version below 9.x do not support IF EXISTS in DDL
    statements. Disabling the directive with value 0 will prevent Ora2Pg
    to add those keywords in all generated statements. Default value is
    1, enabled.

PG_VERSION
    Set the PostgreSQL major version number of the target database. Ex:
    9.6 or 13 Default is current major version at time of a new release.
    This replace the old and deprecadted PG_SUPPORTS_* configuration
    directives described bellow.

PG_SUPPORTS_ROLE (Deprecated)
    This option is deprecated since Ora2Pg release v7.3.

    By default Oracle roles are translated into PostgreSQL groups. If
    you have PostgreSQL 8.1 or more consider the use of ROLES and set
    this directive to 1 to export roles.

PG_SUPPORTS_INOUT (Deprecated)
    This option is deprecated since Ora2Pg release v7.3.

    If set to 0, all IN, OUT or INOUT parameters will not be used into
    the generated PostgreSQL function declarations (disable it for
    PostgreSQL database version lower than 8.1), This is now enable by
    default.

PG_SUPPORTS_DEFAULT
    This directive enable or disable the use of default parameter value
    in function export. Until PostgreSQL 8.4 such a default value was
    not supported, this feature is now enable by default.

PG_SUPPORTS_WHEN (Deprecated)
    Add support to WHEN clause on triggers as PostgreSQL v9.0 now
    support it. This directive is enabled by default, set it to 0
    disable this feature.

PG_SUPPORTS_INSTEADOF (Deprecated)
    Add support to INSTEAD OF usage on triggers (used with PG >= 9.1),
    if this directive is disabled the INSTEAD OF triggers will be
    rewritten as Pg rules.

PG_SUPPORTS_CHECKOPTION
    When enabled, export views with CHECK OPTION. Disable it if you have
    PostgreSQL version prior to 9.4. Default: 1, enabled.

PG_SUPPORTS_IFEXISTS
    If disabled, do not export object with IF EXISTS statements. Enabled
    by default.

PG_SUPPORTS_PARTITION
    PostgreSQL version prior to 10.0 do not have native partitioning.
    Enable this directive if you want to use declarative partitioning.
    Enable by default.

PG_SUPPORTS_SUBSTR
    Some versions of PostgreSQL like Redshift doesn't support substr()
    and it need to be replaced by a call to substring(). In this case,
    disable it.

PG_SUPPORTS_NAMED_OPERATOR
    Disable this directive if you are using PG < 9.5, PL/SQL operator
    used in named parameter => will be replaced by PostgreSQL
    proprietary operator := Enable by default.

PG_SUPPORTS_IDENTITY
    Enable this directive if you have PostgreSQL >= 10 to use IDENTITY
    columns instead of serial or bigserial data type. If
    PG_SUPPORTS_IDENTITY is disabled and there is IDENTITY column in the
    Oracle table, they are exported as serial or bigserial columns. When
    it is enabled they are exported as IDENTITY columns like:

          CREATE TABLE identity_test_tab (
                  id bigint GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY,
                  description varchar(30)
          ) ;

    If there is non default sequence options set in Oracle, they will be
    appended after the IDENTITY keyword. Additionally in both cases,
    Ora2Pg will create a file AUTOINCREMENT_output.sql with a embedded
    function to update the associated sequences with the restart value
    set to "SELECT max(colname)+1 FROM tablename". Of course this file
    must be imported after data import otherwise sequence will be kept
    to start value. Enabled by default.

PG_SUPPORTS_PROCEDURE
    PostgreSQL v11 adds support of PROCEDURE, enable it if you use such
    version.

BITMAP_AS_GIN
    Use btree_gin extension to create bitmap like index with pg >= 9.4
    You will need to create the extension by yourself: create extension
    btree_gin; Default is to create GIN index, when disabled, a btree
    index will be created

PG_BACKGROUND
    Use pg_background extension to create an autonomous transaction
    instead of using a dblink wrapper. With pg >= 9.5 only. Default is
    to use dblink. See https://github.com/vibhorkum/pg_background about
    this extension.

DBLINK_CONN
    By default if you have an autonomous transaction translated using
    dblink extension instead of pg_background the connection is defined
    using the values set with PG_DSN, PG_USER and PG_PWD. If you want to
    fully override the connection string use this directive as follow to
    set the connection in the autonomous transaction wrapper function.
    For example:

            DBLINK_CONN    port=5432 dbname=pgdb host=localhost user=pguser password=pgpass

LONGREADLEN
    Use this directive to set the database handle's 'LongReadLen'
    attribute to a value that will be the larger than the expected size
    of the LOBs. The default is 1MB witch may not be enough to extract
    BLOBs or CLOBs. If the size of the LOB exceeds the 'LongReadLen'
    DBD::Oracle will return a 'ORA-24345: A Truncation' error. Default:
    1023*1024 bytes.

    Take a look at this page to learn more:
    http://search.cpan.org/~pythian/DBD-Oracle-1.22/Oracle.pm#Data_Inter
    face_for_Persistent_LOBs

    Important note: If you increase the value of this directive take
    care that DATA_LIMIT will probably needs to be reduced. Even if you
    only have a 1MB blob, trying to read 10000 of them (the default
    DATA_LIMIT) all at once will require 10GB of memory. You may extract
    data from those table separately and set a DATA_LIMIT to 500 or
    lower, otherwise you may experience some out of memory.

LONGTRUNKOK
    If you want to bypass the 'ORA-24345: A Truncation' error, set this
    directive to 1, it will truncate the data extracted to the
    LongReadLen value. Disable by default so that you will be warned if
    your LongReadLen value is not high enough.

USE_LOB_LOCATOR
    Disable this if you want to load full content of BLOB and CLOB and
    not use LOB locators. In this case you will have to set LONGREADLEN
    to the right value. Note that this will not improve speed of BLOB
    export as most of the time is always consumed by the bytea escaping
    and in this case export is done line by line and not by chunk of
    DATA_LIMIT rows. For more information on how it works, see
    http://search.cpan.org/~pythian/DBD-Oracle-1.74/lib/DBD/Oracle.pm#Da
    ta_Interface_for_LOB_Locators

    Default is enabled, it use LOB locators.

LOB_CHUNK_SIZE
    Oracle recommends reading from and writing to a LOB in batches using
    a multiple of the LOB chunk size. This chunk size defaults to 8k
    (8192). Recent tests shown that the best performances can be reach
    with higher value like 512K or 4Mb.

    A quick benchmark with 30120 rows with different size of BLOB
    (200x5Mb, 19800x212k, 10000x942K, 100x17Mb, 20x156Mb), with
    DATA_LIMIT=100, LONGREADLEN=170Mb and a total table size of 20GB
    gives:

           no lob locator  : 22m46,218s (1365 sec., avg: 22 recs/sec)
           chunk size 8k   : 15m50,886s (951 sec., avg: 31 recs/sec)
           chunk size 512k : 1m28,161s (88 sec., avg: 342 recs/sec)
           chunk size 4Mb  : 1m23,717s (83 sec., avg: 362 recs/sec)

    In conclusion it can be more than 10 time faster with LOB_CHUNK_SIZE
    set to 4Mb. Depending of the size of most BLOB you may want to
    adjust the value here. For example if you have a majority of small
    lobs bellow 8K, using 8192 is better to not waste space. Default
    value for LOB_CHUNK_SIZE is 512000.

XML_PRETTY
    Force the use getStringVal() instead of getClobVal() for XML data
    export. Default is 1, enabled for backward compatibility. Set it to
    0 to use extract method a la CLOB. Note that XML value extracted
    with getStringVal() must not exceed VARCHAR2 size limit (4000)
    otherwise it will return an error.

ENABLE_MICROSECOND
    Set it to O if you want to disable export of millisecond from Oracle
    timestamp columns. By default milliseconds are exported with the use
    of following format:

            'YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS.FF'

    Disabling will force the use of the following Oracle format:

            to_char(..., 'YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS')

    By default milliseconds are exported.

DISABLE_COMMENT
    Set this to 1 if you don't want to export comment associated to
    tables and columns definition. Default is enabled.

Control MySQL export behavior MYSQL_PIPES_AS_CONCAT Enable this if double pipe and double ampersand (|| and &&) should not be taken as equivalent to OR and AND. It depend of the variable @sql_mode, Use it only if Ora2Pg fail on auto detecting this behavior.

MYSQL_INTERNAL_EXTRACT_FORMAT
    Enable this directive if you want EXTRACT() replacement to use the
    internal format returned as an integer, for example DD HH24:MM:SS
    will be replaced with format; DDHH24MMSS::bigint, this depend of
    your apps usage.

Control SQL Server export behavior DROP_ROWVERSION PostgreSQL has no equivalent to rowversion datatype and feature, if you want to remove these useless columns, enable this directive. Columns of datatype 'rowversion' or 'timestamp' will not be exported.

CASE_INSENSITIVE_SEARCH
    Emulate the same behavior of MSSQL with case insensitive search. If
    the value is citext it will use the citext data type instead of
    char/varchar/text in tables DDL (Ora2Pg will add a CHECK constraint
    for columns with a precision). Instead of citext you can also set a
    collation name that will be used in the columns definitions. To
    disable case insensitive search set it to: none.

SELECT_TOP
    Append a TOP N clause to the SELECT command used to extract the data
    from SQL Server. This is the equivalent to a WHERE ROWNUM < 1000
    clause for Oracle.

Special options to handle character encoding NLS_LANG and NLS_NCHAR By default Ora2Pg will set NLS_LANG to AMERICAN_AMERICA.AL32UTF8 and NLS_NCHAR to AL32UTF8. It is not recommended to change those settings but in some case it could be useful. Using your own settings with those configuration directive will change the client encoding at Oracle side by setting the environment variables $ENV{NLS_LANG} and $ENV{NLS_NCHAR}.

BINMODE
    By default Ora2Pg will force Perl to use utf8 I/O encoding. This is
    done through a call to the Perl pragma:

            use open ':utf8';

    You can override this encoding by using the BINMODE directive, for
    example you can set it to :locale to use your locale or iso-8859-7,
    it will respectively use

            use open ':locale';
            use open ':encoding(iso-8859-7)';

    If you have change the NLS_LANG in non UTF8 encoding, you might want
    to set this directive. See http://perldoc.perl.org/5.14.2/open.html
    for more information. Most of the time, leave this directive
    commented.

CLIENT_ENCODING
    By default PostgreSQL client encoding is automatically set to UTF8
    to avoid encoding issue. If you have changed the value of NLS_LANG
    you might have to change the encoding of the PostgreSQL client.

    You can take a look at the PostgreSQL supported character sets here:
    http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/static/multibyte.html

FORCE_PLSQL_ENCODING
    To force utf8 encoding of the PL/SQL code exported, enable this
    directive. Could be helpful in some rare condition.

PLSQL to PLPGSQL conversion Automatic code conversion from Oracle PLSQL to PostgreSQL PLPGSQL is a work in progress in Ora2Pg and surely you will always have manual work. The Perl code used for automatic conversion is all stored in a specific Perl Module named Ora2Pg/PLSQL.pm feel free to modify/add you own code and send me patches. The main work in on function, procedure, package and package body headers and parameters rewrite.

PLSQL_PGSQL
    Enable/disable PLSQL to PLPGSQL conversion. Enabled by default.

NULL_EQUAL_EMPTY
    Ora2Pg can replace all conditions with a test on NULL by a call to
    the coalesce() function to mimic the Oracle behavior where empty
    string are considered equal to NULL.

            (field1 IS NULL) is replaced by (coalesce(field1::text, '') = '')
            (field2 IS NOT NULL) is replaced by (field2 IS NOT NULL AND field2::text <> '')

    You might want this replacement to be sure that your application
    will have the same behavior but if you have control on you
    application a better way is to change it to transform empty string
    into NULL because PostgreSQL makes the difference.

EMPTY_LOB_NULL
    Force empty_clob() and empty_blob() to be exported as NULL instead
    as empty string for the first one and '\x' for the second. If NULL
    is allowed in your column this might improve data export speed if
    you have lot of empty lob. Default is to preserve the exact data
    from Oracle.

PACKAGE_AS_SCHEMA
    If you don't want to export package as schema but as simple
    functions you might also want to replace all call to
    package_name.function_name. If you disable the PACKAGE_AS_SCHEMA
    directive then Ora2Pg will replace all call to
    package_name.function_name() by package_name_function_name().
    Default is to use a schema to emulate package.

    The replacement will be done in all kind of DDL or code that is
    parsed by the PLSQL to PLPGSQL converter. PLSQL_PGSQL must be
    enabled or -p used in command line.

REWRITE_OUTER_JOIN
    Enable this directive if the rewrite of Oracle native syntax (+) of
    OUTER JOIN is broken. This will force Ora2Pg to not rewrite such
    code, default is to try to rewrite simple form of right outer join
    for the moment.

UUID_FUNCTION
    By default Ora2Pg will convert call to SYS_GUID() Oracle function
    with a call to uuid_generate_v4 from uuid-ossp extension. You can
    redefined it to use the gen_random_uuid function from pgcrypto
    extension by changing the function name. Default to
    uuid_generate_v4.

    Note that when a RAW(16) and RAW(32) columns is found or that the
    RAW column has "SYS_GUID()" as default value Ora2Pg will
    automatically translate the type of the column into uuid which might
    be the right translation in most of the case. In this case data will
    be automatically migrated as PostgreSQL uuid data type provided by
    the "uuid-ossp" extension.

FUNCTION_STABLE
    By default Oracle functions are marked as STABLE as they can not
    modify data unless when used in PL/SQL with variable assignment or
    as conditional expression. You can force Ora2Pg to create these
    function as VOLATILE by disabling this configuration directive.

COMMENT_COMMIT_ROLLBACK
    By default call to COMMIT/ROLLBACK are kept untouched by Ora2Pg to
    force the user to review the logic of the function. Once it is fixed
    in Oracle source code or you want to comment this calls enable the
    following directive.

COMMENT_SAVEPOINT
    It is common to see SAVEPOINT call inside PL/SQL procedure together
    with a ROLLBACK TO savepoint_name. When COMMENT_COMMIT_ROLLBACK is
    enabled you may want to also comment SAVEPOINT calls, in this case
    enable it.

STRING_CONSTANT_REGEXP
    Ora2Pg replace all string constant during the pl/sql to plpgsql
    translation, string constant are all text include between single
    quote. If you have some string placeholder used in dynamic call to
    queries you can set a list of regexp to be temporary replaced to not
    break the parser. For example:

            STRING_CONSTANT_REGEXP         <placeholder value=".*">

    The list of regexp must use the semi colon as separator.

ALTERNATIVE_QUOTING_REGEXP
    To support the Alternative Quoting Mechanism ('Q' or 'q') for String
    Literals set the regexp with the text capture to use to extract the
    text part. For example with a variable declared as

            c_sample VARCHAR2(100 CHAR) := q'{This doesn't work.}';

    the regexp to use must be:

            ALTERNATIVE_QUOTING_REGEXP     q'{(.*)}'

    ora2pg will use the $$ delimiter, with the example the result will
    be:

            c_sample varchar(100) := $$This doesn't work.$$;

    The value of this configuration directive can be a list of regexp
    separated by a semi colon. The capture part (between parenthesis) is
    mandatory in each regexp if you want to restore the string constant.

USE_ORAFCE
    If you want to use functions defined in the Orafce library and
    prevent Ora2Pg to translate call to these functions, enable this
    directive. The Orafce library can be found here:
    https://github.com/orafce/orafce

    By default Ora2pg rewrite add_month(), add_year(), date_trunc() and
    to_char() functions, but you may prefer to use the orafce version of
    these function that do not need any code transformation.

AUTONOMOUS_TRANSACTION
    Enable translation of autonomous transactions into a wrapper
    function using dblink or pg_background extension. If you don't want
    to use this translation and just want the function to be exported as
    a normal one without the pragma call, disable this directive.

Materialized view Materialized views are exported as snapshot "Snapshot Materialized Views" as PostgreSQL only supports full refresh.

If you want to import the materialized views in PostgreSQL prior to 9.3
you have to set configuration directive PG_SUPPORTS_MVIEW to 0. In this
case Ora2Pg will export all materialized views as explain in this
document:

        http://tech.jonathangardner.net/wiki/PostgreSQL/Materialized_Views.

When exporting materialized view Ora2Pg will first add the SQL code to
create the "materialized_views" table:

        CREATE TABLE materialized_views (
                mview_name text NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
                view_name text NOT NULL,
                iname text,
                last_refresh TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE
        );

all materialized views will have an entry in this table. It then adds
the plpgsql code to create tree functions:

        create_materialized_view(text, text, text) used to create a materialized view
        drop_materialized_view(text) used to delete a materialized view
        refresh_full_materialized_view(text) used to refresh a view

then it adds the SQL code to create the view and the materialized view:

        CREATE VIEW mviewname_mview AS
        SELECT ... FROM ...;

        SELECT create_materialized_view('mviewname','mviewname_mview', change with the name of the column to used for the index);

The first argument is the name of the materialized view, the second the
name of the view on which the materialized view is based and the third
is the column name on which the index should be build (aka most of the
time the primary key). This column is not automatically deduced so you
need to replace its name.

As said above Ora2Pg only supports snapshot materialized views so the
table will be entirely refreshed by issuing first a truncate of the
table and then by load again all data from the view:

         refresh_full_materialized_view('mviewname');

To drop the materialized view you just have to call the
drop_materialized_view() function with the name of the materialized view
as parameter.

Other configuration directives DEBUG Set it to 1 will enable verbose output.

IMPORT
    You can define common Ora2Pg configuration directives into a single
    file that can be imported into other configuration files with the
    IMPORT configuration directive as follow:

            IMPORT  commonfile.conf

    will import all configuration directives defined into
    commonfile.conf into the current configuration file.

Exporting views as PostgreSQL tables You can export any Oracle view as a PostgreSQL table simply by setting TYPE configuration option to TABLE to have the corresponding create table statement. Or use type COPY or INSERT to export the corresponding data. To allow that you have to specify your views in the VIEW_AS_TABLE configuration option.

Then if Ora2Pg finds the view it will extract its schema (if TYPE=TABLE)
into a PG create table form, then it will extract the data (if TYPE=COPY
or INSERT) following the view schema.

For example, with the following view:

        CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW product_prices (category_id, product_count, low_price, high_price) AS
        SELECT  category_id, COUNT(*) as product_count,
            MIN(list_price) as low_price,
            MAX(list_price) as high_price
         FROM   product_information
        GROUP BY category_id;

Setting VIEW_AS_TABLE to product_prices and using export type TABLE,
will force Ora2Pg to detect columns returned types and to generate a
create table statement:

        CREATE TABLE product_prices (
                category_id bigint,
                product_count integer,
                low_price numeric,
                high_price numeric
        );

Data will be loaded following the COPY or INSERT export type and the
view declaration.

You can use the ALLOW and EXCLUDE directive in addition to filter other
objects to export.

Export as Kettle transformation XML files The KETTLE export type is useful if you want to use Penthalo Data Integrator (Kettle) to import data to PostgreSQL. With this type of export Ora2Pg will generate one XML Kettle transformation files (.ktr) per table and add a line to manually execute the transformation in the output.sql file. For example:

        ora2pg -c ora2pg.conf -t KETTLE -j 12 -a MYTABLE -o load_mydata.sh

will generate one file called 'HR.MYTABLE.ktr' and add a line to the
output file (load_mydata.sh):

        #!/bin/sh

        KETTLE_TEMPLATE_PATH='.'

        JAVAMAXMEM=4096 ./pan.sh -file $KETTLE_TEMPLATE_PATH/HR.MYTABLE.ktr -level Detailed

The -j 12 option will create a template with 12 processes to insert data
into PostgreSQL. It is also possible to specify the number of parallel
queries used to extract data from the Oracle with the -J command line
option as follow:

        ora2pg -c ora2pg.conf -t KETTLE -J 4 -j 12 -a EMPLOYEES -o load_mydata.sh

This is only possible if there is a unique key defined on a numeric
column or that you have defined the technical key to used to split the
query between cores in the DEFINED_PKEY configuration directive. For
example:

        DEFINED_PK      EMPLOYEES:employee_id

will force the number of Oracle connection copies to 4 and defined the
SQL query as follow in the Kettle XML transformation file:

        <sql>SELECT * FROM HR.EMPLOYEES WHERE ABS(MOD(employee_id,${Internal.Step.Unique.Count}))=${Internal.Step.Unique.Number}</sql>

The KETTLE export type requires that the Oracle and PostgreSQL DSN are
defined. You can also activate the TRUNCATE_TABLE directive to force a
truncation of the table before data import.

The KETTLE export type is an original work of Marc Cousin.

Migration cost assessment Estimating the cost of a migration process from Oracle to PostgreSQL is not easy. To obtain a good assessment of this migration cost, Ora2Pg will inspect all database objects, all functions and stored procedures to detect if there's still some objects and PL/SQL code that can not be automatically converted by Ora2Pg.

Ora2Pg has a content analysis mode that inspect the Oracle database to
generate a text report on what the Oracle database contains and what can
not be exported.

To activate the "analysis and report" mode, you have to use the export
de type SHOW_REPORT like in the following command:

        ora2pg -t SHOW_REPORT

Here is a sample report obtained with this command:

        --------------------------------------
        Ora2Pg: Oracle Database Content Report
        --------------------------------------
        Version Oracle Database 10g Enterprise Edition Release 10.2.0.1.0
        Schema  HR
        Size  880.00 MB

        --------------------------------------
        Object  Number  Invalid Comments
        --------------------------------------
        CLUSTER   2 0 Clusters are not supported and will not be exported.
        FUNCTION  40  0 Total size of function code: 81992.
        INDEX     435 0 232 index(es) are concerned by the export, others are automatically generated and will
                                        do so on PostgreSQL. 1 bitmap index(es). 230 b-tree index(es). 1 reversed b-tree index(es)
                                        Note that bitmap index(es) will be exported as b-tree index(es) if any. Cluster, domain,
                                        bitmap join and IOT indexes will not be exported at all. Reverse indexes are not exported
                                        too, you may use a trigram-based index (see pg_trgm) or a reverse() function based index
                                        and search. You may also use 'varchar_pattern_ops', 'text_pattern_ops' or 'bpchar_pattern_ops'
                                        operators in your indexes to improve search with the LIKE operator respectively into
                                        varchar, text or char columns.
        MATERIALIZED VIEW 1 0 All materialized view will be exported as snapshot materialized views, they
                                        are only updated when fully refreshed.
        PACKAGE BODY  2 1 Total size of package code: 20700.
        PROCEDURE 7 0 Total size of procedure code: 19198.
        SEQUENCE  160 0 Sequences are fully supported, but all call to sequence_name.NEXTVAL or sequence_name.CURRVAL
                                        will be transformed into NEXTVAL('sequence_name') or CURRVAL('sequence_name').
        TABLE     265 0 1 external table(s) will be exported as standard table. See EXTERNAL_TO_FDW configuration
                                        directive to export as file_fdw foreign tables or use COPY in your code if you just
                                        want to load data from external files. 2 binary columns. 4 unknown types.
        TABLE PARTITION 8 0 Partitions are exported using table inheritance and check constraint. 1 HASH partitions.
                                        2 LIST partitions. 6 RANGE partitions. Note that Hash partitions are not supported.
        TRIGGER   30  0 Total size of trigger code: 21677.
        TYPE      7 1 5 type(s) are concerned by the export, others are not supported. 2 Nested Tables.
                                        2 Object type. 1 Subtype. 1 Type Boby. 1 Type inherited. 1 Varrays. Note that Type
                                        inherited and Subtype are converted as table, type inheritance is not supported.
        TYPE BODY 0 3 Export of type with member method are not supported, they will not be exported.
        VIEW      7 0 Views are fully supported, but if you have updatable views you will need to use
                                        INSTEAD OF triggers.
        DATABASE LINK 1 0 Database links will not be exported. You may try the dblink perl contrib module or use
                                        the SQL/MED PostgreSQL features with the different Foreign Data Wrapper (FDW) extensions.

        Note: Invalid code will not be exported unless the EXPORT_INVALID configuration directive is activated.

Once the database can be analysed, Ora2Pg, by his ability to convert SQL
and PL/SQL code from Oracle syntax to PostgreSQL, can go further by
estimating the code difficulties and estimate the time necessary to
operate a full database migration.

To estimate the migration cost in person-days, Ora2Pg allow you to use a
configuration directive called ESTIMATE_COST that you can also enabled
at command line:

        --estimate_cost

This feature can only be used with the SHOW_REPORT, FUNCTION, PROCEDURE,
PACKAGE and QUERY export type.

        ora2pg -t SHOW_REPORT  --estimate_cost

The generated report is same as above but with a new 'Estimated cost'
column as follow:

        --------------------------------------
        Ora2Pg: Oracle Database Content Report
        --------------------------------------
        Version Oracle Database 10g Express Edition Release 10.2.0.1.0
        Schema  HR
        Size  890.00 MB

        --------------------------------------
        Object  Number  Invalid Estimated cost  Comments
        --------------------------------------
        DATABASE LINK  3 0 9 Database links will be exported as SQL/MED PostgreSQL's Foreign Data Wrapper (FDW) extensions
                                        using oracle_fdw.
        FUNCTION  2 0 7 Total size of function code: 369 bytes. HIGH_SALARY: 2, VALIDATE_SSN: 3.
        INDEX 21  0 11  11 index(es) are concerned by the export, others are automatically generated and will do so
                                        on PostgreSQL. 11 b-tree index(es). Note that bitmap index(es) will be exported as b-tree
                                        index(es) if any. Cluster, domain, bitmap join and IOT indexes will not be exported at all.
                                        Reverse indexes are not exported too, you may use a trigram-based index (see pg_trgm) or a
                                        reverse() function based index and search. You may also use 'varchar_pattern_ops', 'text_pattern_ops'
                                        or 'bpchar_pattern_ops' operators in your indexes to improve search with the LIKE operator
                                        respectively into varchar, text or char columns.
        JOB 0 0 0 Job are not exported. You may set external cron job with them.
        MATERIALIZED VIEW 1 0 3 All materialized view will be exported as snapshot materialized views, they
                                                are only updated when fully refreshed.
        PACKAGE BODY  0 2 54  Total size of package code: 2487 bytes. Number of procedures and functions found
                                                inside those packages: 7. two_proc.get_table: 10, emp_mgmt.create_dept: 4,
                                                emp_mgmt.hire: 13, emp_mgmt.increase_comm: 4, emp_mgmt.increase_sal: 4,
                                                emp_mgmt.remove_dept: 3, emp_mgmt.remove_emp: 2.
        PROCEDURE 4 0 39  Total size of procedure code: 2436 bytes. TEST_COMMENTAIRE: 2, SECURE_DML: 3,
                                                PHD_GET_TABLE: 24, ADD_JOB_HISTORY: 6.
        SEQUENCE  3 0 0 Sequences are fully supported, but all call to sequence_name.NEXTVAL or sequence_name.CURRVAL
                                                will be transformed into NEXTVAL('sequence_name') or CURRVAL('sequence_name').
        SYNONYM   3 0 4 SYNONYMs will be exported as views. SYNONYMs do not exists with PostgreSQL but a common workaround
                                                is to use views or set the PostgreSQL search_path in your session to access
                                                object outside the current schema.
                                                user1.emp_details_view_v is an alias to hr.emp_details_view.
                                                user1.emp_table is an alias to hr.employees@other_server.
                                                user1.offices is an alias to hr.locations.
        TABLE 17  0 8.5 1 external table(s) will be exported as standard table. See EXTERNAL_TO_FDW configuration
                                        directive to export as file_fdw foreign tables or use COPY in your code if you just want to
                                        load data from external files. 2 binary columns. 4 unknown types.
        TRIGGER 1 1 4 Total size of trigger code: 123 bytes. UPDATE_JOB_HISTORY: 2.
        TYPE  7 1 5 5 type(s) are concerned by the export, others are not supported. 2 Nested Tables. 2 Object type.
                                        1 Subtype. 1 Type Boby. 1 Type inherited. 1 Varrays. Note that Type inherited and Subtype are
                                        converted as table, type inheritance is not supported.
        TYPE BODY 0 3 30  Export of type with member method are not supported, they will not be exported.
        VIEW  1 1 1 Views are fully supported, but if you have updatable views you will need to use INSTEAD OF triggers.
        --------------------------------------
        Total 65  8 162.5 162.5 cost migration units means approximatively 2 man day(s).

The last line shows the total estimated migration cost in person-days
following the number of migration units estimated for each object. This
migration unit represent around five minutes for a PostgreSQL expert. If
this is your first migration you can get it higher with the
configuration directive COST_UNIT_VALUE or the --cost_unit_value command
line option:

        ora2pg -t SHOW_REPORT  --estimate_cost --cost_unit_value 10

Ora2Pg is also able to give you a migration difficulty level assessment,
here a sample:

Migration level: B-5

    Migration levels:
        A - Migration that might be run automatically
        B - Migration with code rewrite and a person-days cost up to 5 days
        C - Migration with code rewrite and a person-days cost above 5 days
    Technical levels:
        1 = trivial: no stored functions and no triggers
        2 = easy: no stored functions but with triggers, no manual rewriting
        3 = simple: stored functions and/or triggers, no manual rewriting
        4 = manual: no stored functions but with triggers or views with code rewriting
        5 = difficult: stored functions and/or triggers with code rewriting

This assessment consist in a letter A or B to specify if the migration
needs manual rewriting or not. And a number from 1 up to 5 to give you a
technical difficulty level. You have an additional option
--human_days_limit to specify the number of person-days limit where the
migration level should be set to C to indicate that it need a huge
amount of work and a full project management with migration support.
Default is 10 person-days. You can use the configuration directive
HUMAN_DAYS_LIMIT to change this default value permanently.

This feature has been developed to help you or your boss to decide which
database to migrate first and the team that must be mobilized to operate
the migration.

Global Oracle and MySQL migration assessment Ora2Pg come with a script ora2pg_scanner that can be used when you have a huge number of instances and schema to scan for migration assessment.

Usage: ora2pg_scanner -l CSVFILE [-o OUTDIR]

   -b | --binpath DIR: full path to directory where the ora2pg binary stays.
                Might be useful only on Windows OS.
   -c | --config FILE: set custom configuration file to use otherwise ora2pg
                will use the default: /etc/ora2pg/ora2pg.conf.
   -l | --list FILE : CSV file containing a list of databases to scan with
                all required information. The first line of the file
                can contain the following header that describes the
                format that must be used:

                "type","schema/database","dsn","user","password"

   -o | --outdir DIR : (optional) by default all reports will be dumped to a
                directory named 'output', it will be created automatically.
                If you want to change the name of this directory, set the name
                at second argument.

   -t | --test : just try all connections by retrieving the required schema
                 or database name. Useful to validate your CSV list file.
   -u | --unit MIN : redefine globally the migration cost unit value in minutes.
                 Default is taken from the ora2pg.conf (default 5 minutes).

   Here is a full example of a CSV databases list file:

        "type","schema/database","dsn","user","password"
        "MYSQL","sakila","dbi:mysql:host=192.168.1.10;database=sakila;port=3306","root","secret"
        "ORACLE","HR","dbi:Oracle:host=192.168.1.10;sid=XE;port=1521","system","manager"
        "MSSQL","HR","dbi:ODBC:driver=msodbcsql18;server=srv.database.windows.net;database=testdb","system","manager"

   The CSV field separator must be a comma.

   Note that if you want to scan all schemas from an Oracle instance you just
   have to leave the schema field empty, Ora2Pg will automatically detect all
   available schemas and generate a report for each one. Of course you need to
   use a connection user with enough privileges to be able to scan all schemas.
   For example:

        "ORACLE","","dbi:Oracle:host=192.168.1.10;sid=XE;port=1521","system","manager"
        "MSSQL","","dbi:ODBC:driver=msodbcsql18;server=srv.database.windows.net;database=testdb","usrname","passwd"

   will generate a report for all schema in the XE instance. Note that in this
   case the SCHEMA directive in ora2pg.conf must not be set.

It will generate a CSV file with the assessment result, one line per
schema or database and a detailed HTML report for each database scanned.

Hint: Use the -t | --test option before to test all your connections in
your CSV file.

For Windows users you must use the -b command line option to set the
directory where ora2pg_scanner stays otherwise the ora2pg command calls
will fail.

In the migration assessment details about functions Ora2Pg always
include per default 2 migration units for TEST and 1 unit for SIZE per
1000 characters in the code. This mean that by default it will add 15
minutes in the migration assessment per function. Obviously if you have
unitary tests or very simple functions this will not represent the real
migration time.

Migration assessment method Migration unit scores given to each type of Oracle database object are defined in the Perl library lib/Ora2Pg/PLSQL.pm in the %OBJECT_SCORE variable definition.

The number of PL/SQL lines associated to a migration unit is also
defined in this file in the $SIZE_SCORE variable value.

The number of migration units associated to each PL/SQL code
difficulties can be found in the same Perl library lib/Ora2Pg/PLSQL.pm
in the hash %UNCOVERED_SCORE initialization.

This assessment method is a work in progress so I'm expecting feedbacks
on migration experiences to polish the scores/units attributed in those
variables.

Improving indexes and constraints creation speed Using the LOAD export type and a file containing SQL orders to perform, it is possible to dispatch those orders over multiple PostgreSQL connections. To be able to use this feature, the PG_DSN, PG_USER and PG_PWD must be set. Then:

        ora2pg -t LOAD -c config/ora2pg.conf -i schema/tables/INDEXES_table.sql -j 4

will dispatch indexes creation over 4 simultaneous PostgreSQL
connections.

This will considerably accelerate this part of the migration process
with huge data size.

Exporting LONG RAW If you still have columns defined as LONG RAW, Ora2Pg will not be able to export these kind of data. The OCI library fail to export them and always return the same first record. To be able to export the data you need to transform the field as BLOB by creating a temporary table before migrating data. For example, the Oracle table:

        SQL> DESC TEST_LONGRAW
         Name                 NULL ?   Type
         -------------------- -------- ----------------------------
         ID                            NUMBER
         C1                            LONG RAW

need to be "translated" into a table using BLOB as follow:

        CREATE TABLE test_blob (id NUMBER, c1 BLOB);

And then copy the data with the following INSERT query:

        INSERT INTO test_blob SELECT id, to_lob(c1) FROM test_longraw;

Then you just have to exclude the original table from the export (see
EXCLUDE directive) and to renamed the new temporary table on the fly
using the REPLACE_TABLES configuration directive.

Global variables Oracle allow the use of global variables defined in packages. Ora2Pg will export these variables for PostgreSQL as user defined custom variables available in a session. Oracle variables assignment are exported as call to:

    PERFORM set_config('pkgname.varname', value, false);

Use of these variables in the code is replaced by:

    current_setting('pkgname.varname')::global_variables_type;

where global_variables_type is the type of the variable extracted from
the package definition.

If the variable is a constant or have a default value assigned at
declaration, Ora2Pg will create a file global_variables.conf with the
definition to include in the postgresql.conf file so that their values
will already be set at database connection. Note that the value can
always modified by the user so you can not have exactly a constant.

Hints Converting your queries with Oracle style outer join (+) syntax to ANSI standard SQL at the Oracle side can save you lot of time for the migration. You can use TOAD Query Builder can re-write these using the proper ANSI syntax, see: http://www.toadworld.com/products/toad-for-oracle/f/10/t/9518.aspx

There's also an alternative with SQL Developer Data Modeler, see
http://www.thatjeffsmith.com/archive/2012/01/sql-developer-data-modeler-
quick-tip-use-oracle-join-syntax-or-ansi/

Toad is also able to rewrite the native Oracle DECODE() syntax into ANSI
standard SQL CASE statement. You can find some slide about this in a
presentation given at PgConf.RU:
http://ora2pg.darold.net/slides/ora2pg_the_hard_way.pdf

Test the migration The type of action called TEST allow you to check that all objects from Oracle database have been created under PostgreSQL. Of course PG_DSN must be set to be able to check PostgreSQL side.

Note that this feature respect the schema name limitation if
EXPORT_SCHEMA and SCHEMA or PG_SCHEMA are defined. If only EXPORT_SCHEMA
is set all schemes from Oracle and PostgreSQL are scanned. You can
filter to a single schema using SCHEMA and/or PG_SCHEMA but you can not
filter on a list of schema. To test a list of schema you will have to
repeat the calls to Ora2Pg by specifying a single schema each time.

For example command:

        ora2pg -t TEST -c config/ora2pg.conf > migration_diff.txt

Will create a file containing the report of all object and row count on
both side, Oracle and PostgreSQL, with an error section giving you the
detail of the differences for each kind of object. Here is a sample
result:

        [TEST INDEXES COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:2
        POSTGRES:departments:1
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:6
        POSTGRES:employees:6
        [ERRORS INDEXES COUNT]
        Table departments doesn't have the same number of indexes in Oracle (2) and in PostgreSQL (1).

        [TEST UNIQUE CONSTRAINTS COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:1
        POSTGRES:departments:1
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:1
        POSTGRES:employees:1
        [ERRORS UNIQUE CONSTRAINTS COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of unique constraints.

        [TEST PRIMARY KEYS COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:1
        POSTGRES:departments:1
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:1
        POSTGRES:employees:1
        [ERRORS PRIMARY KEYS COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of primary keys.

        [TEST CHECK CONSTRAINTS COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:1
        POSTGRES:departments:1
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:1
        POSTGRES:employees:1
        [ERRORS CHECK CONSTRAINTS COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of check constraints.

        [TEST NOT NULL CONSTRAINTS COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:1
        POSTGRES:departments:1
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:1
        POSTGRES:employees:1
        [ERRORS NOT NULL CONSTRAINTS COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of not null constraints.

        [TEST COLUMN DEFAULT VALUE COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:1
        POSTGRES:departments:1
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:1
        POSTGRES:employees:1
        [ERRORS COLUMN DEFAULT VALUE COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of column default value.

        [TEST IDENTITY COLUMN COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:1
        POSTGRES:departments:1
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:0
        POSTGRES:employees:0
        [ERRORS IDENTITY COLUMN COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of identity column.

        [TEST FOREIGN KEYS COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:0
        POSTGRES:departments:0
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:1
        POSTGRES:employees:1
        [ERRORS FOREIGN KEYS COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of foreign keys.

        [TEST TABLE COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:TABLE:2
        POSTGRES:TABLE:2
        [ERRORS TABLE COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of TABLE.

        [TEST TABLE TRIGGERS COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:0
        POSTGRES:departments:0
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:1
        POSTGRES:employees:1
        [ERRORS TABLE TRIGGERS COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of table triggers.

        [TEST TRIGGER COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:TRIGGER:2
        POSTGRES:TRIGGER:2
        [ERRORS TRIGGER COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of TRIGGER.

        [TEST VIEW COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:VIEW:1
        POSTGRES:VIEW:1
        [ERRORS VIEW COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of VIEW.

        [TEST MVIEW COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:MVIEW:0
        POSTGRES:MVIEW:0
        [ERRORS MVIEW COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of MVIEW.

        [TEST SEQUENCE COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:SEQUENCE:1
        POSTGRES:SEQUENCE:0
        [ERRORS SEQUENCE COUNT]
        SEQUENCE does not have the same count in Oracle (1) and in PostgreSQL (0).

        [TEST TYPE COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:TYPE:1
        POSTGRES:TYPE:0
        [ERRORS TYPE COUNT]
        TYPE does not have the same count in Oracle (1) and in PostgreSQL (0).

        [TEST FDW COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:FDW:0
        POSTGRES:FDW:0
        [ERRORS FDW COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of FDW.

        [TEST FUNCTION COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:FUNCTION:3
        POSTGRES:FUNCTION:3
        [ERRORS FUNCTION COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of functions.

        [TEST SEQUENCE VALUES]
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES_NUM_SEQ:1285
        POSTGRES:employees_num_seq:1285
        [ERRORS SEQUENCE VALUES COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same values for sequences

        [TEST ROWS COUNT]
        ORACLEDB:DEPARTMENTS:27
        POSTGRES:departments:27
        ORACLEDB:EMPLOYEES:854
        POSTGRES:employees:854
        [ERRORS ROWS COUNT]
        OK, Oracle and PostgreSQL have the same number of rows.

Data validation Data validation consists in comparing data retrieved from a foreign table pointing to the source Oracle table and a local PostgreSQL table resulting from the data export.

To run data validation you can use a direct connection like any other
Ora2Pg action but you can also use the oracle_fdw, mysql_fdw ior tds_fdw
extension provided that FDW_SERVER and PG_DSN configuration directives
are set.

By default Ora2Pg will extract the 10000 first rows from both side, you
can change this value using directive DATA_VALIDATION_ROWS. When it is
set to zero all rows of the tables will be compared.

Data validation requires that the table has a primary key or unique
index and that the key columns is not a LOB. Rows will be sorted using
this unique key. Due to differences in sort behavior between Oracle and
PostgreSQL, if the collation of unique key columns in PostgreSQL is not
'C', the sort order can be different compared to Oracle. In this case
the data validation will fail.

Data validation must be done before any data is modified.

Ora2Pg will stop comparing two tables after DATA_VALIDATION_ROWS is
reached or that 10 errors has been encountered, result is dumped in a
file named "data_validation.log" written in the current directory by
default. The number of error before stopping the diff between rows can
be controlled using the configuration directive DATA_VALIDATION_ERROR.
All rows in errors are printed to the output file for your analyze.

It is possible to parallelize data validation by using -P option or the
corresponding configuration directive PARALLEL_TABLES in ora2pg.conf.

Use of System Change Number (SCN) Ora2Pg is able to export data as of a specific SCN. You can set it at command line using the -S or --scn option. You can give a specific SCN or if you want to use the current SCN at first connection time set the value to 'current'. In this last case the connection user has the "SELECT ANY DICTIONARY" or the "SELECT_CATALOG_ROLE" role, the current SCN is looked at the v$database view.

Example of use:

    ora2pg -c ora2pg.conf -t COPY --scn 16605281

This adds the following clause to the query used to retrieve data for
example:

    AS OF SCN 16605281

You can also use th --scn option to use the Oracle flashback capabality
by specifying a timestamp expression instead of a SCN. For example:

    ora2pg -c ora2pg.conf -t COPY --scn "TO_TIMESTAMP('2021-12-01 00:00:00', 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MI:SS')"

This will add the following clause to the query used to retrieve data:

    AS OF TIMESTAMP TO_TIMESTAMP('2021-12-01 00:00:00', 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MI:SS')

or for example to only retrive yesterday's data:

    ora2pg -c ora2pg.conf -t COPY --scn "SYSDATE - 1"

Change Data Capture (CDC) Ora2Pg do not have such feature which allow to import data and to only apply changes after the first import. But you can use the --cdc_ready option to export data with registration of the SCN at the time of the table export. All SCN per tables are written to a file named TABLES_SCN.log by default, it can be changed using -C | --cdc_file option.

These SCN registered per table during COPY or INSERT export can be used
with a CDC tool. The format of the file is tablename:SCN per line.

Importing BLOB as large objects By default Ora2Pg imports Oracle BLOB as bytea, the destination column is created using the bytea data type. If you want to use large object instead of bytea, just add the --blob_to_lo option to the ora2pg command. It will create the destination column as data type Oid and will save the BLOB as a large object using the lo_from_bytea() function. The Oid returned by the call to lo_from_bytea() is inserted in the destination column instead of a bytea. Because of the use of the function this option can only be used with actions SHOW_COLUMN, TABLE and INSERT. Action COPY is not allowed.

If you want to use COPY or have huge size BLOB ( > 1GB) than can not be
imported using lo_from_bytea() you can add option --lo_import to the
ora2pg command. This will allow to import data in two passes.

1) Export data using COPY or INSERT will set the Oid destination column
for BLOB to value 0 and save the BLOB value into a dedicated file. It
will also create a Shell script to import the BLOB files into the
database using psql command \lo_import and to update the table Oid
column to the returned large object Oid. The script is named
lo_import-TABLENAME.sh

2) Execute all scripts lo_import-TABLENAME.sh after setting the
environment variables PGDATABASE and optionally PGHOST, PGPORT, PGUSER,
etc. if they do not correspond to the default values for libpq.

You might also execute manually a VACUUM FULL on the table to remove the
bloat created by the table update.

Limitation: the table must have a primary key, it is used to set the
WHERE clause to update the Oid column after the large object import.
Importing BLOB using this second method (--lo_import) is very slow so it
should be reserved to rows where the BLOB > 1GB for all other rows use
the option --blob_to_lo. To filter the rows you can use the WHERE
configuration directive in ora2pg.conf.

SUPPORT Author / Maintainer Gilles Darold

Please report any bugs, patches, help, etc. to <gilles AT darold DOT
net>.

Feature request If you need new features let me know at . This help a lot to develop a better/useful tool.

How to contribute ? Any contribution to build a better tool is welcome, you just have to send me your ideas, features request or patches and there will be applied.

LICENSE Copyright (c) 2000-2024 Gilles Darold - All rights reserved.

        This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
        it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
        the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
        any later version.

        This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
        but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
        MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
        GNU General Public License for more details.

        You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
        along with this program.  If not, see < http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ >.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I must thanks a lot all the great contributors, see changelog for all acknowledgments.