I have a PostgreSQL database that I want to move to SQL Server -- both schema and data. I am poor so I don't want to pay any money. I am also lazy, so I don't want to do very much work. Currently I'm doing this table by table, and there are about 100 tables to do. This is extremely tedious.
Is there some sort of trick that does what I want?
PostgreSQL, like many other relational databases, has added support for JSON data, the most common format for semi-structured data stored in NoSQL systems. But because SQL is the only way to interact with a PostgreSQL database, it should not be considered NoSQL.
From the above comparisons, PostgreSQL trumps SQL Server in several scenarios. Not only is it open-source and free, but it also has several features that are easily available and can be implemented automatically, unlike Microsoft SQL Server. Moreover, PostgreSQL has a more suitable concurrency management system.
You should be able to find some useful information in the accepted answer in this Serverfault page: https://serverfault.com/questions/65407/best-tool-to-migrate-a-postgresql-database-to-ms-sql-2005.
If you can get the schema converted without the data, you may be able to shorten the steps for the data by using this command:
pg_dump --data-only --column-inserts your_db_name > data_load_script.sql
This load will be quite slow, but the --column-inserts
option generates the most generic INSERT statements possible for each row of data and should be compatible.
EDIT: Suggestions on converting the schema follows:
I would start by dumping the schema, but removing anything that has to do with ownership or permissions. This should be enough:
pg_dump --schema-only --no-owner --no-privileges your_db_name > schema_create_script.sql
Edit this file to add the line BEGIN TRANSACTION;
to the beginning and ROLLBACK TRANSACTION;
to the end. Now you can load it and run it in a query window in SQL Server. If you get any errors, make sure you go to the bottom of the file, highlight the ROLLBACK statement and run it (by hitting F5 while the statement is highlighted).
Basically, you have to resolve each error until the script runs through cleanly. Then you can change the ROLLBACK TRANSACTION
to COMMIT TRANSACTION
and run one final time.
Unfortunately, I cannot help with which errors you may see as I have never gone from PostgreSQL to SQL Server, only the other way around. Some things that I would expect to be an issue, however (obviously, NOT an exhaustive list):
NOT NULL INTEGER
field to a SEQUENCE
using a DEFAULT
. In SQL Server, this is an IDENTITY
column, but they're not exactly the same thing. I'm not sure if they are equivalent, but if your original schema is full of "id" fields, you may be in for some trouble. I don't know if SQL Server has CREATE SEQUENCE
, so you may have to remove those.CREATE FUNCTION
statements and translate the algorithms manually.pg_dump
has an option --encoding=
that will let you set a specific encoding. I seem to recall that Windows tends to use two-byte, UTF-16 encoding for Unicode where PostgreSQL uses UTF-8. I had some issue going from SQL Server to PostgreSQL due to UTF-16 output so it would be worth researching.TEXT
is simply a VARCHAR
without a max length. In SQL Server, TEXT
is... complicated (and deprecated). Each field in your original schema that are declared as TEXT
will need to be reviewed for an appropriate SQL Server data type.UNICODE
data. I'm not familiar enough with it to make suggestions. I'm just pointing out that it may be an issue.If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
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