DESCRIPTION

db.in.ogr imports attribute tables in various formats as supported by the OGR library on the local system (DBF, CSV, PostgreSQL, SQLite, MySQL, ODBC, etc.). Optionally a unique key (ID) column can be added to the table.

EXAMPLES

Import CSV file

Limited type recognition can be done for Integer, Real, String, Date, Time and DateTime columns through a descriptive file with same name as the CSV file, but .csvt extension (see details here).
# NOTE: create koeppen_gridcode.csvt first for automated type recognition
db.in.ogr input=koeppen_gridcode.csv output=koeppen_gridcode
db.select table=koeppen_gridcode

Import DBF table

Import of a DBF table with additional unique key column (e.g., needed for v.in.db).
db.in.ogr input=/path/to/mydata.dbf output=census_raleigh key=myid
db.describe -c census_raleigh

Import of a SQLite table

db.in.ogr input=/path/to/sqlite.db db_table=census_raleigh output=census_raleigh

Import of a PostgreSQL table

# HINT: if the database contains spatial tables, but you want to import a non-spatial 
table, set the environmental variable PG_LIST_ALL_TABLES to YES before importing

db.in.ogr input="PG:host=localhost dbname=ecad user=neteler" \
          db_table=ecad_verona_tmean output=ecad_verona_tmean
db.select table=ecad_verona_tmean
db.describe -c ecad_verona_tmean

Import XLS file

To force reading headers, define environmental variable OGR_XLS_HEADERS='FORCE'. Parameter db_table refers to the list within XLS file.
export OGR_XLS_HEADERS='FORCE'
db.in.ogr input=address.xls db_table=address_data

SEE ALSO

db.select, v.in.ogr, v.in.db

GRASS SQL interface

AUTHOR

Markus Neteler

Last changed: $Date$