Introduction
Programmers usually need to transfer production data for testing or analyzing. The simplest way to copy lots of data from any resources to SQL Server is BulkCopying. .NET Framework 2.0 contains a class in ADO.NET "System.Data.SqlClient" namespace: SqlBulkCopy. The bulk copy operation usually has two separated phases.
In the first phase you get the source data. The source could be various data platforms such as Access, Excel, SQL.. You must get the source data in your code wrapping it in a DataTable, or any DataReader class which implements IDataReader. After that, in the second phase, you must connect the target SQL Database and perform the bulk copy operation.
The bulk copy operation in .Net is a very fast way to copy large amount of data somewhere to SQL Server. The reason for that is the Bulkcopy Sql Server mechanism. Inserting all data row by row, one after the other is a very time and system resources consuming. But the bulkcopy mechanism process all data at once. So the data inserting becomes very fast.
Solution walkthrough
While you are programming for bulk copy, first open a connection for the source data. In this sample we are connecting a SQL Server named SQLProduction. We are using SqlConnectionStringBuilder to build our connection string.
SqlConnectionStringBuilder cb = new SqlConnectionStringBuilder();
cb.DataSource = "SQLProduction";
cb.InitialCatalog = "Sales";
cb.IntegratedSecurity = true;
SqlConnection cnn = new SqlConnection(cb.ConnectionString);
Then we are retrieving data from the source with SqlCommand and SqlDataReader classes.
SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand("SELECT * FROM PendingOrders",cnn);
cnn.Open();
SqlDataReader rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader();
Now we have a data in rdr variable. It's time to initialize a SqlBulkCopy object and copy the data. The SqlBulkCopy class needs a connection to copy data into a Sql server. You can establish a second connection explicitly or the class will do it for you. We are using the second alternative with creating a SqlBulkCopy object. We are passing a connection string as a parameter in constructor method.
SqlBulkCopy sbc = new SqlBulkCopy("server=.;database=ProductionTest;" +<BR> "Integrated Security=SSPI");
OK. The sbc object is ready to copy. Now you must tell the object the destination table name, start the copying process calling WriteToServer method and pass the method the SqlDataReader variable rdr as parameter.
sbc.DestinationTableName = "Temp";
sbc.WriteToServer(rdr);
At the end, close all SqlConnection, SqlDataReader and SqlBulkCopy objects.
sbc.Close();
rdr.Close();
cnn.Close();
That's all. Just a few lines and in a few seconds...
SqlConnectionStringBuilder cb = new SqlConnectionStringBuilder();
cb.DataSource = "SQLProduction";
cb.InitialCatalog = "Sales";
cb.IntegratedSecurity = true;
SqlConnection cnn = new SqlConnection(cb.ConnectionString);
SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand("SELECT * FROM PendingOrders",cnn);
cnn.Open();
SqlDataReader rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader();
SqlBulkCopy sbc = new SqlBulkCopy("server=.;database=ProductionTest;" +<BR> "Integrated Security=SSPI");
sbc.DestinationTableName = "Temp";
sbc.WriteToServer(rdr);
sbc.Close();
rdr.Close();
cnn.Close();