ArangoDB v3.13 is under development and not released yet. This documentation is not final and potentially incomplete.
arangoimport Details
The most convenient method to import a lot of data into ArangoDB is to use the arangoimport command-line tool
The most convenient method to import a lot of data into ArangoDB is to use the arangoimport command-line tool. It allows you to bulk import data records from a file into a database collection. Multiple files can be imported into the same or different collections by invoking it multiple times.
Import files are expected to be UTF-8 encoded without byte order mark (BOM) . Other encodings are not supported, but may not raise warnings or errors.
In case of CSV/TSV files, BOMs become part of the first column’s name (possibly mangled), so be sure the files have none.
Importing into an Edge Collection
arangoimport can also be used to import data into an existing edge collection.
The import data must, for each edge to import, contain at least the _from
and
_to
attributes. These indicate which other two documents the edge should connect.
It is necessary that these attributes are set for all records, and point to
valid document IDs in existing collections.
Example
{ "_from" : "users/1234", "_to" : "users/4321", "desc" : "1234 is connected to 4321" }
Note: The edge collection must already exist when the import is started. Using
the --create-collection
flag does not work because arangoimport always tries to
create a regular document collection if the target collection does not exist.
Attribute Naming and Special Attributes
Attributes whose names start with an underscore are treated in a special way by ArangoDB:
- the optional
_key
attribute contains the document’s key. If specified, the value must be formally valid (e.g. must be a string and conform to the naming restrictions
described in Document keys). Additionally, the key value must be unique within the collection the import is run for. _from
: when importing into an edge collection, this attribute contains the id of one of the documents connected by the edge. The value of_from
must be a syntactically valid document id and the referred collection must exist._to
: when importing into an edge collection, this attribute contains the id of the other document connected by the edge. The value of_to
must be a syntactically valid document id and the referred collection must exist._rev
: this attribute contains the revision number of a document. However, the revision numbers are managed by ArangoDB and cannot be specified on import. Thus any value in this attribute is ignored on import.
If you import values into _key
, you should make sure they are valid and unique.
When importing data into an edge collection, you should make sure that all import
documents can _from
and _to
and that their values point to existing documents.
To avoid specifying complete document ids (consisting of collection names and document
keys) for _from
and _to
values, there are the options --from-collection-prefix
and
--to-collection-prefix
. If specified, these values are automatically prepended
to each value in _from
(or _to
resp.). This allows specifying only document keys
inside _from
and/or _to
.
Example
arangoimport --from-collection-prefix users --to-collection-prefix products ...
Importing the following document creates an edge between users/1234
and
products/4321
:
{ "_from" : "1234", "_to" : "4321", "desc" : "users/1234 is connected to products/4321" }
Updating existing documents
By default, arangoimport tries to insert all documents from the import file into the
specified collection. In case the import file contains documents that are already present
in the target collection (matching is done via the _key
attributes), then a default
arangoimport run does not import these documents and complain about unique key constraint
violations.
However, arangoimport can be used to update or replace existing documents in case they
already exist in the target collection. It provides the command-line option --on-duplicate
to control the behavior in case a document is already present in the database.
The default value of --on-duplicate
is error
. This means that when the import file
contains a document that is present in the target collection already, then trying to
re-insert a document with the same _key
value is considered an error, and the document in
the database is not modified.
Other possible values for --on-duplicate
are:
update
: each document present in the import file that is also present in the target collection already is updated by arangoimport.update
performs a partial update of the existing document, modifying only the attributes that are present in the import file and leaving all other attributes untouched.The values of system attributes
_id
,_key
, and_rev
cannot be updated or replaced in existing documents.replace
: each document present in the import file that is already present in the target collection is replaced by arangoimport.replace
replaces the existing document entirely, resulting in a document with only the attributes specified in the import file.The values of system attributes
_id
,_key
, and_rev
cannot be updated or replaced in existing documents.ignore
: each document present in the import file that is also present in the target collection already is ignored and not modified in the target collection.
When --on-duplicate
is set to either update
or replace
, arangoimport returns the
number of documents updated/replaced in the updated
return value. When set to another
value, the value of updated
is always zero. When --on-duplicate
is set to ignore
,
arangoimport returns the number of ignored documents in the ignored
return value.
When set to another value, ignored
is always zero.
It is possible to perform a combination of inserts and updates/replaces with a single
arangoimport run. When --on-duplicate
is set to update
or replace
, all documents present
in the import file are inserted into the target collection provided they are valid
and do not already exist with the specified _key
. Documents that are already present
in the target collection (identified by _key
attribute) are instead updated/replaced.
Result output
An arangoimport import run prints out the final results on the command line. It shows the
- number of documents created (
created
) - number of documents updated/replaced (
updated/replaced
, only non-zero if--on-duplicate
was set toupdate
orreplace
, see below) - number of warnings or errors that occurred on the server side (
warnings/errors
) - number of ignored documents (only non-zero if
--on-duplicate
was set toignore
).
Example
created: 2
warnings/errors: 0
updated/replaced: 0
ignored: 0
For CSV and TSV imports, the total number of input file lines read is also printed
(lines read
).
arangoimport also prints out details about warnings and errors that happened on the server-side (if any).
Automatic pacing with busy or low throughput disk subsystems
arangoimport has an optional automatic pacing algorithm that can limit how fast data is sent to the ArangoDB servers. This pacing algorithm exists to prevent the import operation from failing due to slow responses.
Google Cloud and other VM providers limit the throughput of disk devices. Similarly, other users’ processes on the shared VMs can limit the available throughput of the disk devices.
The automatic pacing algorithm adjusts the transmit block size dynamically
based upon the actual throughput of the server over the last few seconds.
Automatic pacing intentionally may not use the full throughput of a
disk device. An unlimited (really fast) disk device might not need
pacing. Raising the number of threads via the --threads X
command
line to any value of X
greater than 2 increases the total
throughput used.
--threads X
parameter
together with the --on-duplicate
parameter set to ignore
, update
or replace
can
lead to a race condition, when there are duplicates e.g. multiple identical _key
values. Even ignoring the duplicates makes the result unpredictable, meaning
it is not possible to predict which versions of the documents are inserted.Automatic pacing frees the user from adjusting the throughput used to
match available resources. It is disabled by default, and can be enabled
by invoking arangoimport with the --auto-rate-limit true
parameter.
When enabling the pacing, the initial chunk size is 8MB per second. This
may be too high or too low, depending on the available disk throughput of
the target system. To start off with a different chunk size, one can
adjust the value of the --batch-size
parameter.