cockroach userfile upload

On this page Carat arrow pointing down
Warning:
CockroachDB v22.2 is no longer supported as of June 5, 2024. For more details, refer to the Release Support Policy.

The cockroach userfile upload command uploads a file to the user-scoped file storage using a SQL connection.

This command takes in a source file to upload and a destination filename. It will then use a SQL connection to upload the file to the destination.

Note:

A userfile uses storage space in the cluster, and is replicated with the rest of the cluster's data. We recommended using cockroach userfile upload for quick uploads from your client (about 15MB or smaller).

Tip:

If you would like to upload and import data from a dump file, consider using cockroach import instead.

Required privileges

The user must have the CREATE privilege on the target database. CockroachDB will proactively grant the user GRANT, SELECT, INSERT, DROP, DELETE on the metadata and file tables.

A user can only upload files to their own user-scoped storage, which is accessed through the userfile URI. CockroachDB will revoke all access from every other user in the cluster except users in the admin role.

Synopsis

Upload a file:

$ cockroach userfile upload <location/of/file> <destination/of/file> [flags]

Upload a directory recursively:

cockroach userfile upload --recursive <location/of/dir> <destination/of/file> [flags]
Note:

You must specify a source path.

View help:

$ cockroach userfile upload --help

File destination

Userfile operations are backed by two tables: files (which holds file metadata) and payload (which holds the file payloads). To reference these tables, you can:

  • Use the default URI: userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_$user/.
  • Provide a fully qualified userfile URI that specifies the database, schema, and table name prefix you want to use.

    • If you do not specify a destination URI/path, then CockroachDB will use the default URI scheme and host, and the basename from the source argument as the path. For example: userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/local
    • If the destination is a well-formed userfile URI (i.e., userfile://db.schema.tablename_prefix/path/to/file), then CockroachDB will use that as the final URI. For example: userfile://foo.bar.baz_root/destination/path
    • If destination is not a well-formed userfile URI, then CockroachDB will use the default userfile URI schema and host (userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_$user/), and the destination as the path. For example: userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/destination/path
Warning:

Userfile is not a filesystem and does not support filesystem semantics. The destination file path must be the same after normalization (i.e., if you pass any path that results in a different path after normalization, it will be rejected).

Note:

Files are uploaded with a .tmp suffix and are renamed once the userfile upload transaction has committed (i.e, the process ends gracefully). Therefore, if a file you believed had finished uploading has a .tmp suffix, then the upload should be retried.

Flags

Flag Description
--cert-principal-map A comma-separated list of <cert-principal>:<db-principal> mappings. This allows mapping the principal in a cert to a DB principal such as node or root or any SQL user. This is intended for use in situations where the certificate management system places restrictions on the Subject.CommonName or SubjectAlternateName fields in the certificate (e.g., disallowing a CommonName like node or root). If multiple mappings are provided for the same <cert-principal>, the last one specified in the list takes precedence. A principal not specified in the map is passed through as-is via the identity function. A cert is allowed to authenticate a DB principal if the DB principal name is contained in the mapped CommonName or DNS-type SubjectAlternateName fields.
--certs-dir The path to the certificate directory containing the CA and client certificates and client key.

Env Variable: COCKROACH_CERTS_DIR
Default: ${HOME}/.cockroach-certs/
--echo-sql Reveal the SQL statements sent implicitly by the command-line utility.
--url A connection URL to use instead of the other arguments.

Env Variable: COCKROACH_URL
Default: no URL
--user
-u
The SQL user that will own the client session.

Env Variable: COCKROACH_USER
Default: root
--recursive
-r
Upload a directory and its contents rooted at a specified directory recursively to user-scoped file storage. For example: cockroach userfile upload -r <location/of/file> <userfile destination/of/file>

See File Destination for detail on forming the destination URI and this usage example for working with the --recursive flag.

Examples

Upload a file

To upload a file to the default storage (userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_$user/):

icon/buttons/copy
$ cockroach userfile upload /Users/maxroach/Desktop/test-data.csv /test-data.csv --certs-dir=certs
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/test-data.csv

Also, a file can be uploaded to the default storage if the destination is not specified:

icon/buttons/copy
$ cockroach userfile upload /Users/maxroach/Desktop/test-data2.csv --certs-dir=certs
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/test-data2.csv

Then, you can use the file to IMPORT or IMPORT INTO data.

Upload a file to a specific directory

To upload a file to a specific destination, include the destination in the command:

icon/buttons/copy
$ cockroach userfile upload /Users/maxroach/Desktop/test-data.csv /test-upload/test-data.csv --cert-dir=certs
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/test-upload/test-data.csv

Then, you can use the file to IMPORT or IMPORT INTO data.

Upload a directory recursively

To upload the contents of a directory to userfile storage, specify a source directory and destination. For example, to upload a backup directory to userfile storage:

cockroach userfile upload -r /Users/maxroach/movr-backup userfile:///backup-data --certs-dir=certs
uploading: BACKUP-CHECKPOINT-698053706999726081-CHECKSUM
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/backup-data/movr-backup/BACKUP-CHECKPOINT-698053706999726081-CHECKSUM
uploading: BACKUP-CHECKPOINT-CHECKSUM
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/backup-data/movr-backup/BACKUP-CHECKPOINT-CHECKSUM
uploading: BACKUP-STATISTICS
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/backup-data/movr-backup/BACKUP-STATISTICS
uploading: BACKUP_MANIFEST
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/backup-data/movr-backup/BACKUP_MANIFEST
uploading: BACKUP_MANIFEST-CHECKSUM
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/backup-data/movr-backup/BACKUP_MANIFEST-CHECKSUM
uploading: data/698053715875692545.sst
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/backup-data/movr-backup/data/698053715875692545.sst
uploading: data/698053717178744833.sst
successfully uploaded to userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/backup-data/movr-backup/data/698053717178744833.sst
. . .

When the source directory does not have a trailing slash, the last element of the source path will be appended to the destination path. In this example the source path /Users/maxroach/movr-backup does not have a trailing slash, as a result movr-backup appends to the destination path—originally userfile:///backup-data—to become userfile://defaultdb.public.userfiles_root/backup-data/movr-backup/.

It is important to note that userfile is not a filesystem and does not support filesystem semantics. The destination file path must be the same after normalization (i.e., if you pass any path that results in a different path after normalization, it will be rejected).

See the file destination section for more detail on forming userfile URIs.

Upload a file to a non-default userfile URI

icon/buttons/copy
cockroach userfile upload /Users/maxroach/Desktop/test-data.csv userfile://testdb.public.uploads/test-data.csv
successfully uploaded to userfile://testdb.public.uploads/test-data.csv

See also


Yes No
On this page

Yes No