Overview of data loading methods v16
As with Oracle SQL*Loader, EDB*Loader supports three data loading methods:
Conventional path load — Conventional path load is the default method used by EDB*Loader. Use basic insert processing to add rows to the table. The advantage of a conventional path load is that table constraints and database objects defined on the table are enforced during a conventional path load. Table constraints and database objects include primary keys, not null constraints, check constraints, unique indexes, foreign key constraints, triggers, and so on. One exception is that the EDB Postgres Advanced Server rules defined on the table aren't enforced. EDB*Loader can load tables on which rules are defined. However, the rules aren't executed. As a consequence, you can't load partitioned tables implemented using rules with EDB*Loader. See Conventional path load.
Direct path load — A direct path load is faster than a conventional path load but requires removing most types of constraints and triggers from the table. See Direct path load.
Parallel direct path load — A parallel direct path load provides even greater performance improvement by permitting multiple EDB*Loader sessions to run simultaneously to load a single table. See Parallel direct path load.
Note
Create EDB Postgres Advanced Server rules using the CREATE RULE
command. EDB Postgres Advanced Server rules aren't the same database objects as rules and rule sets used in Oracle.