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298 lines
8.9 KiB
Go
298 lines
8.9 KiB
Go
// Copyright 2015 Google Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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//
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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// You may obtain a copy of the License at
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//
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// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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//
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// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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// limitations under the License.
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/*
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Package bigquery provides a client for the BigQuery service.
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Note: This package is in beta. Some backwards-incompatible changes may occur.
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The following assumes a basic familiarity with BigQuery concepts.
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See https://cloud.google.com/bigquery/docs.
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Creating a Client
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To start working with this package, create a client:
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ctx := context.Background()
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client, err := bigquery.NewClient(ctx, projectID)
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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Querying
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To query existing tables, create a Query and call its Read method:
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q := client.Query(`
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SELECT year, SUM(number) as num
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FROM [bigquery-public-data:usa_names.usa_1910_2013]
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WHERE name = "William"
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GROUP BY year
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ORDER BY year
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`)
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it, err := q.Read(ctx)
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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Then iterate through the resulting rows. You can store a row using
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anything that implements the ValueLoader interface, or with a slice or map of bigquery.Value.
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A slice is simplest:
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for {
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var values []bigquery.Value
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err := it.Next(&values)
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if err == iterator.Done {
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break
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}
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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fmt.Println(values)
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}
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You can also use a struct whose exported fields match the query:
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type Count struct {
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Year int
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Num int
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}
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for {
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var c Count
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err := it.Next(&c)
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if err == iterator.Done {
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break
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}
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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fmt.Println(c)
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}
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You can also start the query running and get the results later.
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Create the query as above, but call Run instead of Read. This returns a Job,
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which represents an asychronous operation.
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job, err := q.Run(ctx)
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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Get the job's ID, a printable string. You can save this string to retrieve
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the results at a later time, even in another process.
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jobID := job.ID()
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fmt.Printf("The job ID is %s\n", jobID)
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To retrieve the job's results from the ID, first look up the Job:
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job, err = client.JobFromID(ctx, jobID)
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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Use the Job.Read method to obtain an iterator, and loop over the rows.
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Query.Read is just a convenience method that combines Query.Run and Job.Read.
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it, err = job.Read(ctx)
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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// Proceed with iteration as above.
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Datasets and Tables
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You can refer to datasets in the client's project with the Dataset method, and
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in other projects with the DatasetInProject method:
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myDataset := client.Dataset("my_dataset")
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yourDataset := client.DatasetInProject("your-project-id", "your_dataset")
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These methods create references to datasets, not the datasets themselves. You can have
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a dataset reference even if the dataset doesn't exist yet. Use Dataset.Create to
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create a dataset from a reference:
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if err := myDataset.Create(ctx, nil); err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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You can refer to tables with Dataset.Table. Like bigquery.Dataset, bigquery.Table is a reference
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to an object in BigQuery that may or may not exist.
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table := myDataset.Table("my_table")
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You can create, delete and update the metadata of tables with methods on Table.
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For instance, you could create a temporary table with:
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err = myDataset.Table("temp").Create(ctx, &bigquery.TableMetadata{
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ExpirationTime: time.Now().Add(1*time.Hour)})
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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We'll see how to create a table with a schema in the next section.
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Schemas
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There are two ways to construct schemas with this package.
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You can build a schema by hand, like so:
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schema1 := bigquery.Schema{
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&bigquery.FieldSchema{Name: "Name", Required: true, Type: bigquery.StringFieldType},
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&bigquery.FieldSchema{Name: "Grades", Repeated: true, Type: bigquery.IntegerFieldType},
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}
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Or you can infer the schema from a struct:
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type student struct {
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Name string
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Grades []int
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}
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schema2, err := bigquery.InferSchema(student{})
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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// schema1 and schema2 are identical.
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Struct inference supports tags like those of the encoding/json package,
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so you can change names, ignore fields, or mark a field as nullable (non-required):
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type student2 struct {
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Name string `bigquery:"full_name"`
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Grades []int
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Secret string `bigquery:"-"`
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Optional int `bigquery:",nullable"
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}
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schema3, err := bigquery.InferSchema(student2{})
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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// schema3 has required fields "full_name", "Grade" and nullable field "Optional".
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Having constructed a schema, you can create a table with it like so:
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if err := table.Create(ctx, &bigquery.TableMetadata{Schema: schema1}); err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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Copying
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You can copy one or more tables to another table. Begin by constructing a Copier
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describing the copy. Then set any desired copy options, and finally call Run to get a Job:
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copier := myDataset.Table("dest").CopierFrom(myDataset.Table("src"))
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copier.WriteDisposition = bigquery.WriteTruncate
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job, err = copier.Run(ctx)
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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You can chain the call to Run if you don't want to set options:
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job, err = myDataset.Table("dest").CopierFrom(myDataset.Table("src")).Run(ctx)
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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You can wait for your job to complete:
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status, err := job.Wait(ctx)
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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Job.Wait polls with exponential backoff. You can also poll yourself, if you
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wish:
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for {
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status, err := job.Status(ctx)
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if err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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if status.Done() {
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if status.Err() != nil {
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log.Fatalf("Job failed with error %v", status.Err())
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}
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break
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}
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time.Sleep(pollInterval)
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}
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Loading and Uploading
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There are two ways to populate a table with this package: load the data from a Google Cloud Storage
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object, or upload rows directly from your program.
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For loading, first create a GCSReference, configuring it if desired. Then make a Loader, optionally configure
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it as well, and call its Run method.
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gcsRef := bigquery.NewGCSReference("gs://my-bucket/my-object")
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gcsRef.AllowJaggedRows = true
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loader := myDataset.Table("dest").LoaderFrom(gcsRef)
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loader.CreateDisposition = bigquery.CreateNever
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job, err = loader.Run(ctx)
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// Poll the job for completion if desired, as above.
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To upload, first define a type that implements the ValueSaver interface, which has a single method named Save.
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Then create an Uploader, and call its Put method with a slice of values.
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u := table.Uploader()
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// Item implements the ValueSaver interface.
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items := []*Item{
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{Name: "n1", Size: 32.6, Count: 7},
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{Name: "n2", Size: 4, Count: 2},
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{Name: "n3", Size: 101.5, Count: 1},
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}
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if err := u.Put(ctx, items); err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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You can also upload a struct that doesn't implement ValueSaver. Use the StructSaver type
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to specify the schema and insert ID by hand, or just supply the struct or struct pointer
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directly and the schema will be inferred:
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type Item2 struct {
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Name string
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Size float64
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Count int
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}
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// Item implements the ValueSaver interface.
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items2 := []*Item2{
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{Name: "n1", Size: 32.6, Count: 7},
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{Name: "n2", Size: 4, Count: 2},
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{Name: "n3", Size: 101.5, Count: 1},
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}
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if err := u.Put(ctx, items2); err != nil {
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// TODO: Handle error.
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}
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Extracting
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If you've been following so far, extracting data from a BigQuery table
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into a Google Cloud Storage object will feel familiar. First create an
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Extractor, then optionally configure it, and lastly call its Run method.
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extractor := table.ExtractorTo(gcsRef)
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extractor.DisableHeader = true
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job, err = extractor.Run(ctx)
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// Poll the job for completion if desired, as above.
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Authentication
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See examples of authorization and authentication at
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https://godoc.org/cloud.google.com/go#pkg-examples.
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*/
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package bigquery // import "cloud.google.com/go/bigquery"
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