oradelete – Deleting all records
Purpose
oradelete prints the delete statements for all tables in an Oracle database schema in the correct order (i.e. records will be deleted so that no errors happen during script execution). oradelete can also be used to actually make all tables empty.
Options
oradelete supports the following options:
- -v <flag>, --verbose <flag>
Produces output (on stderr) while the database is read or written. (Valid flag values are
false,no,0,true,yesor1)
- -c <flag>, --color <flag>
Should the output (when the
-voption is used) be colored? Ifautois specified (the default) then the output is colored if stderr is a terminal. Valid modes areyes,noorauto.
- -s <flag>, --sequences <flag>
Should sequences be reset to their initial values? (Valid flag values are
false,no,0,true,yesor1)
- -x <flag>, --execute <flag>
When the
-xargument is given the SQL script isn’t printed on stdout, but is executed directly in the schema specified via theconnectstringoption. Be careful with this: You will have empty tables afteroradelete -x. (Valid flag values arefalse,no,0,true,yesor1)
- -k <flag>, --keepjunk <flag>
If false (the default), database objects that have
$orSYS_EXPORT_SCHEMA_in their name will be skipped (otherwise these objects will be included in the output). (Valid flag values arefalse,no,0,true,yesor1)
- -i <flag>, --ignore <flag>
If true, any exception that occurs while the database is read or written will be ignored. (Valid flag values are
false,no,0,true,yesor1)
- -t <flag>, --truncate <flag>
If given the script uses the
TRUNCATEcommand instead of theDELETEcommand. (Valid flag values arefalse,no,0,true,yesor1)
- --format <format>
If
--executeis not given, this determines the output format: Plain SQL (formatsql), or PySQL (formatpysql) which can be piped intoll.pysql.