Loading XML Data
You can transfer XML data from SQL Server 2000 to SQL Server 2005 or SQL Server 2008 in several ways. For example:
If you have your data in an [n]text or image column in a SQL Server 2000 database, you can import the table into a later version database by using Integration Services. Change the column type to XML by using the ALTER TABLE statement.
You can bulk copy your data from SQL Server 2000 by using bcp out, and then bulk insert the data into the later version database by using bcp in.
If you have data in relational columns in a SQL Server 2000 database, create a new table with an [n]text column and, optionally, a primary key column for a row identifier. Use client-side programming to retrieve the XML that is generated at the server with FOR XML and write it into the [n]text column. Then, use the previously mentioned techniques to transfer data to a later version database. You can choose to write the XML into an XML column in the later version database directly.
Bulk loading XML data
You can bulk load XML data into the server by using the bulk loading capabilities of SQL Server, such as bcp. OPENROWSET allows you to load data into an XML column from files. The following example illustrates this point.
Example: Loading XML from Files
This example shows how to insert a row in table T. The value of the XML column is loaded from file C:\MyFile\xmlfile.xml as CLOB, and the integer column is supplied the value 10.
INSERT INTO T
SELECT 10, xCol
FROM (SELECT *
FROM OPENROWSET (BULK 'C:\MyFile\xmlfile.xml', SINGLE_CLOB)
AS xCol) AS R(xCol)
Text Encoding
SQL Server stores XML data in Unicode (UTF-16). XML data retrieved from the server comes out in UTF-16 encoding. If you want a different encoding, you have to perform the required conversion on the retrieved data. Sometimes, the XML data may be in a different encoding. If it is, you have to use care during data loading. For example:
If your text XML is in Unicode (UCS-2, UTF-16), you can assign it to an XML column, variable, or parameter without any problems.
If the encoding is not Unicode and is implicit, because of the source code page, the string code page in the database should be the same as or compatible with the code points that you want to load. If required, use COLLATE. If no such server code page exists, you have to add an explicit XML declaration with the correct encoding.
To use an explicit encoding, use either the varbinary() type, which has no interaction with code pages, or use a string type of the appropriate code page. Then, assign the data to an XML column, variable, or parameter.
Example: Explicitly Specifying an Encoding
Assume that you have an XML document, vcdoc, stored as varchar(max) that does not have an explicit XML declaration. The following statement adds an XML declaration with the encoding "iso8859-1", concatenates the XML document, casts the result to varbinary(max) so that the byte representation is preserved, and then finally casts it to XML. This enables the XML processor to parse the data according to the specified encoding "iso8859-1" and generate the corresponding UTF-16 representation for string values.
SELECT CAST(
CAST (('<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso8859-1"?>'+ vcdoc) AS VARBINARY (MAX))
AS XML)
String Encoding Incompatibilities
If you copy and paste XML as a string literal into the Query Editor window in SQL Server Management Studio, you might experience [N]VARCHAR string encoding incompatibilities. This will depend on the encoding of your XML instance. In many cases, you may want to remove the XML declaration. For example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<xsd:schema …
You should then include an N to make the XML instance an instance of Unicode. For example:
-- Assign XML instance to a variable.
DECLARE @X XML
SET @X = N'…'
-- Insert XML instance into an xml type column.
INSERT INTO T VALUES (N'…')
-- Create an XML schema collection
CREATE XML SCHEMA COLLECTION XMLCOLL1 AS N'<xsd:schema … '