...
Option | Description |
---|---|
Step name | Name of the step.
|
Filename | Specify the name of the CSV file to read from. |
Delimiter | Specify the file delimiter character used in the target file. Special characters (e.g. CHAR HEX01) can be set with the format $[value], e.g. $[01] or $[6F,FF,00,1F]. |
Enclosure | Specify the enclosure character used in the target file. Special characters (e.g. CHAR HEX01) can be set with the format $[value], e.g. $[01] or $[6F,FF,00,1F]. |
NIO buffer size | This is the size of the read buffer. It represents the amount of bytes that is read in one time from disk. |
Lazy conversion | The lazy conversion algorithm will try to avoid unnecessary data type conversions and can result in a significant performance improvements if this is possible. The typical example that comes to mind is reading from a text file and writing back to a text file. |
Header row present? | Enable this option if the target file contains a header row containing column names. |
Add filename to result | Adds the CSV filename(s) read to the result of this transformation. A unique list is being kept in memory that can be used in the next job entry in a job, for example in another transformation. |
The row number field name (optional) | The name of the Integer field that will contain the row number in the output of this step. |
Running in parallel? | Check this box if you will have multiple instances of this step running (step copies) and if you want each instance to read a separate part of the CSV file(s).
|
File Encoding | Specify the encoding of the file being read. |
Fields Table | This table contains an ordered list of fields to be read from the target file. |
Preview button | Click to preview the data coming from the target file. |
Get Fields button | Click to return a list of fields from the target file based on the current settings (i.e. Delimiter, Enclosure, etc.). All fields identified will be added to the Fields Table. |