SQLUTB LOAD

SQLUTB LOAD is designed to work with LOAD cards generated by DSNUTILB UNLOAD on the mainframe as well as LOAD cards generated by SQLUTB UNLOAD itself. For example, the following UNLOAD control statements generate valid LOAD statements:
UNLOAD DATA FROM TABLE HCOSQL.CUSTOMER
UNLOAD TABLESPACE HCOSQL.HCOTS FROM TABLE HCOSQL.EMPLOYEE
Important: SQLUTB LOAD requires that you modify the LOAD control statement created on the mainframe to include either the REPLACE YES or the RESUME YES option. If neither is included, the JCL job terminates with an abend.

Executing SQLUTB LOAD

To use SQLUTB LOAD, either create a JCL application project or directly submit JCL using the JES CONTROL feature in Enterprise Server. The JCL syntax must be z/OS DB2 compatible.

The following is an example of JCL using a LOAD card generated on the mainframe:

//DSNCUSTM JOB
//DSNUTILB EXEC PGM=HCOUTILB,PARM='HCOD,SH      '
//*
//SYSPRINT DD   SYSOUT=*
//UTPRINT  DD   SYSOUT=*
//SYSUDUMP DD   SYSOUT=*
//STPRIN01 DD   SYSOUT=*
//IDIOFF   DD   DUMMY
//*
//SYSUT1   DD   DISP=MOD,DSN=SH.DSNUTILB.SYSUT1
//SORTOUT  DD   DISP=MOD,DSN=SH.DSNUTILB.SYSOUT
//SYSMAP   DD   DISP=MOD,DSN=SH.DSNUTILB.SYSMAP
//SYSERR   DD   DISP=MOD,DSN=SH.DSNUTILB.SYSERR
//SYSREC   DD   DISP=SHR,DSN=SH.HCOSQL.CUSTOMRS
//SYSIN    DD   *
LOAD DATA INDDN SYSREC LOG NO RESUME NO REPLACE 
 EBCDIC  CCSID(00037,00000,00000)
 INTO TABLE
 "HCOSQL".
 "CUSTOMRS"
 WHEN(00001:00002) = X'0028'
 NUMRECS               242100
 ( "C_ID"
  POSITION(  00003:00006) INTEGER
 , "C_D_ID"
  POSITION(  00007:00008) SMALLINT
 , "C_W_ID"
  POSITION(  00009:00010) SMALLINT
 , "C_FIRST"
  POSITION(  00012:00029) VARCHAR
                          NULLIF(00011)=X'FF'
 , "C_MIDDLE"
  POSITION(  00031:00032) CHAR(00002)
                          NULLIF(00030)=X'FF'
 , "C_LAST"
  POSITION(  00034:00051) VARCHAR
                          NULLIF(00033)=X'FF'
 , "C_STREET_1"
  POSITION(  00053:00074) VARCHAR
                          NULLIF(00052)=X'FF'
 , "C_STREET_2"
  POSITION(  00076:00097) VARCHAR
                          NULLIF(00075)=X'FF'
 , "C_CITY"
  POSITION(  00099:00120) VARCHAR
                          NULLIF(00098)=X'FF'
 , "C_STATE"
  POSITION(  00122:00123) CHAR(00002)
                          NULLIF(00121)=X'FF'
 , "C_ZIP"
  POSITION(  00125:00133) CHAR(00009)
                          NULLIF(00124)=X'FF'
 , "C_PHONE"
  POSITION(  00135:00150) CHAR(00016)
                          NULLIF(00134)=X'FF'
 , "C_SINCE"
  POSITION(  00152:00177) TIMESTAMP EXTERNAL
                          NULLIF(00151)=X'FF'
 , "C_CREDIT"
  POSITION(  00179:00180) CHAR(00002)
                          NULLIF(00178)=X'FF'
 , "C_CREDIT_LIM"
  POSITION(  00182:00188) DECIMAL
                          NULLIF(00181)=X'FF'
 , "C_DISCOUNT"
  POSITION(  00190:00192) DECIMAL
                          NULLIF(00189)=X'FF'
 , "C_BALANCE"
  POSITION(  00194:00200) DECIMAL
                          NULLIF(00193)=X'FF'
 , "C_YTD_PAYMENT"
  POSITION(  00202:00208) DECIMAL
                          NULLIF(00201)=X'FF'
 , "C_PAYMENT_CNT"
  POSITION(  00210:00211) SMALLINT
                          NULLIF(00209)=X'FF'
 , "C_DELIVERY_CNT"
  POSITION(  00213:00214) SMALLINT
                          NULLIF(00212)=X'FF'
 , "C_DATA"
  POSITION(  00216:00717) VARCHAR
                          NULLIF(00215)=X'FF'
 )
 
/*
//

Where HCOD is the ODBC XAR ID for your database connection, SQLUTB has been established as an alias for program HCOUTILB, and SH.HCOSQL.CUSTOMRS is the cataloged data file mapped to SYSREC.

LOAD Options

Standard LOAD Options
DATA
Syntactically optional.
REPLACE YES
REPLACE YES is mutually exclusive to RESUME YES. Either REPLACE YES or RESUME YES is required.

If neither REPLACE YES nor RESUME YES are present, warnings are generated based on the target table having an empty status.

DISCARDDN
This option behaves differently from DB2 for z/OS in handling unique index. The utility does not check for duplicates in the input data set, but instead forwards all data to the database. If duplicate records exist in the data set, only the first instance is loaded into the target table, assuming that no existing record in the table has the same index.
LOG NO|YES
This option is syntactically accepted, but ignored, as LOG YES is the only supported behavior.
RESUME YES
RESUME YES is mutually exclusive to REPLACE YES. Either RESUME YES or REPLACE YES is required.

If neither RESUME YES nor REPLACE YES are present, warnings are generated based on the target table having an empty status.

Ignored, but Syntactically Recognized LOAD Options
  • CCSID
  • CONTINUE IF
  • COPYDDN
  • DISCARDS
  • ENFORCE
  • ERRDDN
  • FLOAT (S390/IEEE)
  • FORMAT-SPEC
  • FREQVAL
  • HISTORY
  • INCURSOR
  • INDEX
  • KEEPDICTIONARY
  • KEYCARD
  • MAPDDN
  • NOCOPYPEND
  • NOSUBS
  • PREFORMAT
  • RECOVERYDDN
  • REUSE
  • SHRLEVEL
  • SORTDEVT
  • SORTKEY
  • SORTNUMS
  • STATISTICS
  • WORKDDN
Unsupported LOAD Options
  • COPYDICTIONARY
  • DECFLOAT ROUNDMODE-SPEC
  • IDENTITYOVERRIDE
  • INDEXDEFER
  • PRESORTED

Specifications

INTO TABLE Specifications
The INTO TABLE specifications have a number of options.
INTO TABLE Supported Options
  • WHEN
  • NUMRECS
  • FIELD SPECIFICATION
  • PART (for DB2 LUW only)
Ignored, but Syntactially Recognized INTO TABLE Options
  • IGNOREFIELDS
  • PART (for all DBMSs but DB2 LUW)
LOAD Specification
  • INDDN SYSREC (or ddname)
  • EBCDIC/ASCII/UNICODE
Note: Unlike the mainframe, SQLUTB LOAD does not default to EBCDIC, but defaults to ASCII.
FIELD Specification
Supported SQL Data Types for FIELD Specification
  • INTEGER, BIGINT, SMALLINT
  • FLOAT, REAL
  • DECIMAL
  • CHAR, VARCHAR (UP TO VARCHAR(20000))
  • GRAPHIC, VARGRAPHIC
  • DATE, TIME, TIMESTAMP
  • BINARY, VARBINARY
Unsupported SQL Data Types for FIELD Specification
  • DECFLOAT
  • ROWID
  • BLOB
  • CLOB
  • DBCLOB
  • XML
Important: SQLUTB LOAD commit behavior can be configured to issue one commit or multiple commits. See MBDT Configuration Utility for details.
Note: To ensure proper parsing of SYSIN, do not include the tab character (ASCII decimal character code 9; EBCDIC decimal character code 5) in its contents. When parsed, the tab character could cause spurious, unintended errors.