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SAS/ACCESS 9.2 for Relational Databases: Reference, Fourth Edition

SAS/ACCESS 9.2 for Relational Databases: Reference, Fourth Edition

SAS/ACCESS 9.2 for Relational Databases: Reference, Fourth Edition

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Data Set Options <strong>for</strong> <strong>Relational</strong> <strong>Databases</strong> 4 BL_BADDATA_FILE= Data Set Option 211Syntax DescriptionYESspecifies that table data is still visible to readers and writers during data import.NOspecifies that readers and writers cannot view table data during data import.DetailsTo specify this option, you must first set BULKLOAD=YES.See AlsoFor more in<strong>for</strong>mation about using this option, see theSQLU_ALLOW_WRITE_<strong>ACCESS</strong> parameter in the IBM DB2 Universal Database DataMovement Utilities Guide and <strong>Reference</strong>.“BL_ALLOW_READ_<strong>ACCESS</strong>= Data Set Option” on page 210“BULKLOAD= Data Set Option” on page 290BL_BADDATA_FILE= Data Set OptionSpecifies where to put records that failed to process internally.Default value: creates a data file in the current directory or with the default filespecificationsValid in: DATA and PROC steps (when accessing DBMS data using <strong>SAS</strong>/<strong>ACCESS</strong>software)DBMS Support: HP NeoviewSyntaxBL_BADDATA_FILE=filenameSyntax Descriptionfilenamespecifies where to put records that failed to process internally.DetailsTo specify this option, you must first set BULKLOAD=YES or BULKEXTRACT=YES.For bulk load, these are source records that failed internal processing be<strong>for</strong>e theywere written to the database. For example, a record might contain only six fields, buteight fields were expected. Load records are in the same <strong>for</strong>mat as the source file.For extraction, these are records that were retrieved from the database that couldnot be properly written into the target <strong>for</strong>mat. For example, a database value might be

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