Manage datasets

This document describes how to copy datasets, recreate datasets in another location, secure datasets, delete datasets, restore tables from deleted datasets, and undelete datasets in BigQuery.

As a BigQuery administrator, you can organize and control access to tables and views that analysts use. For more information about datasets, see Introduction to datasets.

You cannot change the name of an existing dataset or relocate a dataset after it's created. As a workaround for changing the dataset name, you can copy a dataset and change the destination dataset's name. To relocate a dataset, you can follow one of the following methods:

Required roles

This section describes the roles and permissions that you need to manage datasets. If your source or destination dataset is in the same project as the one you are using to copy, then you don't need extra permissions or roles on that dataset.

To get the permissions that you need to manage datasets, ask your administrator to grant you the following IAM roles:

For more information about granting roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations.

These predefined roles contain the permissions required to manage datasets. To see the exact permissions that are required, expand the Required permissions section:

Required permissions

The following permissions are required to manage datasets:

  • Copy a dataset:
    • bigquery.transfers.update on the destination project
    • bigquery.jobs.create on the destination project
    • bigquery.datasets.get on the source and destination dataset
    • bigquery.tables.list on the source and destination dataset
    • bigquery.datasets.update on the destination dataset
    • bigquery.tables.create on the destination dataset
  • Delete a dataset:
    • bigquery.datasets.delete on the project
    • bigquery.tables.delete on the project
  • Restore a deleted dataset:
    • bigquery.datasets.create on the project
    • bigquery.datasets.get on the dataset

You might also be able to get these permissions with custom roles or other predefined roles.

For more information about IAM roles and permissions in BigQuery, see Introduction to IAM.

Copy datasets

You can copy a dataset, including partitioned data within a region or across regions, without extracting, moving, or reloading data into BigQuery. BigQuery uses the BigQuery Data Transfer Service in the backend to copy datasets. For location considerations when you transfer data, see Data location and transfers.

For each dataset copy configuration, you can have one transfer run active at a time. Additional transfer runs are queued. If you are using the Google Cloud console, you can schedule recurring copies, and configure an email or Pub/Sub notifications with the BigQuery Data Transfer Service.

Limitations

The following limitations apply when you copy datasets:

  • You can't copy the following resources from a source dataset:

    • Views.
    • Routines, including UDFs.
    • External tables.
    • Change data capture (CDC) tables if the copy job is across regions. Copying CDC tables within the same region is supported.
    • Cross-region table copy job is not supported for tables encrypted with customer-managed encrypted keys (CMEK) when the destination dataset is not encrypted with CMEK and there is no CMEK provided. Copying tables with default encryption across regions is supported.

      You can copy all encrypted tables within the same region, including tables encrypted with CMEK.

  • You can't use the following resources as destination datasets for copy jobs:

    • Write-optimized storage.
    • Dataset encrypted with CMEK if the copy job is across regions and the source table is not encrypted with CMEK.

      However, tables encrypted with CMEK are allowed as destination tables when copying within the same region.

  • The minimum frequency between copy jobs is 12 hours.

  • Appending data to a partitioned table in the destination dataset isn't supported.

  • If a table exists in the source dataset and the destination dataset, and the source table has not changed since the last successful copy, it's skipped. The source table is skipped even if the Overwrite destination tables checkbox is selected.

  • When truncating tables in the destination dataset, the dataset copy job doesn't detect any changes made to resources in the destination dataset before it begins the copy job. The dataset copy job overwrites all of the data in the destination dataset, including both the tables and schema.

  • The destination table might not reflect changes made to the source tables after a copy job starts.

  • Copying a dataset is not supported in BigQuery Omni regions.

  • To copy a dataset to a project in another VPC Service Controls service perimeter, you need to set the following egress rules:

    • In the destination project's VPC Service Controls service perimeter configuration, the IAM principal must have the following methods:

      • bigquery.datasets.get
      • bigquery.tables.list
      • bigquery.tables.get,
      • bigquery.tables.getData
    • In the source project's VPC Service Controls service perimeter configuration, the IAM principal being used must have the method set to All Methods.

Copy a dataset

Select one of the following options:

Console

  1. Enable the BigQuery Data Transfer Service for your destination dataset.

    Enable the BigQuery Data Transfer Service API

  2. Ensure that you have the required roles.

    If you intend to set up transfer run notifications for Pub/Sub (Option 2 later in these steps), then you must have the pubsub.topics.setIamPolicy permission.

    If you only set up email notifications, then Pub/Sub permissions are not required. For more information, see the BigQuery Data Transfer Service run notifications.

  3. Create a BigQuery dataset in the same region or a different region from your source dataset.

Option 1: Use the BigQuery copy function

To create a one-time transfer, use the BigQuery copy function:

  1. Go to the BigQuery page.

    Go to BigQuery

  2. In the Explorer panel, expand your project and select a dataset.

  3. In the Dataset info section, click Copy, and then do the following:

    1. In the Dataset field, either create a new dataset or select an existing dataset ID from the list.

      Dataset names within a project must be unique. The project and dataset can be in different regions, but not all regions are supported for cross-region dataset copying.

      In the Location field, the location of the source dataset is displayed.

    2. Optional: To overwrite both the data and schema of the destination tables with the source tables, select the Overwrite destination tables checkbox. Both the source and destination tables must have the same partitioning schema.

    3. To copy the dataset, click Copy.

Option 2: Use the BigQuery Data Transfer Service

To schedule recurring copies and configure email or Pub/Sub notifications, use the BigQuery Data Transfer Service in the Google Cloud console of the destination project:

  1. Go to the Data transfers page.

    Go to Data transfers

  2. Click Create a transfer.

  3. In the Source list, select Dataset Copy.

  4. In the Display name field, enter a name for your transfer run.

  5. In the Schedule options section, do the following:

    1. For Repeat frequency, choose an option for how often to run the transfer:

      If you select Custom, enter a custom frequency—for example, every day 00:00. For more information, see Formatting the schedule.

    2. For Start date and run time, enter the date and time to start the transfer. If you choose Start now, this option is disabled.

  6. In the Destination settings section, select a destination dataset to store your transfer data. You can also click CREATE NEW DATASET to create a new dataset before you select it for this transfer.

  7. In the Data source details section, enter the following information:

    1. For Source dataset, enter the dataset ID that you want to copy.
    2. For Source project, enter the project ID of your source dataset.
  8. To overwrite both the data and schema of the destination tables with the source tables, select the Overwrite destination tables checkbox. Both the source and destination tables must have the same partitioning schema.

  9. In the Service Account menu, select a service account from the service accounts associated with your Google Cloud project. You can associate a service account with your transfer instead of using your user credentials. For more information about using service accounts with data transfers, see Use service accounts.

    • If you signed in with a federated identity, then a service account is required to create a transfer. If you signed in with a Google Account, then a service account for the transfer is optional.
    • The service account must have the required roles.
  10. Optional: In the Notification options section, do the following:

    • To enable email notifications, click the toggle. When you enable this option, the owner of the transfer configuration receives an email notification when a transfer run fails.
    • To enable Pub/Sub notifications, click the toggle, and then either select a topic name from the list or click Create a topic. This option configures Pub/Sub run notifications for your transfer.
  11. Click Save.

bq

  1. Enable the BigQuery Data Transfer Service for your destination dataset.

  2. Ensure that you have the required roles.

  3. To create a BigQuery dataset, use the bq mk command with the dataset creation flag --dataset and the location flag:

    bq mk \
      --dataset \
      --location=LOCATION \
      PROJECT:DATASET
    

    Replace the following:

    • LOCATION: the location where you want to copy the dataset
    • PROJECT: the project ID of your target dataset
    • DATASET: the name of the target dataset
  4. To copy a dataset, use the bq mk command with the transfer creation flag --transfer_config and the --data_source flag. You must set the --data_source flag to cross_region_copy. For a complete list of valid values for the --data_source flag, see the transfer-config flags in the bq command-line tool reference.

    bq mk \
      --transfer_config \
      --project_id=PROJECT \
      --data_source=cross_region_copy \
      --target_dataset=DATASET \
      --display_name=NAME \
     --service_account_name=SERCICE_ACCOUNT \
      --params='PARAMETERS'
    

    Replace the following:

    • NAME: the display name for the copy job or the transfer configuration

    • SERVICE_ACCOUNT: the service account name used to authenticate your transfer. The service account should be owned by the same project_id used to create the transfer and it should have all of the required permissions.

    • PARAMETERS: the parameters for the transfer configuration in the JSON format

      Parameters for a dataset copy configuration include the following:

      • source_dataset_id: the ID of the source dataset that you want to copy
      • source_project_id: the ID of the project that your source dataset is in
      • overwrite_destination_table: an optional flag that lets you truncate the tables of a previous copy and refresh all the data

      Both the source and destination tables must have the same partitioning schema.

    The following examples show the formatting of the parameters, based on your system's environment:

    • Linux: use single quotes to enclose the JSON string–for example:

      '{"source_dataset_id":"mydataset","source_project_id":"mysourceproject","overwrite_destination_table":"true"}'
      
    • Windows command line: use double quotes to enclose the JSON string, and escape double quotes in the string with a backslash–for example:

      "{\"source_dataset_id\":\"mydataset\",\"source_project_id\":\"mysourceproject\",\"overwrite_destination_table\":\"true\"}"
      
    • PowerShell: use single quotes to enclose the JSON string, and escape double quotes in the string with a backslash–for example:

      '{\"source_dataset_id\":\"mydataset\",\"source_project_id\":\"mysourceproject\",\"overwrite_destination_table\":\"true\"}'
      

    For example, the following command creates a dataset copy configuration that's named My Transfer with a target dataset that's named mydataset and a project with the ID of myproject.

    bq mk \
      --transfer_config \
      --project_id=myproject \
      --data_source=cross_region_copy \
      --target_dataset=mydataset \
      --display_name='My Transfer' \
      --params='{
          "source_dataset_id":"123_demo_eu",
          "source_project_id":"mysourceproject",
          "overwrite_destination_table":"true"
          }'
    

API

  1. Enable the BigQuery Data Transfer Service for your destination dataset.

  2. Ensure that you have the required roles.

  3. To create a BigQuery dataset, call the datasets.insert method with a defined dataset resource.

  4. To copy a dataset, use the projects.locations.transferConfigs.create method and supply an instance of the TransferConfig resource.

Java

Before trying this sample, follow the Java setup instructions in the BigQuery quickstart using client libraries. For more information, see the BigQuery Java API reference documentation.

To authenticate to BigQuery, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for client libraries.

import com.google.api.gax.rpc.ApiException;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.datatransfer.v1.CreateTransferConfigRequest;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.datatransfer.v1.DataTransferServiceClient;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.datatransfer.v1.ProjectName;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.datatransfer.v1.TransferConfig;
import com.google.protobuf.Struct;
import com.google.protobuf.Value;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;

// Sample to copy dataset from another gcp project
public class CopyDataset {

  public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
    // TODO(developer): Replace these variables before running the sample.
    final String destinationProjectId = "MY_DESTINATION_PROJECT_ID";
    final String destinationDatasetId = "MY_DESTINATION_DATASET_ID";
    final String sourceProjectId = "MY_SOURCE_PROJECT_ID";
    final String sourceDatasetId = "MY_SOURCE_DATASET_ID";
    Map<String, Value> params = new HashMap<>();
    params.put("source_project_id", Value.newBuilder().setStringValue(sourceProjectId).build());
    params.put("source_dataset_id", Value.newBuilder().setStringValue(sourceDatasetId).build());
    TransferConfig transferConfig =
        TransferConfig.newBuilder()
            .setDestinationDatasetId(destinationDatasetId)
            .setDisplayName("Your Dataset Copy Name")
            .setDataSourceId("cross_region_copy")
            .setParams(Struct.newBuilder().putAllFields(params).build())
            .setSchedule("every 24 hours")
            .build();
    copyDataset(destinationProjectId, transferConfig);
  }

  public static void copyDataset(String projectId, TransferConfig transferConfig)
      throws IOException {
    try (DataTransferServiceClient dataTransferServiceClient = DataTransferServiceClient.create()) {
      ProjectName parent = ProjectName.of(projectId);
      CreateTransferConfigRequest request =
          CreateTransferConfigRequest.newBuilder()
              .setParent(parent.toString())
              .setTransferConfig(transferConfig)
              .build();
      TransferConfig config = dataTransferServiceClient.createTransferConfig(request);
      System.out.println("Copy dataset created successfully :" + config.getName());
    } catch (ApiException ex) {
      System.out.print("Copy dataset was not created." + ex.toString());
    }
  }
}

Python

Before trying this sample, follow the Python setup instructions in the BigQuery quickstart using client libraries. For more information, see the BigQuery Python API reference documentation.

To authenticate to BigQuery, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for client libraries.

Install the Python client for the BigQuery Data Transfer API with pip install google-cloud-bigquery-datatransfer. Then create a transfer configuration to copy the dataset.
from google.cloud import bigquery_datatransfer

transfer_client = bigquery_datatransfer.DataTransferServiceClient()

destination_project_id = "my-destination-project"
destination_dataset_id = "my_destination_dataset"
source_project_id = "my-source-project"
source_dataset_id = "my_source_dataset"
transfer_config = bigquery_datatransfer.TransferConfig(
    destination_dataset_id=destination_dataset_id,
    display_name="Your Dataset Copy Name",
    data_source_id="cross_region_copy",
    params={
        "source_project_id": source_project_id,
        "source_dataset_id": source_dataset_id,
    },
    schedule="every 24 hours",
)
transfer_config = transfer_client.create_transfer_config(
    parent=transfer_client.common_project_path(destination_project_id),
    transfer_config=transfer_config,
)
print(f"Created transfer config: {transfer_config.name}")

To avoid additional storage costs, consider deleting the prior dataset.

View dataset copy jobs

To see the status and view details of a dataset copy job in the Google Cloud console, do the following:

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Data transfers page.

    Go to Data transfers

  2. Select a transfer for which you want to view the transfer details, and then do the following:

    1. On the Transfer details page, select a transfer run.

    2. To refresh, click Refresh.

Recreate datasets in another location

To manually move a dataset from one location to another, follow these steps:

  1. Export the data from your BigQuery tables to a Cloud Storage bucket in either the same location as your dataset or in a location contained within your dataset's location. For example, if your dataset is in the EU multi-region location, you could export your data to the europe-west1 Belgium location, which is part of the EU.

    There are no charges for exporting data from BigQuery, but you do incur charges for storing the exported data in Cloud Storage. BigQuery exports are subject to the limits on export jobs.

  2. Copy or move the data from your export Cloud Storage bucket to a new bucket you created in the destination location. For example, if you are moving your data from the US multi-region to the asia-northeast1 Tokyo region, you would transfer the data to a bucket that you created in Tokyo. For information about transferring Cloud Storage objects, see Copy, rename, and move objects in the Cloud Storage documentation.

    Transferring data between regions incurs network egress charges in Cloud Storage.

  3. Create a new BigQuery dataset in the new location, and then load your data from the Cloud Storage bucket into the new dataset.

    You are not charged for loading the data into BigQuery, but you will incur charges for storing the data in Cloud Storage until you delete the data or the bucket. You are also charged for storing the data in BigQuery after it is loaded. Loading data into BigQuery is subject to the load jobs limits.

You can also use Cloud Composer to move and copy large datasets programmatically.

For more information about using Cloud Storage to store and move large datasets, see Use Cloud Storage with big data.

Secure datasets

To control access to datasets in BigQuery, see Controlling access to datasets. For information about data encryption, see Encryption at rest.

Delete datasets

When you delete a dataset by using the Google Cloud console, tables and views in the dataset, including their data, are deleted. When you delete a dataset by using the bq command-line tool, you must use the -r flag to delete the tables and views.

To delete a dataset, select one of the following options:

Console

  1. Go to the BigQuery page.

    Go to BigQuery

  2. In the Explorer pane, expand your project and select a dataset.

  3. Expand the Actions option and click Delete.

  4. In the Delete dataset dialog, type delete into the field, and then click Delete.

SQL

To delete a dataset, use the DROP SCHEMA DDL statement.

The following example deletes a dataset named mydataset:

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the BigQuery page.

    Go to BigQuery

  2. In the query editor, enter the following statement:

    DROP SCHEMA IF EXISTS mydataset;
    

    By default, this only works to delete an empty dataset. To delete a dataset and all of its contents, use the CASCADE keyword:

    DROP SCHEMA IF EXISTS mydataset CASCADE;
    
  3. Click Run.

For more information about how to run queries, see Run an interactive query.

bq

Use the bq rm command with the --dataset or -d flag, which is optional. If your dataset contains tables, you must use the -r flag to remove all tables in the dataset. If you use the -r flag, then you can omit the --dataset or -d flag.

After you run the command, the system asks for confirmation. You can use the -f flag to skip the confirmation.

If you are deleting a table in a project other than your default project, add the project ID to the dataset name in the following format: PROJECT_ID:DATASET.

bq rm -r -f -d PROJECT_ID:DATASET

Replace the following:

  • PROJECT_ID: your project ID
  • DATASET: the name of the dataset that you're deleting

Examples:

Enter the following command to remove a dataset that's named mydataset and all the tables in it from your default project. The command uses the -d flag.

bq rm -r -d mydataset

When prompted, type y and press enter.

Enter the following command to remove mydataset and all the tables in it from myotherproject. The command does not use the optional -d flag. The -f flag is used to skip confirmation.

bq rm -r -f myotherproject:mydataset

You can use the bq ls command to confirm that the dataset was deleted.

API

Call the datasets.delete method to delete the dataset and set the deleteContents parameter to true to delete the tables in it.

C#

The following code sample deletes an empty dataset.

Before trying this sample, follow the C# setup instructions in the BigQuery quickstart using client libraries. For more information, see the BigQuery C# API reference documentation.

To authenticate to BigQuery, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for client libraries.

Install the Python client for the BigQuery Data Transfer API with pip install google-cloud-bigquery-datatransfer. Then create a transfer configuration to copy the dataset.

using Google.Cloud.BigQuery.V2;
using System;

public class BigQueryDeleteDataset
{
    public void DeleteDataset(
        string projectId = "your-project-id",
        string datasetId = "your_empty_dataset"
    )
    {
        BigQueryClient client = BigQueryClient.Create(projectId);
        // Delete a dataset that does not contain any tables
        client.DeleteDataset(datasetId: datasetId);
        Console.WriteLine($"Dataset {datasetId} deleted.");
    }
}

The following code sample deletes a dataset and all of its contents:

// Copyright(c) 2018 Google LLC
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
// use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
// the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
// WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
// License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
// the License.
//

using Google.Cloud.BigQuery.V2;
using System;

public class BigQueryDeleteDatasetAndContents
{
    public void DeleteDatasetAndContents(
        string projectId = "your-project-id",
        string datasetId = "your_dataset_with_tables"
    )
    {
        BigQueryClient client = BigQueryClient.Create(projectId);
        // Use the DeleteDatasetOptions to delete a dataset and its contents
        client.DeleteDataset(
            datasetId: datasetId,
            options: new DeleteDatasetOptions() { DeleteContents = true }
        );
        Console.WriteLine($"Dataset {datasetId} and contents deleted.");
    }
}

Go

Before trying this sample, follow the Go setup instructions in the BigQuery quickstart using client libraries. For more information, see the BigQuery Go API reference documentation.

To authenticate to BigQuery, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for client libraries.

Install the Python client for the BigQuery Data Transfer API with pip install google-cloud-bigquery-datatransfer. Then create a transfer configuration to copy the dataset.
import (
	"context"
	"fmt"

	"cloud.google.com/go/bigquery"
)

// deleteDataset demonstrates the deletion of an empty dataset.
func deleteDataset(projectID, datasetID string) error {
	// projectID := "my-project-id"
	// datasetID := "mydataset"
	ctx := context.Background()

	client, err := bigquery.NewClient(ctx, projectID)
	if err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("bigquery.NewClient: %v", err)
	}
	defer client.Close()

	// To recursively delete a dataset and contents, use DeleteWithContents.
	if err := client.Dataset(datasetID).Delete(ctx); err != nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("Delete: %v", err)
	}
	return nil
}

Java

The following code sample deletes an empty dataset.

Before trying this sample, follow the Java setup instructions in the BigQuery quickstart using client libraries. For more information, see the BigQuery Java API reference documentation.

To authenticate to BigQuery, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for client libraries.

Install the Python client for the BigQuery Data Transfer API with pip install google-cloud-bigquery-datatransfer. Then create a transfer configuration to copy the dataset.
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.BigQuery;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.BigQuery.DatasetDeleteOption;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.BigQueryException;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.BigQueryOptions;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.DatasetId;

public class DeleteDataset {

  public static void runDeleteDataset() {
    // TODO(developer): Replace these variables before running the sample.
    String projectId = "MY_PROJECT_ID";
    String datasetName = "MY_DATASET_NAME";
    deleteDataset(projectId, datasetName);
  }

  public static void deleteDataset(String projectId, String datasetName) {
    try {
      // Initialize client that will be used to send requests. This client only needs to be created
      // once, and can be reused for multiple requests.
      BigQuery bigquery = BigQueryOptions.getDefaultInstance().getService();

      DatasetId datasetId = DatasetId.of(projectId, datasetName);
      boolean success = bigquery.delete(datasetId, DatasetDeleteOption.deleteContents());
      if (success) {
        System.out.println("Dataset deleted successfully");
      } else {
        System.out.println("Dataset was not found");
      }
    } catch (BigQueryException e) {
      System.out.println("Dataset was not deleted. \n" + e.toString());
    }
  }
}

The following code sample deletes a dataset and all of its contents:

/*
 * Copyright 2020 Google LLC
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */

package com.example.bigquery;

import com.google.cloud.bigquery.BigQuery;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.BigQueryException;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.BigQueryOptions;
import com.google.cloud.bigquery.DatasetId;

// Sample to delete dataset with contents.
public class DeleteDatasetAndContents {

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    // TODO(developer): Replace these variables before running the sample.
    String projectId = "MY_PROJECT_ID";
    String datasetName = "MY_DATASET_NAME";
    deleteDatasetAndContents(projectId, datasetName);
  }

  public static void deleteDatasetAndContents(String projectId, String datasetName) {
    try {
      // Initialize client that will be used to send requests. This client only needs to be created
      // once, and can be reused for multiple requests.
      BigQuery bigquery = BigQueryOptions.getDefaultInstance().getService();

      DatasetId datasetId = DatasetId.of(projectId, datasetName);
      // Use the force parameter to delete a dataset and its contents
      boolean success = bigquery.delete(datasetId, BigQuery.DatasetDeleteOption.deleteContents());
      if (success) {
        System.out.println("Dataset deleted with contents successfully");
      } else {
        System.out.println("Dataset was not found");
      }
    } catch (BigQueryException e) {
      System.out.println("Dataset was not deleted with contents. \n" + e.toString());
    }
  }
}

Node.js

Before trying this sample, follow the Node.js setup instructions in the BigQuery quickstart using client libraries. For more information, see the BigQuery Node.js API reference documentation.

To authenticate to BigQuery, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for client libraries.

Install the Python client for the BigQuery Data Transfer API with pip install google-cloud-bigquery-datatransfer. Then create a transfer configuration to copy the dataset.
// Import the Google Cloud client library
const {BigQuery} = require('@google-cloud/bigquery');
const bigquery = new BigQuery();

async function deleteDataset() {
  // Deletes a dataset named "my_dataset".

  /**
   * TODO(developer): Uncomment the following lines before running the sample.
   */
  // const datasetId = 'my_dataset';

  // Create a reference to the existing dataset
  const dataset = bigquery.dataset(datasetId);

  // Delete the dataset and its contents
  await dataset.delete({force: true});
  console.log(`Dataset ${dataset.id} deleted.`);
}

PHP

Before trying this sample, follow the PHP setup instructions in the BigQuery quickstart using client libraries. For more information, see the BigQuery PHP API reference documentation.

To authenticate to BigQuery, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for client libraries.

Install the Python client for the BigQuery Data Transfer API with pip install google-cloud-bigquery-datatransfer. Then create a transfer configuration to copy the dataset.
use Google\Cloud\BigQuery\BigQueryClient;

/** Uncomment and populate these variables in your code */
// $projectId = 'The Google project ID';
// $datasetId = 'The BigQuery dataset ID';

$bigQuery = new BigQueryClient([
    'projectId' => $projectId,
]);
$dataset = $bigQuery->dataset($datasetId);
$table = $dataset->delete();
printf('Deleted dataset %s' . PHP_EOL, $datasetId);

Python

Before trying this sample, follow the Python setup instructions in the BigQuery quickstart using client libraries. For more information, see the BigQuery Python API reference documentation.

To authenticate to BigQuery, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for client libraries.

Install the Python client for the BigQuery Data Transfer API with pip install google-cloud-bigquery-datatransfer. Then create a transfer configuration to copy the dataset.

from google.cloud import bigquery

# Construct a BigQuery client object.
client = bigquery.Client()

# TODO(developer): Set model_id to the ID of the model to fetch.
# dataset_id = 'your-project.your_dataset'

# Use the delete_contents parameter to delete a dataset and its contents.
# Use the not_found_ok parameter to not receive an error if the dataset has already been deleted.
client.delete_dataset(
    dataset_id, delete_contents=True, not_found_ok=True
)  # Make an API request.

print("Deleted dataset '{}'.".format(dataset_id))

Ruby

The following code sample deletes an empty dataset.

Before trying this sample, follow the Ruby setup instructions in the BigQuery quickstart using client libraries. For more information, see the BigQuery Ruby API reference documentation.

To authenticate to BigQuery, set up Application Default Credentials. For more information, see Set up authentication for client libraries.

Install the Python client for the BigQuery Data Transfer API with pip install google-cloud-bigquery-datatransfer. Then create a transfer configuration to copy the dataset.
require "google/cloud/bigquery"

def delete_dataset dataset_id = "my_empty_dataset"
  bigquery = Google::Cloud::Bigquery.new

  # Delete a dataset that does not contain any tables
  dataset = bigquery.dataset dataset_id
  dataset.delete
  puts "Dataset #{dataset_id} deleted."
end

The following code sample deletes a dataset and all of its contents:

# Copyright 2020 Google LLC
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
#     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
require "google/cloud/bigquery"

def delete_dataset_and_contents dataset_id = "my_dataset_with_tables"
  bigquery = Google::Cloud::Bigquery.new

  # Use the force parameter to delete a dataset and its contents
  dataset = bigquery.dataset dataset_id
  dataset.delete force: true
  puts "Dataset #{dataset_id} and contents deleted."
end

Restore tables from deleted datasets

You can restore tables from a deleted dataset that are within the dataset's time travel window. To restore the entire dataset, see undelete datasets.

  1. Create a dataset with the same name and in the same location as the original.
  2. Choose a timestamp from before the original dataset was deleted by using a format of milliseconds since the epoch–for example, 1418864998000.
  3. Copy the originaldataset.table1 table at the time 1418864998000 into the new dataset:

    bq cp originaldataset.table1@1418864998000 mydataset.mytable
    

    To find the names of the nonempty tables that were in the deleted dataset, query the dataset's INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_STORAGE view within the time travel window.

Undelete datasets

You can undelete a dataset to recover it to the state that it was in when it was deleted. You can only undelete datasets that are within your time travel window. This recovery includes all of the objects that were contained in the dataset, the dataset properties, and the security settings. For resources that are not recovered, see Undelete dataset limitations.

Undelete dataset limitations

  • Restored datasets might reference security principals that no longer exist.
  • References to a deleted dataset in linked datasets are not restored by undelete. Subscribers must subscribe again to manually restore the links.
  • Business tags are not restored by undelete.
  • You must manually refresh materialized views and reauthorize authorized views, authorized datasets, and authorized routines. Note that, when authorized resources (views, datasets, and routines) are deleted, it takes up to 24 hours for the authorization to delete. So, if you undelete a dataset with an authorized resource less than 24 hours after deletion, it's possible that reauthorization isn't necessary. As a best practice, always verify authorization after undeleting resources.

Undelete a dataset

To undelete a dataset, select one of the following options:

SQL

Use the UNDROP SCHEMA data definition language (DDL) statement:

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the BigQuery page.

    Go to BigQuery

  2. In the query editor, enter the following statement:

    UNDROP SCHEMA DATASET_ID;
    

    Replace DATASET_ID with the dataset that you want to undelete.

  3. Specify the location of the dataset that you want to undelete.

  4. Click Run.

For more information about how to run queries, see Running interactive queries.

API

Call the datasets.undelete method.

When you undelete a dataset, the following errors might occur:

  • ALREADY_EXISTS: a dataset with the same name already exists in the region that you tried to undelete in. You can't use undelete to overwrite or merge datasets.
  • NOT_FOUND: the dataset you're trying to recover is past its time travel window, it never existed, or you didn't specify the correct location of the dataset.
  • ACCESS_DENIED: you don't have the correct permissions to undelete this dataset.

Quotas

For information about copy quotas, see Copy jobs. Usage for copy jobs are available in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA. To learn how to query the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.JOBS view, see Get usage of copy jobs.

Pricing

For pricing information for copying datasets, see Data replication pricing.

BigQuery sends compressed data for copying across regions so the data that is billed might be less than the actual size of your dataset. For more information, see BigQuery pricing.

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