PostgreSQL 7.4.8 Documentation | ||||
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ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] ADD [ COLUMN ] column type [ column_constraint [ ... ] ] ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] DROP [ COLUMN ] column [ RESTRICT | CASCADE ] ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] ALTER [ COLUMN ] column { SET DEFAULT expression | DROP DEFAULT } ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] ALTER [ COLUMN ] column { SET | DROP } NOT NULL ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] ALTER [ COLUMN ] column SET STATISTICS integer ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] ALTER [ COLUMN ] column SET STORAGE { PLAIN | EXTERNAL | EXTENDED | MAIN } ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] SET WITHOUT OIDS ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] RENAME [ COLUMN ] column TO new_column ALTER TABLE name RENAME TO new_name ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] ADD table_constraint ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ] DROP CONSTRAINT constraint_name [ RESTRICT | CASCADE ] ALTER TABLE name OWNER TO new_owner ALTER TABLE name CLUSTER ON index_name
ALTER TABLE changes the definition of an existing table. There are several subforms:
This form adds a new column to the table using the same syntax as CREATE TABLE.
This form drops a column from a table. Indexes and table constraints involving the column will be automatically dropped as well. You will need to say CASCADE if anything outside the table depends on the column, for example, foreign key references or views.
These forms set or remove the default value for a column. The default values only apply to subsequent INSERT commands; they do not cause rows already in the table to change. Defaults may also be created for views, in which case they are inserted into INSERT statements on the view before the view's ON INSERT rule is applied.
These forms change whether a column is marked to allow null values or to reject null values. You can only use SET NOT NULL when the column contains no null values.
This form sets the per-column statistics-gathering target for subsequent ANALYZE operations. The target can be set in the range 0 to 1000; alternatively, set it to -1 to revert to using the system default statistics target.
This form sets the storage mode for a column. This controls whether this column is held inline or in a supplementary table, and whether the data should be compressed or not. PLAIN must be used for fixed-length values such as integer and is inline, uncompressed. MAIN is for inline, compressible data. EXTERNAL is for external, uncompressed data, and EXTENDED is for external, compressed data. EXTENDED is the default for all data types that support it. The use of EXTERNAL will, for example, make substring operations on a text column faster, at the penalty of increased storage space.
This form removes the oid column from the table. Removing OIDs from a table does not occur immediately. The space that the OID uses will be reclaimed when the row is updated. Without updating the row, both the space and the value of the OID are kept indefinitely. This is semantically similar to the DROP COLUMN process.
The RENAME forms change the name of a table (or an index, sequence, or view) or the name of an individual column in a table. There is no effect on the stored data.
This form adds a new constraint to a table using the same syntax as CREATE TABLE.
This form drops constraints on a table. Currently, constraints on tables are not required to have unique names, so there may be more than one constraint matching the specified name. All such constraints will be dropped.
This form changes the owner of the table, index, sequence, or view to the specified user.
This form marks a table for future CLUSTER operations.
You must own the table to use ALTER TABLE; except for ALTER TABLE OWNER, which may only be executed by a superuser.
The name (possibly schema-qualified) of an existing table to alter. If ONLY is specified, only that table is altered. If ONLY is not specified, the table and all its descendant tables (if any) are updated. * can be appended to the table name to indicate that descendant tables are to be altered, but in the current version, this is the default behavior. (In releases before 7.1, ONLY was the default behavior. The default can be altered by changing the configuration parameter sql_inheritance.)
Name of a new or existing column.
Data type of the new column.
New name for an existing column.
New name for the table.
New table constraint for the table.
Name of an existing constraint to drop.
The user name of the new owner of the table.
The index name on which the table should be marked for clustering.
Automatically drop objects that depend on the dropped column or constraint (for example, views referencing the column).
Refuse to drop the column or constraint if there are any dependent objects. This is the default behavior.
The key word COLUMN is noise and can be omitted.
In the current implementation of ADD COLUMN, default and NOT NULL clauses for the new column are not supported. The new column always comes into being with all values null. You can use the SET DEFAULT form of ALTER TABLE to set the default afterward. (You may also want to update the already existing rows to the new default value, using UPDATE.) If you want to mark the column non-null, use the SET NOT NULL form after you've entered non-null values for the column in all rows.
The DROP COLUMN form does not physically remove the column, but simply makes it invisible to SQL operations. Subsequent insert and update operations in the table will store a null value for the column. Thus, dropping a column is quick but it will not immediately reduce the on-disk size of your table, as the space occupied by the dropped column is not reclaimed. The space will be reclaimed over time as existing rows are updated. To reclaim the space at once, do a dummy UPDATE of all rows and then vacuum, as in:
UPDATE table SET col = col; VACUUM FULL table;
If a table has any descendant tables, it is not permitted to add or rename a column in the parent table without doing the same to the descendants. That is, ALTER TABLE ONLY will be rejected. This ensures that the descendants always have columns matching the parent.
A recursive DROP COLUMN operation will remove a descendant table's column only if the descendant does not inherit that column from any other parents and never had an independent definition of the column. A nonrecursive DROP COLUMN (i.e., ALTER TABLE ONLY ... DROP COLUMN) never removes any descendant columns, but instead marks them as independently defined rather than inherited.
Changing any part of a system catalog table is not permitted.
Refer to CREATE TABLE for a further description of valid parameters. Chapter 5 has further information on inheritance.
To add a column of type varchar to a table:
ALTER TABLE distributors ADD COLUMN address varchar(30);
To drop a column from a table:
ALTER TABLE distributors DROP COLUMN address RESTRICT;
To rename an existing column:
ALTER TABLE distributors RENAME COLUMN address TO city;
To rename an existing table:
ALTER TABLE distributors RENAME TO suppliers;
To add a not-null constraint to a column:
ALTER TABLE distributors ALTER COLUMN street SET NOT NULL;
To remove a not-null constraint from a column:
ALTER TABLE distributors ALTER COLUMN street DROP NOT NULL;
To add a check constraint to a table:
ALTER TABLE distributors ADD CONSTRAINT zipchk CHECK (char_length(zipcode) = 5);
To remove a check constraint from a table and all its children:
ALTER TABLE distributors DROP CONSTRAINT zipchk;
To add a foreign key constraint to a table:
ALTER TABLE distributors ADD CONSTRAINT distfk FOREIGN KEY (address) REFERENCES addresses (address) MATCH FULL;
To add a (multicolumn) unique constraint to a table:
ALTER TABLE distributors ADD CONSTRAINT dist_id_zipcode_key UNIQUE (dist_id, zipcode);
To add an automatically named primary key constraint to a table, noting that a table can only ever have one primary key:
ALTER TABLE distributors ADD PRIMARY KEY (dist_id);
The ADD COLUMN form conforms with the SQL standard, with the exception that it does not support defaults and not-null constraints, as explained above. The ALTER COLUMN form is in full conformance.
The clauses to rename tables, columns, indexes, views, and sequences are PostgreSQL extensions of the SQL standard.
ALTER TABLE DROP COLUMN can be used to drop the only column of a table, leaving a zero-column table. This is an extension of SQL, which disallows zero-column tables.