ALTER TABLE
SQL - Language Statements
ALTER TABLE
change the definition of a table
ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ]
action [, ... ]
ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] name [ * ]
RENAME [ COLUMN ] column TO new_column
ALTER TABLE name
RENAME TO new_name
where action is one of:
ADD [ COLUMN ] column type [ column_constraint [ ... ] ]
DROP [ COLUMN ] column [ RESTRICT | CASCADE ]
ALTER [ COLUMN ] column TYPE type [ USING expression ]
ALTER [ COLUMN ] column SET DEFAULT expression
ALTER [ COLUMN ] column DROP DEFAULT
ALTER [ COLUMN ] column { SET | DROP } NOT NULL
ALTER [ COLUMN ] column SET STATISTICS integer
ALTER [ COLUMN ] column SET STORAGE { PLAIN | EXTERNAL | EXTENDED | MAIN }
ADD table_constraint
DROP CONSTRAINT constraint_name [ RESTRICT | CASCADE ]
CLUSTER ON index_name
SET WITHOUT CLUSTER
SET WITHOUT OIDS
OWNER TO new_owner
SET TABLESPACE tablespace_name
Description
ALTER TABLE changes the definition of an existing table.
There are several subforms:
ADD COLUMN
This form adds a new column to the table using the same syntax as
.
DROP COLUMN
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.
ALTER COLUMN TYPE
This form changes the type of a column of a table. Indexes and
simple table constraints involving the column will be automatically
converted to use the new column type by reparsing the originally
supplied expression. The optional USING
clause specifies how to compute the new column value from the old;
if omitted, the default conversion is the same as an assignment
cast from old data type to new. A USING
clause must be provided if there is no implicit or assignment
cast from old to new type.
SET/DROP DEFAULT
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.
SET/DROP NOT NULL
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.
SET STATISTICS
This form
sets the per-column statistics-gathering target for subsequent
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 ().
For more information on the use of statistics by the
PostgreSQL query planner, refer to
.
TOAST
per-column storage settings
SET STORAGE
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 most
data types that support non-PLAIN storage.
Use of EXTERNAL will
make substring operations on text and bytea
columns faster, at the penalty of increased storage space. Note that
SET STORAGE> doesn't itself change anything in the table,
it just sets the strategy to be pursued during future table updates.
See for more information.
ADD table_constraint
This form adds a new constraint to a table using the same syntax as
.
DROP CONSTRAINT
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 matching constraints will be dropped.
CLUSTER
This form selects the default index for future
operations. It does not actually re-cluster the table.
SET WITHOUT CLUSTER
This form removes the most recently used
index specification from the table. This affects
future cluster operations that don't specify an index.
SET WITHOUT OIDS
This form removes the oid system column from the
table. This is exactly equivalent to
DROP COLUMN oid RESTRICT,
except that it will not complain if there is already no
oid column.
Note that there is no variant of ALTER TABLE
that allows OIDs to be restored to a table once they have been
removed.
OWNER
This form changes the owner of the table, index, sequence, or view to the
specified user.
SET TABLESPACE
This form changes the table's tablespace to the specified tablespace and
moves the data file(s) associated with the table to the new tablespace.
Indexes on the table, if any, are not moved; but they can be moved
separately with additional SET TABLESPACE commands.
See also
.
RENAME
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.
All the actions except RENAME can be combined into
a list of multiple alterations to apply in parallel. For example, it
is possible to add several columns and/or alter the type of several
columns in a single command. This is particularly useful with large
tables, since only one pass over the table need be made.
You must own the table to use ALTER TABLE>; except for
ALTER TABLE OWNER>, which may only be executed by a superuser.
Parameters
name
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 .)
column
Name of a new or existing column.
new_column
New name for an existing column.
new_name
New name for the table.
type
Data type of the new column, or new data type for an existing
column.
table_constraint
New table constraint for the table.
constraint_name
Name of an existing constraint to drop.
CASCADE
Automatically drop objects that depend on the dropped column
or constraint (for example, views referencing the column).
RESTRICT
Refuse to drop the column or constraint if there are any dependent
objects. This is the default behavior.
index_name
The index name on which the table should be marked for clustering.
new_owner
The user name of the new owner of the table.
tablespace_name
The tablespace name to which the table will be moved.
Notes
The key word COLUMN is noise and can be omitted.
When a column is added with ADD COLUMN, all existing
rows in the table are initialized with the column's default value
(NULL if no DEFAULT> clause is specified).
Adding a column with a non-null default or changing the type of an
existing column will require the entire table to be rewritten. This
may take a significant amount of time for a large table; and it will
temporarily require double the disk space.
Adding a CHECK> or NOT NULL> constraint requires
scanning the table to verify that existing rows meet the constraint.
The main reason for providing the option to specify multiple changes
in a single ALTER TABLE> is that multiple table scans or
rewrites can thereby be combined into a single pass over the table.
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.
The fact that ALTER TYPE> requires rewriting the whole table
is sometimes an advantage, because the rewriting process eliminates
any dead space in the table. For example, to reclaim the space occupied
by a dropped column immediately, the fastest way is
ALTER TABLE table ALTER COLUMN anycol TYPE anytype;
where anycol> is any remaining table column and
anytype> is the same type that column already has.
This results in no semantically-visible change in the table,
but the command forces rewriting, which gets rid of no-longer-useful
data.
The USING option of ALTER TYPE> can actually
specify any expression involving the old values of the row; that is, it
can refer to other columns as well as the one being converted. This allows
very general conversions to be done with the ALTER TYPE>
syntax. Because of this flexibility, the USING
expression is not applied to the column's default value (if any); the
result might not be a constant expression as required for a default.
This means that when there is no implicit or assignment cast from old to
new type, ALTER TYPE> may fail to convert the default even
though a USING clause is supplied. In such cases,
drop the default with DROP DEFAULT>, perform the ALTER
TYPE>, and then use SET DEFAULT> to add a suitable new
default. Similar considerations apply to indexes and constraints involving
the column.
If a table has any descendant tables, it is not permitted to add,
rename, or change the type of 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 for a further description of valid
parameters. has further information on
inheritance.
Examples
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 change the types of two existing columns in one operation:
ALTER TABLE distributors
ALTER COLUMN address TYPE varchar(80),
ALTER COLUMN name TYPE varchar(100);
To change an integer column containing UNIX timestamps to timestamp
with time zone via a USING clause:
ALTER TABLE foo
ALTER COLUMN foo_timestamp TYPE timestamp with time zone
USING
timestamp with time zone 'epoch' + foo_timestamp * interval '1 second';
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);
To move a table to a different tablespace:
ALTER TABLE distributors SET TABLESPACE fasttablespace;
Compatibility
The ADD, DROP>, and SET DEFAULT>
forms conform with the SQL standard. The other forms are
PostgreSQL extensions of the SQL standard.
Also, the ability to specify more than one manipulation in a single
ALTER TABLE> command is an extension.
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.