ALTER TABLESPACE
ALTER TABLESPACE — change the definition of a tablespace
Synopsis
ALTER TABLESPACEnameRENAME TOnew_nameALTER TABLESPACEnameOWNER TO {new_owner| CURRENT_ROLE | CURRENT_USER | SESSION_USER } ALTER TABLESPACEnameSET (tablespace_option=value[, ... ] ) ALTER TABLESPACEnameRESET (tablespace_option[, ... ] )
Description
ALTER TABLESPACE can be used to change the definition of a tablespace.
You must own the tablespace to change the definition of a tablespace. To alter the owner, you must also be able to SET ROLE to the new owning role. (Note that superusers have these privileges automatically.)
Parameters
nameThe name of an existing tablespace.
new_nameThe new name of the tablespace. The new name cannot begin with
pg_, as such names are reserved for system tablespaces.new_ownerThe new owner of the tablespace.
tablespace_optionA tablespace parameter to be set or reset. Currently, the only available parameters are
seq_page_cost,random_page_cost,effective_io_concurrencyandmaintenance_io_concurrency. Setting these values for a particular tablespace will override the planner's usual estimate of the cost of reading pages from tables in that tablespace, and the executor's prefetching behavior, as established by the configuration parameters of the same name (see seq_page_cost, random_page_cost, effective_io_concurrency, maintenance_io_concurrency). This may be useful if one tablespace is located on a disk which is faster or slower than the remainder of the I/O subsystem.
Examples
Rename tablespace index_space to fast_raid:
ALTER TABLESPACE index_space RENAME TO fast_raid;
Change the owner of tablespace index_space:
ALTER TABLESPACE index_space OWNER TO mary;
Compatibility
There is no ALTER TABLESPACE statement in the SQL standard.