ALTER INDEX
ALTER INDEX — change the definition of an index
Synopsis
ALTER INDEX [ IF EXISTS ]nameRENAME TOnew_nameALTER INDEX [ IF EXISTS ]nameSET TABLESPACEtablespace_nameALTER INDEXnameDEPENDS ON EXTENSIONextension_nameALTER INDEX [ IF EXISTS ]nameSET (storage_parameter[=value] [, ... ] ) ALTER INDEX [ IF EXISTS ]nameRESET (storage_parameter[, ... ] ) ALTER INDEX ALL IN TABLESPACEname[ OWNED BYrole_name[, ... ] ] SET TABLESPACEnew_tablespace[ NOWAIT ]
Description
ALTER INDEX changes the definition of an existing index. There are several subforms:
RENAMEThe
RENAMEform changes the name of the index. There is no effect on the stored data.SET TABLESPACEThis form changes the index's tablespace to the specified tablespace and moves the data file(s) associated with the index to the new tablespace. To change the tablespace of an index, you must own the index and have
CREATEprivilege on the new tablespace. All indexes in the current database in a tablespace can be moved by using theALL IN TABLESPACEform, which will lock all indexes to be moved and then move each one. This form also supportsOWNED BY, which will only move indexes owned by the roles specified. If theNOWAIToption is specified then the command will fail if it is unable to acquire all of the locks required immediately. Note that system catalogs will not be moved by this command, useALTER DATABASEor explicitALTER INDEXinvocations instead if desired. See also CREATE TABLESPACE.DEPENDS ON EXTENSIONThis form marks the index as dependent on the extension, such that if the extension is dropped, the index will automatically be dropped as well.
SET (storage_parameter[=value] [, ... ] )This form changes one or more index-method-specific storage parameters for the index. See CREATE INDEX for details on the available parameters. Note that the index contents will not be modified immediately by this command; depending on the parameter you might need to rebuild the index with REINDEX to get the desired effects.
RESET (storage_parameter[, ... ] )This form resets one or more index-method-specific storage parameters to their defaults. As with
SET, aREINDEXmight be needed to update the index entirely.
Parameters
IF EXISTSDo not throw an error if the index does not exist. A notice is issued in this case.
nameThe name (possibly schema-qualified) of an existing index to alter.
new_nameThe new name for the index.
tablespace_nameThe tablespace to which the index will be moved.
extension_nameThe name of the extension that the index is to depend on.
storage_parameterThe name of an index-method-specific storage parameter.
valueThe new value for an index-method-specific storage parameter. This might be a number or a word depending on the parameter.
Notes
These operations are also possible using ALTER TABLE. ALTER INDEX is in fact just an alias for the forms of ALTER TABLE that apply to indexes.
There was formerly an ALTER INDEX OWNER variant, but this is now ignored (with a warning). An index cannot have an owner different from its table's owner. Changing the table's owner automatically changes the index as well.
Changing any part of a system catalog index is not permitted.
Examples
To rename an existing index:
ALTER INDEX distributors RENAME TO suppliers;
To move an index to a different tablespace:
ALTER INDEX distributors SET TABLESPACE fasttablespace;
To change an index's fill factor (assuming that the index method supports it):
ALTER INDEX distributors SET (fillfactor = 75); REINDEX INDEX distributors;
Compatibility
ALTER INDEX is a PostgreSQL extension.