ALTER TABLE SQL - Language Statements ALTER TABLE change the definition of a table 1999-07-20 ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] table [ * ] ADD [ COLUMN ] column type [ column_constraint [ ... ] ] ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] table [ * ] ALTER [ COLUMN ] column { SET DEFAULT value | DROP DEFAULT } ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] table [ * ] ALTER [ COLUMN ] column { SET | DROP } NOT NULL ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] table [ * ] ALTER [ COLUMN ] column SET STATISTICS integer ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] table [ * ] ALTER [ COLUMN ] column SET STORAGE {PLAIN | EXTERNAL | EXTENDED | MAIN} ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] table [ * ] RENAME [ COLUMN ] column TO newcolumn ALTER TABLE table RENAME TO new_table ALTER TABLE table ADD table_constraint_definition ALTER TABLE [ ONLY ] table DROP CONSTRAINT constraint { RESTRICT | CASCADE } ALTER TABLE table OWNER TO new_owner 1998-04-15 Inputs table The name of an existing table to alter. column Name of a new or existing column. type Type of the new column. newcolumn New name for an existing column. new_table New name for the table. table_constraint_definition New table constraint for the table new_owner The user name of the new owner of the table. 1998-04-15 Outputs ALTER Message returned from column or table renaming. ERROR Message returned if table or column is not available. 1998-04-15 Description ALTER TABLE changes the definition of an existing table. The ADD COLUMN form adds a new column to the table using the same syntax as . The ALTER COLUMN SET/DROP DEFAULT forms allow you to set or remove the default for the column. Note that defaults only apply to subsequent INSERT commands; they do not cause rows already in the table to change. The ALTER COLUMN SET/DROP NOT NULL forms allow you to change whether a column is marked to allow NULL values or to reject NULL values. The ALTER COLUMN SET STATISTICS form allows you to set the statistics-gathering target for subsequent operations. The ALTER COLUMN SET STORAGE form allows the column storage mode to be set. 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. The use of EXTERNAL will make substring operations on a column faster, at the penalty of increased storage space. The RENAME clause causes the name of a table, column, index, sequence or view to change without changing any of the data. The data will remain of the same type and size after the command is executed. The ADD table_constraint_definition clause adds a new constraint to the table using the same syntax as . The DROP CONSTRAINT constraint clause drops all constraints on the table (and its children) that match constraint. The OWNER clause changes the owner of the table, index, sequence or view to the user new user. You must own the table in order to change its schema. 1998-04-15 Notes The keyword 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. You can use the SET DEFAULT form of ALTER TABLE to set the default later. (You may also want to update the already existing rows to the new default value, using .) In DROP CONSTRAINT, the RESTRICT keyword is required, although dependencies are not yet checked. The CASCADE option is unsupported. Currently DROP CONSTRAINT drops only CHECK constraints. To remove a PRIMARY or UNIQUE constraint, drop the relevant index using the command. To remove FOREIGN KEY constraints you need to recreate and reload the table, using other parameters to the command. For example, to drop all constraints on a table distributors: CREATE TABLE temp AS SELECT * FROM distributors; DROP TABLE distributors; CREATE TABLE distributors AS SELECT * FROM temp; DROP TABLE temp; You must own the table in order to change it. Changing any part of the schema of a system catalog is not permitted. The PostgreSQL User's Guide has further information on inheritance. Refer to CREATE TABLE for a further description of valid arguments. Usage To add a column of type varchar to a table: ALTER TABLE distributors ADD COLUMN address VARCHAR(30); 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 RESTRICT; 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); Compatibility 1998-04-15 SQL92 The ADD COLUMN form is compliant with the exception that it does not support defaults and NOT NULL constraints, as explained above. The ALTER COLUMN form is in full compliance. SQL92 specifies some additional capabilities for ALTER TABLE statement which are not yet directly supported by PostgreSQL: ALTER TABLE table DROP [ COLUMN ] column { RESTRICT | CASCADE } Removes a column from a table. Currently, to remove an existing column the table must be recreated and reloaded: CREATE TABLE temp AS SELECT did, city FROM distributors; DROP TABLE distributors; CREATE TABLE distributors ( did DECIMAL(3) DEFAULT 1, name VARCHAR(40) NOT NULL ); INSERT INTO distributors SELECT * FROM temp; DROP TABLE temp; The clauses to rename tables, columns, indexes, and sequences are PostgreSQL extensions from SQL92.