Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference 11g Release 1 (11.1) Part Number B28286-01 |
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Purpose
Use the ALTER
CLUSTER
statement to redefine storage and parallelism characteristics of a cluster.
Note:
You cannot use this statement to change the number or the name of columns in the cluster key, and you cannot change the tablespace in which the cluster is stored.See Also:
CREATE CLUSTER for information on creating a cluster, DROP CLUSTER and DROP TABLE for information on removing tables from a cluster, and CREATE TABLE ... physical_properties for information on adding a table to a clusterPrerequisites
The cluster must be in your own schema or you must have the ALTER
ANY
CLUSTER
system privilege.
Syntax
alter_cluster::=
(physical_attributes_clause ::=, size_clause::=, allocate_extent_clause ::=, deallocate_unused_clause ::=, parallel_clause::=)
physical_attributes_clause ::=
Semantics
schema
Specify the schema containing the cluster. If you omit schema
, then Oracle Database assumes the cluster is in your own schema.
cluster
Specify the name of the cluster to be altered.
Use this clause to change the values of the PCTUSED
, PCTFREE
, and INITRANS
parameters of the cluster.
Use the STORAGE
clause to change the storage characteristics of the cluster.
See Also:
physical_attributes_clause for information on the parameters
storage_clause for a full description of that clause
Restriction on Physical Attributes You cannot change the values of the storage parameters INITIAL
and MINEXTENTS
for a cluster.
Use the SIZE
clause to specify the number of cluster keys that will be stored in data blocks allocated to the cluster.
Restriction on SIZE You can change the SIZE
parameter only for an indexed cluster, not for a hash cluster.
Specify the allocate_extent_clause
to explicitly allocate a new extent for the cluster.
When you explicitly allocate an extent with this clause, Oracle Database does not evaluate the storage parameters of the cluster and determine a new size for the next extent to be allocated (as it does when you create a table). Therefore, specify SIZE
if you do not want Oracle Database to use a default value.
Restriction on Allocating Extents You can allocate a new extent only for an indexed cluster, not for a hash cluster.
See Also:
allocate_extent_clause for a full description of this clause and "Deallocating Unused Space: Example"Use the deallocate_unused_clause
to explicitly deallocate unused space at the end of the cluster and make the freed space available for other segments.
See Also:
deallocate_unused_clause for a full description of this clauseThis clause has the same behavior in CREATE
CLUSTER
and ALTER
CLUSTER
statements.
See Also:
"CACHE | NOCACHE" for information on this clause.Specify the parallel_clause
to change the default degree of parallelism for queries and DML
on the cluster.
Restriction on Parallelized Clusters If the tables in cluster
contain any columns of LOB or user-defined object type, then this statement as well as subsequent INSERT
, UPDATE
, or DELETE
operations on cluster
are executed serially without notification.
See Also:
parallel_clause in the documentation onCREATE
TABLE
for complete information on this clauseExamples
The following examples modify the clusters that were created in the CREATE
CLUSTER
"Examples".
Modifying a Cluster: Example The next statement alters the personnel
cluster:
ALTER CLUSTER personnel SIZE 1024 CACHE;
Oracle Database allocates 1024 bytes for each cluster key value and enables the cache attribute. Assuming a data block size of 2 kilobytes, future data blocks within this cluster contain 2 cluster keys in each data block, or 2 kilobytes divided by 1024 bytes.
Deallocating Unused Space: Example The following statement deallocates unused space from the language
cluster, keeping 30 kilobytes of unused space for future use:
ALTER CLUSTER language DEALLOCATE UNUSED KEEP 30 K;