Updated on 2024-05-20 GMT+08:00

Creating Partitioned Tables

Creating a Partitioned Table

The SQL syntax tree is complex due to the powerful and flexible functions of the SQL language. So do partitioned tables. The creation of a partitioned table can be regarded as adding partition attributes to the original non-partitioned table. Therefore, the syntax interface of a partitioned table can be regarded to extend the CREATE TABLE statement of a non-partitioned table with a PARTITION BY clause and specify the following three core elements related to the partition:
  1. partType: describes the partitioning policy of a partitioned table. The options are RANGE, INTERVAL, LIST, and HASH.
  2. partKey: describes the partition key of a partitioned table. Currently, range and list partitioning supports a partition key with up to 16 columns, while interval and hash partitioning supports a one-column partition key only.
  3. partExpr: describes the specific partitioning type of a partitioned table, that is, the mapping between key values and partitions.
The three elements are reflected in the PARTITION BY clause of the CREATE TABLE statement, for example, PARTITION BY partType (partKey) (partExpr[,partExpr]...). Example:
CREATE TABLE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] partition_table_name
(
    [ /* Inherited from the CREATE TABLE statement of an ordinary table */
    { column_name data_type [ COLLATE collation ] [ column_constraint [ ... ] ]
    | table_constraint
    | LIKE source_table [ like_option [...] ] }[, ... ]
    ]
)
[ WITH ( {storage_parameter = value} [, ... ] ) ]
[ COMPRESS | NOCOMPRESS ]
[ TABLESPACE tablespace_name ]
/* Range partitioning. If the INTERVAL clause is declared, interval partitioning is used. */
PARTITION BY RANGE (partKey) [ INTERVAL ('interval_expr') [ STORE IN (tablespace_name [, ... ] ) ] ] (
    partition_start_end_item [, ... ]
    partition_less_then_item [, ... ]
)
/* List partitioning */
PARTITION BY LIST (partKey)
(
    PARTITION partition_name VALUES (list_values_clause) [ TABLESPACE tablespace_name [, ... ] ]
...
)
/* Hash partitioning */
PARTITION BY HASH (partKey) (
    PARTITION partition_name [ TABLESPACE tablespace_name [, ... ] ]
...
)
/* Enable or disable row migration for a partitioned table. */
[ { ENABLE | DISABLE } ROW MOVEMENT ];
Restrictions
  1. Range and list partitioning supports a partition key with up to 16 columns. Interval and hash partitioning supports a one-column partition key only. All subpartitioning types support a one-column partition key only.
  2. Interval partitioning supports only partition keys of the time/date data type and interval partitions cannot be created in a level-2 partitioned table.
  3. The partition key value cannot be null except for hash partitioning. Otherwise, the DML statement reports an error. The only exception is the MAXVALUE partition defined for a range partitioned table and the DEFAULT partition defined for a list partitioned table.
  4. The maximum number of partitions is 1048575, which can meet the requirements of most service scenarios. If the number of partitions increases, the number of files in the system increases, which affects the system performance. It is recommended that the number of partitions for a single table be less than or equal to 200.

Creating a Level-2 Partitioned Table

The level-2 partitioned table may be considered as an extension of the partitioned table. In the level-2 partitioned table, the partition is a logical table and does not actually store data, and the data is actually stored on the level-2 partition node. The subpartitioning solution is implemented by nesting two partitions. For details about the partitioning solution, see "CREATE TABLE PARTITION." Common subpartitioning solutions include range-range partitioning, range-list partitioning, range-hash partitioning, list-range partitioning, list-list partitioning, list-hash partitioning, hash-range partitioning, hash-list partitioning, and hash-hash partitioning. Currently, subpartitioning is only applicable to row-store tables. The following is an example of creating a level-2 partition:
CREATE TABLE [ IF NOT EXISTS ] subpartition_table_name
(
    [ /* Inherited from the CREATE TABLE statement of an ordinary table */
    { column_name data_type [ COLLATE collation ] [ column_constraint [ ... ] ]
    | table_constraint
    | LIKE source_table [ like_option [...] ] } [, ... ]
    ]
)
[ WITH ( {storage_parameter = value} [, ... ] ) ]
[ COMPRESS | NOCOMPRESS ]
[ TABLESPACE tablespace_name ]
/* Level-2 partition definition */
PARTITION BY {RANGE | LIST | HASH} SUBPARTITOIN BY {RANGE | LIST | HASH}
(
    PARTITION partition_name partExpr…  /* Partition */
    (
        SUBPARTITION partition_name partExpr …
        SUBPARTITION partition_name partExpr …
    ),
    PARTITION partition_name partExpr…  /* Partition */
    (
        SUBPARTITION partition_name partExpr …
        SUBPARTITION partition_name partExpr …
    ),
    …
)
[ { ENABLE | DISABLE } ROW MOVEMENT ];
Restrictions
  1. Subpartitioning support a combination of any two of the list, hash, and range partitioning methods.
  2. Subpartitioning supports only a single partition key.
  3. Subpartitioning does not support interval partitions.
  4. Subpartitioning supports a maximum of 1048575 partitions.

Modifying Partition Attributes

You can run the ALTER TABLE command similar to that of a non-partitioned table to modify attributes related to partitioned tables and partitions. Common statements for modifying partition attributes are as follows:
  1. ADD PARTITION
  2. DROP PARTITION
  3. TRUNCATE PARTITION
  4. SPLIT PARTITION
  5. MERGE PARTITION
  6. MOVE PARTITION
  7. EXCHANGE PARTITION
  8. RENAME PARTITION
The preceding statements for modifying partition attributes are extended based on the ALTER TABLE statement of an ordinary table. Most of the statements are used in a similar way. The following is an example of the basic syntax framework for modifying partitioned table attributes:
/* Basic ALTER TABLE syntax */
ALTER TABLE [ IF EXISTS ] { table_name [*] | ONLY table_name | ONLY ( table_name )}
action [, ... ];

For details about how to use the ALTER TABLE statement, see Partitioned Table O&M Management and sections "SQL Reference > SQL Syntax > ALTER TABLE PARTITION and ALTER TABLE SUBPARTITION" in Developer Guide.