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Les13 - Manage Schema Objects

This document discusses how to manage schema objects in Oracle, including adding, modifying, and dropping columns using the ALTER TABLE statement, adding and dropping constraints, creating indexes, and using flashback operations. Specifically, it covers adding constraints, creating indexes using the CREATE TABLE statement, creating function-based indexes, dropping columns and setting them to UNUSED, performing flashback operations, and creating and using external tables.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
48 views31 pages

Les13 - Manage Schema Objects

This document discusses how to manage schema objects in Oracle, including adding, modifying, and dropping columns using the ALTER TABLE statement, adding and dropping constraints, creating indexes, and using flashback operations. Specifically, it covers adding constraints, creating indexes using the CREATE TABLE statement, creating function-based indexes, dropping columns and setting them to UNUSED, performing flashback operations, and creating and using external tables.

Uploaded by

Ra dia
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Manage Schema Objects

Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Objectives

After completing this lesson, you should be able to do


the following:
• Add constraints
• Create indexes
• Create indexes using the CREATE TABLE
statement
• Creating function-based indexes
• Drop columns and set column UNUSED
• Perform FLASHBACK operations
• Create and use external tables

2-2 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


The ALTER TABLE Statement

Use the ALTER TABLE statement to:


• Add a new column
• Modify an existing column
• Define a default value for the new column
• Drop a column

2-3 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


The ALTER TABLE Statement

Use the ALTER TABLE statement to add, modify, or


drop columns.
ALTER TABLE table
ADD (column datatype [DEFAULT expr]
[, column datatype]...);

ALTER TABLE table


MODIFY (column datatype [DEFAULT expr]
[, column datatype]...);

ALTER TABLE table


DROP (column);

2-4 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Adding a Column

• You use the ADD clause to add columns.


ALTER TABLE dept80
ADD (job_id VARCHAR2(9));
Table altered.

• The new column becomes the last column.

2-5 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Modifying a Column

• You can change a column’s data type, size, and


default value.
ALTER TABLE dept80
MODIFY (last_name VARCHAR2(30));
Table altered.

• A change to the default value affects only


subsequent insertions to the table.

2-6 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Dropping a Column

Use the DROP COLUMN clause to drop columns you no


longer need from the table.

ALTER TABLE dept80


DROP COLUMN job_id;
Table altered.

2-7 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


The SET UNUSED Option

• You use the SET UNUSED option to mark one or


more columns as unused.
• You use the DROP UNUSED COLUMNS option to
remove the columns that are marked as unused.
ALTER TABLE <table_name>
SET UNUSED(<column_name>);
OR
ALTER TABLE <table_name>
SET UNUSED COLUMN <column_name>;

ALTER TABLE <table_name>


DROP UNUSED COLUMNS;

2-8 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Adding a Constraint Syntax

Use the ALTER TABLE statement to:


• Add or drop a constraint, but not modify its
structure
• Enable or disable constraints
• Add a NOT NULL constraint by using the MODIFY
clause
ALTER TABLE <table_name>
ADD [CONSTRAINT <constraint_name>]
type (<column_name>);

2-10 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Adding a Constraint

Add a FOREIGN KEY constraint to the EMP2 table


indicating that a manager must already exist as a valid
employee in the EMP2 table.
ALTER TABLE emp2
modify employee_id Primary Key;
Table altered.

ALTER TABLE emp2


ADD CONSTRAINT emp_mgr_fk
FOREIGN KEY(manager_id)
REFERENCES emp2(employee_id);
Table altered.

2-11 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


ON DELETE CASCADE

Delete child rows when a parent key is deleted.


ALTER TABLE Emp2 ADD CONSTRAINT emp_dt_fk
FOREIGN KEY (Department_id)
REFERENCES departments ON DELETE CASCADE);
Table altered.

2-12 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Deferring Constraints

Constraints can have the following attributes:


• DEFERRABLE or NOT DEFERRABLE
• INITIALLY DEFERRED or INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
Deferring constraint on
ALTER TABLE dept2 creation
ADD CONSTRAINT dept2_id_pk
PRIMARY KEY (department_id)
DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED

Changing a specific
SET CONSTRAINTS dept2_id_pk IMMEDIATE constraint attribute

ALTER SESSION Changing all constraints for a


session
SET CONSTRAINTS= IMMEDIATE

2-13 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Dropping a Constraint

• Remove the manager constraint from the EMP2


table.
ALTER TABLE emp2
DROP CONSTRAINT emp_mgr_fk;
Table altered.

• Remove the PRIMARY KEY constraint on the


DEPT2 table and drop the associated FOREIGN
KEY constraint on the EMP2.DEPARTMENT_ID
column.
ALTER TABLE dept2
DROP PRIMARY KEY CASCADE;
Table altered.

2-14 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Disabling Constraints

• Execute the DISABLE clause of the ALTER TABLE


statement to deactivate an integrity constraint.
• Apply the CASCADE option to disable dependent
integrity constraints.

ALTER TABLE emp2


DISABLE CONSTRAINT emp_dt_fk;
Table altered.

2-15 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Enabling Constraints

• Activate an integrity constraint currently disabled


in the table definition by using the ENABLE clause.
ALTER TABLE emp2
ENABLE CONSTRAINT emp_dt_fk;
Table altered.

• A UNIQUE index is automatically created if you


enable a UNIQUE key or PRIMARY KEY constraint.

2-16 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Cascading Constraints

• The CASCADE CONSTRAINTS clause is used along


with the DROP COLUMN clause.
• The CASCADE CONSTRAINTS clause drops all
referential integrity constraints that refer to the
primary and unique keys defined on the dropped
columns.
• The CASCADE CONSTRAINTS clause also drops all
multicolumn constraints defined on the dropped
columns.

2-18 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Cascading Constraints

Example:
ALTER TABLE emp2
DROP COLUMN employee_id CASCADE CONSTRAINTS;
Table altered.

ALTER TABLE test1


DROP (pk, fk, col1) CASCADE CONSTRAINTS;
Table altered.

2-19 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Overview of Indexes

Indexes are created:


• Automatically
– PRIMARY KEY creation
– UNIQUE KEY creation
• Manually
– CREATE INDEX statement
– CREATE TABLE statement

2-20 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


CREATE INDEX with CREATE TABLE
Statement

CREATE TABLE NEW_EMP


(employee_id NUMBER(6)
PRIMARY KEY USING INDEX
(CREATE INDEX emp_id_idx ON
NEW_EMP(employee_id)),
first_name VARCHAR2(20),
last_name VARCHAR2(25));
Table created.

SELECT INDEX_NAME, TABLE_NAME


FROM USER_INDEXES
WHERE TABLE_NAME = 'NEW_EMP';

2-21 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Function-Based Indexes

• A function-based index is based on expressions.


• The index expression is built from table columns,
constants, SQL functions, and user-defined
functions.

CREATE INDEX upper_dept_name_idx


ON dept2(UPPER(department_name));

Index created.

SELECT *
FROM dept2
WHERE UPPER(department_name) = 'SALES';

2-23 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Removing an Index

• Remove an index from the data dictionary by


using the DROP INDEX command.
DROP INDEX index;

• Remove the UPPER_DEPT_NAME_IDX index from


the data dictionary.
DROP INDEX upper_dept_name_idx;
Index dropped.
• To drop an index, you must be the owner of the
index or have the DROP ANY INDEX privilege.

2-25 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


DROP TABLE …PURGE

DROP TABLE dept80 PURGE;

2-26 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


The FLASHBACK TABLE Statement

• Repair tool for accidental table modifications


– Restores a table to an earlier point in time
– Benefits: Ease of use, availability, fast execution
– Performed in place
• Syntax:

FLASHBACK TABLE[schema.]table[,
[ schema.]table ]...
TO { TIMESTAMP | SCN } expr
[ { ENABLE | DISABLE } TRIGGERS ];

2-27 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


The FLASHBACK TABLE Statement

DROP TABLE emp2;


Table dropped

SELECT original_name, operation, droptime,


FROM recyclebin;

FLASHBACK TABLE emp2 TO BEFORE DROP;


Flashback complete

2-28 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


External Tables

2-29 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Creating a Directory for the External Table

Create a DIRECTORY object that corresponds to the


directory on the file system where the external data
source resides.

CREATE OR REPLACE DIRECTORY emp_dir


AS '/…/emp_dir';

GRANT READ ON DIRECTORY emp_dir TO hr;

2-31 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Creating an External Table

CREATE TABLE <table_name>


( <col_name> <datatype>, … )
ORGANIZATION EXTERNAL
(TYPE <access_driver_type>
DEFAULT DIRECTORY <directory_name>
ACCESS PARAMETERS
(… ) )
LOCATION ('<location_specifier>') )
REJECT LIMIT [0 | <number> | UNLIMITED];

2-33 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Creating an External Table Using
ORACLE_LOADER
CREATE TABLE oldemp (
fname char(25), lname CHAR(25))
ORGANIZATION EXTERNAL
(TYPE ORACLE_LOADER
DEFAULT DIRECTORY emp_dir
ACCESS PARAMETERS
(RECORDS DELIMITED BY NEWLINE
NOBADFILE
NOLOGFILE
FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
(fname POSITION ( 1:20) CHAR,
lname POSITION (22:41) CHAR))
LOCATION ('emp.dat'))
PARALLEL 5
REJECT LIMIT 200;
Table created.

2-35 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Querying External Tables

SELECT *
FROM oldemp

OLDEMP
emp.dat

2-37 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Summary

In this lesson, you should have learned how to:


• Add constraints
• Create indexes
• Create a primary key constraint using an index
• Create indexes using the CREATE TABLE
statement
• Creating function-based indexes
• Drop columns and set column UNUSED
• Perform FLASHBACK operations
• Create and use external tables

2-38 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.


Practice 2: Overview

This practice covers the following topics:


• Altering tables
• Adding columns
• Dropping columns
• Creating indexes
• Creating external tables

2-39 Copyright © 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved.

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