Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E26088-03 |
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Use the deallocate_unused_clause
to explicitly deallocate unused space at the end of a database object segment and make the space available for other segments in the tablespace.
You can deallocate unused space using the following statements:
ALTER
CLUSTER
(see ALTER CLUSTER)
ALTER
INDEX
: to deallocate unused space from the index, an index partition, or an index subpartition (see ALTER INDEX)
ALTER
MATERIALIZED
VIEW
: to deallocate unused space from the overflow segment of an index-organized materialized view (see ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW)
ALTER
TABLE
: to deallocate unused space from the table, a table partition, a table subpartition, the mapping table of an index-organized table, the overflow segment of an index-organized table, or a LOB storage segment (see ALTER TABLE)
This section describes the semantics of the deallocate_unused_clause
. For additional information, refer to the SQL statement in which you set or reset this clause for a particular database object.
You cannot specify both the deallocate_unused_clause
and the allocate_extent_clause
in the same statement.
Oracle Database frees only unused space above the high water mark (the point beyond which database blocks have not yet been formatted to receive data). Oracle deallocates unused space beginning from the end of the object and moving toward the beginning of the object to the high water mark.
If an extent is completely contained in the deallocation, then the whole extent is freed for reuse. If an extent is partially contained in the deallocation, then the used part up to the high water mark becomes the extent, and the remaining unused space is freed for reuse.
Oracle credits the amount of the released space to the user quota for the tablespace in which the deallocation occurs.
The exact amount of space freed depends on the values of the INITIAL
, MINEXTENTS
, and NEXT
storage parameters. Refer to the storage_clause for a description of these parameters.
Specify the number of bytes above the high water mark that the segment of the database object is to have after deallocation.
If you omit KEEP
and the high water mark is above the size of INITIAL
and MINEXTENTS
, then all unused space above the high water mark is freed. When the high water mark is less than the size of INITIAL
or MINEXTENTS
, then all unused space above MINEXTENTS
is freed.
If you specify KEEP
, then the specified amount of space is kept and the remaining space is freed. When the remaining number of extents is less than MINEXTENTS
, then Oracle adjusts MINEXTENTS
to the new number of extents. If the initial extent becomes smaller than INITIAL
, then Oracle adjusts INITIAL
to the new size.
In either case, Oracle sets the value of the NEXT
storage parameter to the size of the last extent that was deallocated.