Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E26088-03 |
|
|
PDF · Mobi · ePub |
Use the DROP
CLUSTER
clause to remove a cluster from the database.
Caution:
When you drop a cluster, any tables in the recycle bin that were once part of that cluster are purged from the recycle bin and can no longer be recovered with aFLASHBACK TABLE
operation.You cannot uncluster an individual table. Instead you must perform these steps:
Create a new table with the same structure and contents as the old one, but with no CLUSTER
clause.
Drop the old table.
Use the RENAME
statement to give the new table the name of the old one.
Grant privileges on the new unclustered table. Grants on the old clustered table do not apply.
The cluster must be in your own schema or you must have the DROP
ANY
CLUSTER
system privilege.
Specify the schema containing the cluster. If you omit schema
, then the database assumes the cluster is in your own schema.
Specify the name of the cluster to be dropped. Dropping a cluster also drops the cluster index and returns all cluster space, including data blocks for the index, to the appropriate tablespace(s).
Specify INCLUDING
TABLES
to drop all tables that belong to the cluster.
Specify CASCADE
CONSTRAINTS
to drop all referential integrity constraints from tables outside the cluster that refer to primary and unique keys in tables of the cluster. If you omit this clause and such referential integrity constraints exist, then the database returns an error and does not drop the cluster.
Dropping a Cluster: Examples The following examples drop the clusters created in the "Examples" section of CREATE
CLUSTER
.
The following statements drops the language
cluster:
DROP CLUSTER language;
The following statement drops the personnel
cluster as well as tables dept_10
and dept_20
and any referential integrity constraints that refer to primary or unique keys in those tables:
DROP CLUSTER personnel INCLUDING TABLES CASCADE CONSTRAINTS;