Tablespaces allow database administrators to have multiple file systems per machine and decide how to best use physical storage to store database objects. Tablespaces allow you to assign different storage for frequently and infrequently used database objects or to control the I/O performance on certain database objects. For example, place frequently-used tables on file systems that use high performance solid-state drives (SSD), and place other tables on standard hard drives.
A tablespace requires a host file system location to store its database files. In Greenplum Database, the file system location must exist on all hosts including the hosts running the master, standby master, each primary segment, and each mirror segment.
A tablespace is Greenplum Database system object (a global object), you can use a tablespace from any database if you have appropriate privileges.
NoteGreenplum Database does not support different tablespace locations for a primary-mirror pair with the same content ID. It is only possible to configure different locations for different content IDs. Do not modify symbolic links under the
pg_tblspc
directory so that primary-mirror pairs point to different file locations; this will lead to erroneous behavior.
Parent topic: Defining Database Objects
The CREATE TABLESPACE
command defines a tablespace. For example:
CREATE TABLESPACE fastspace LOCATION '/fastdisk/gpdb';
Database superusers define tablespaces and grant access to database users with the GRANT``CREATE
command. For example:
GRANT CREATE ON TABLESPACE fastspace TO admin;
Users with the CREATE
privilege on a tablespace can create database objects in that tablespace, such as tables, indexes, and databases. The command is:
CREATE TABLE tablename(options) TABLESPACE spacename
For example, the following command creates a table in the tablespace space1:
CREATE TABLE foo(i int) TABLESPACE space1;
You can also use the default_tablespace
parameter to specify the default tablespace for CREATE TABLE
and CREATE INDEX
commands that do not specify a tablespace:
SET default_tablespace = space1;
CREATE TABLE foo(i int);
There is also the temp_tablespaces
configuration parameter, which determines the placement of temporary tables and indexes, as well as temporary files that are used for purposes such as sorting large data sets. This can be a comma-separate list of tablespace names, rather than only one, so that the load associated with temporary objects can be spread over multiple tablespaces. A random member of the list is picked each time a temporary object is to be created.
The tablespace associated with a database stores that database's system catalogs, temporary files created by server processes using that database, and is the default tablespace selected for tables and indexes created within the database, if no TABLESPACE
is specified when the objects are created. If you do not specify a tablespace when you create a database, the database uses the same tablespace used by its template database.
You can use a tablespace from any database in the Greenplum Database system if you have appropriate privileges.
Every Greenplum Database system has the following default tablespaces.
pg_global
for shared system catalogs.pg_default
, the default tablespace. Used by the template1 and template0 databases.These tablespaces use the default system location, the data directory locations created at system initialization.
To see tablespace information, use the pg_tablespace
catalog table to get the object ID (OID) of the tablespace and then use gp_tablespace_location()
function to display the tablespace directories. This is an example that lists one user-defined tablespace, myspace
:
SELECT oid, * FROM pg_tablespace ;
oid | spcname | spcowner | spcacl | spcoptions
-------+------------+----------+--------+------------
1663 | pg_default | 10 | |
1664 | pg_global | 10 | |
16391 | myspace | 10 | |
(3 rows)
The OID for the tablespace myspace
is 16391
. Run gp_tablespace_location()
to display the tablespace locations for a system that consists of two segment instances and the master.
# SELECT * FROM gp_tablespace_location(16391);
gp_segment_id | tblspc_loc
---------------+------------------
0 | /data/mytblspace
1 | /data/mytblspace
-1 | /data/mytblspace
(3 rows)
This query uses gp_tablespace_location()
the gp_segment_configuration
catalog table to display segment instance information with the file system location for the myspace
tablespace.
WITH spc AS (SELECT * FROM gp_tablespace_location(16391))
SELECT seg.role, spc.gp_segment_id as seg_id, seg.hostname, seg.datadir, tblspc_loc
FROM spc, gp_segment_configuration AS seg
WHERE spc.gp_segment_id = seg.content ORDER BY seg_id;
This is information for a test system that consists of two segment instances and the master on a single host.
role | seg_id | hostname | datadir | tblspc_loc
------+--------+----------+----------------------+------------------
p | -1 | testhost | /data/master/gpseg-1 | /data/mytblspace
p | 0 | testhost | /data/data1/gpseg0 | /data/mytblspace
p | 1 | testhost | /data/data2/gpseg1 | /data/mytblspace
(3 rows)
To drop a tablespace, you must be the tablespace owner or a superuser. You cannot drop a tablespace until all objects in all databases using the tablespace are removed.
The DROP TABLESPACE
command removes an empty tablespace.
NoteYou cannot drop a tablespace if it is not empty or if it stores temporary or transaction files.
You can move temporary or transaction files to a specific tablespace to improve database performance when running queries, creating backups, and to store data more sequentially.
The Greenplum Database server configuration parameter temp_tablespaces
controls the location for both temporary tables and temporary spill files for hash aggregate and hash join queries. Temporary files for purposes such as sorting large data sets are also created in these tablespaces.
temp_tablespaces
specifies tablespaces in which to create temporary objects (temp tables and indexes on temp tables) when a CREATE
command does not explicitly specify a tablespace.
Also note the following information about temporary or transaction files: