Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the Oracle CREATE TABLESPACE
statement to create a new tablespace in a database.
Introduction to the CREATE TABLESPACE statement
The CREATE TABLESPACE
statement allows you to create a new tablespace. The following illustrates how to create a new tablespace named tbs1
with size 1MB:
CREATE TABLESPACE tbs1
DATAFILE 'tbs1_data.dbf'
SIZE 1m;
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
In this statement:
- First, specify the name of the tablespace after the
CREATE TABLESPACE
keywords. In this example, the tablespace name istbs1
. - Second, specify the path to the data file of the tablespace in the
DATAFILE
clause. In this case, it istbs1.dbf
. Note that you can use the datafile full path. - Third, specify the size of the tablespace in the
SIZE
clause. In this example,1m
stands for1MB
, which is quite small.
Once the tablespace is created, you can find its information by querying data from the dba_data_files
view:
SELECT
tablespace_name,
file_name,
bytes / 1024/ 1024 MB
FROM
dba_data_files;
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
Here are all the tablespaces in the current database:
The CREATE TABLESPACE
is quite complex with many options, you can find more information from the Oracle CREATE TABLESPACE
page.
Tablespaces and CREATE TABLE statement
When you create a new table, Oracle automatically places the table in the default tablespace of the user which you use to create the table. However, you can explicitly specify the tablespace to which the table belongs as shown in the following query:
CREATE TABLE table_name(
...
)
TABLESPACE tablespace_name;
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
Note that you must have privilege on the tablespace that you specify in the CREATE TABLE
statement.
Consider the following example.
First, create a new table called t1
whose tablespace is tbs1
:
CREATE TABLE t1(
id INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY,
c1 VARCHAR2(32)
) TABLESPACE tbs1;
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
Second, insert 10,000 rows into the t1
table:
BEGIN
FOR counter IN 1..10000 loop
INSERT INTO t1(c1)
VALUES(sys_guid());
END loop;
END;
/
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
Third, check the free space of the tbs1
tablespace by querying from the dba_free_space
view:
SELECT
tablespace_name,
bytes / 1024 / 1024 MB
FROM
dba_free_space
WHERE
tablespace_name = 'TBS1';
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
Fourth, insert 10,000 rows into the t1
table, Oracle will issue an error due to insufficient storage in the tablespace:
BEGIN
FOR counter IN 1..10000 loop
INSERT INTO t1(c1)
VALUES(sys_guid());
END loop;
END;
/
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
Here is the error message:
ORA-01653: unable to extend table OT.T1 by 8 in tablespace TBS1
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
To fix this, you can resize the tablespace using the following ALTER DATABASE
statement:
ALTER DATABASE
DATAFILE 'tbs1.dbf'
RESIZE 10m;
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
If you insert 10,00 rows into the t1 table again, it should work.
The second way to avoid this issue, when creating a new tablespace, you can use the AUTOEXTEND ON
clause as follows:
CREATE TABLESPACE tbs1
DATAFILE 'tbs1.dbf'
SIZE 1m
AUTOEXTEND 20m;
Code language: SQL (Structured Query Language) (sql)
In this tutorial, you have learned how to use the Oracle CREATE TABLESPACE
statement to create a new tablespace.