Oracle® Database Administrator's Guide 11g Release 1 (11.1) Part Number B28310-01 |
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Using the RENAME TO
clause of the ALTER TABLESPACE
, you can rename a permanent or temporary tablespace. For example, the following statement renames the users
tablespace:
ALTER TABLESPACE users RENAME TO usersts;
When you rename a tablespace the database updates all references to the tablespace name in the data dictionary, control file, and (online) datafile headers. The database does not change the tablespace ID so if this tablespace were, for example, the default tablespace for a user, then the renamed tablespace would show as the default tablespace for the user in the DBA_USERS
view.
The following affect the operation of this statement:
The COMPATIBLE
parameter must be set to 10.0.0 or higher.
If the tablespace being renamed is the SYSTEM
tablespace or the SYSAUX
tablespace, then it will not be renamed and an error is raised.
If any datafile in the tablespace is offline, or if the tablespace is offline, then the tablespace is not renamed and an error is raised.
If the tablespace is read only, then datafile headers are not updated. This should not be regarded as corruption; instead, it causes a message to be written to the alert log indicating that datafile headers have not been renamed. The data dictionary and control file are updated.
If the tablespace is the default temporary tablespace, then the corresponding entry in the database properties table is updated and the DATABASE_PROPERTIES
view shows the new name.
If the tablespace is an undo tablespace and if the following conditions are met, then the tablespace name is changed to the new tablespace name in the server parameter file (SPFILE
).
The server parameter file was used to start up the database.
The tablespace name is specified as the UNDO_TABLESPACE
for any instance.
If a traditional initialization parameter file (PFILE
) is being used then a message is written to the alert log stating that the initialization parameter file must be manually changed.