RENAME TABLE
Syntax
RENAME TABLE [IF EXISTS] tbl_name [WAIT n | NOWAIT] TO new_tbl_name [, tbl_name2 TO new_tbl_name2] ...
Contents
Description
This statement renames one or more tables or views, but not the privileges associated to them.
The rename operation is done atomically, which means that no other session can
access any of the tables while the rename is running. For example, if you have
an existing table old_table
, you can create another table
new_table
that has the same structure but is empty, and then
replace the existing table with the empty one as follows (assuming that
backup_table
does not already exist):
IF EXISTS
was added in MariaDB 10.5.3. If this is directive is used, one will not get an error if the "table-to-be-renamed" doesn't exists.
CREATE TABLE new_table (...); RENAME TABLE old_table TO backup_table, new_table TO old_table;
tbl_name
can optionally be specified as db_name
.tbl_name
. See Identifier Qualifiers. This allows to use RENAME
to move a table from a database to another (as long as they are on the same filesystem):
RENAME TABLE db1.t TO db2.t;
Note that moving a table to another database is not possible if it has some triggers. Trying to do so produces the following error:
ERROR 1435 (HY000): Trigger in wrong schema
Also, views cannot be moved to another database:
ERROR 1450 (HY000): Changing schema from 'old_db' to 'new_db' is not allowed.
If a RENAME TABLE
renames more than one table and one renaming fails, all renames executed by the same statement are rolled back.
Renames are always executed in the specified order. Knowing this, it is also possible to swap two tables' names:
RENAME TABLE t1 TO tmp_table, t2 TO t1, tmp_table TO t2;
Privileges
Executing the RENAME TABLE
statement requires the DROP
, CREATE
and INSERT
privileges for the table or the database.
WAIT/NOWAIT
MariaDB starting with 10.3.0
Set the lock wait timeout. See WAIT and NOWAIT.