REINDEX

REINDEX

Name

REINDEX  --  rebuild corrupted indexes

Synopsis

REINDEX { TABLE | DATABASE | INDEX } name [ FORCE ]
  

Inputs

TABLE

Recreate all indexes of a specified table.

DATABASE

Recreate all system indexes of a specified database. (User-table indexes are not included.)

INDEX

Recreate a specified index.

name

The name of the specific table/database/index to be reindexed. Table and index names may be schema-qualified.

FORCE

Force rebuild of system indexes. Without this keyword REINDEX skips system indexes that are not marked invalid. FORCE is irrelevant for REINDEX INDEX, or when reindexing user indexes.

Outputs

REINDEX

Message returned if the table is successfully reindexed.

Description

REINDEX is used to rebuild corrupted indexes. Although in theory this should never be necessary, in practice indexes may become corrupted due to software bugs or hardware failures. REINDEX provides a recovery method.

REINDEX also removes certain dead index pages that can't be reclaimed any other way. See the "Routine Reindexing" section in the manual for more information.

If you suspect corruption of an index on a user table, you can simply rebuild that index, or all indexes on the table, using REINDEX INDEX or REINDEX TABLE.

Note: Another approach to dealing with a corrupted user-table index is just to drop and recreate it. This may in fact be preferable if you would like to maintain some semblance of normal operation on the table meanwhile. REINDEX acquires exclusive lock on the table, while CREATE INDEX only locks out writes not reads of the table.

Things are more difficult if you need to recover from corruption of an index on a system table. In this case it's important for the backend doing the recovery to not have used any of the suspect indexes itself. (Indeed, in this sort of scenario you may find that backends are crashing immediately at start-up, due to reliance on the corrupted indexes.) To recover safely, the postmaster must be shut down and a stand-alone PostgreSQL backend must be started instead, giving it the command-line options -O and -P (these options allow system table modifications and prevent use of system indexes, respectively). Then issue REINDEX INDEX, REINDEX TABLE, or REINDEX DATABASE depending on how much you want to reconstruct. If in doubt, use REINDEX DATABASE FORCE to force reconstruction of all system indexes in the database. Then quit the standalone backend and restart the postmaster.

Since this is likely the only situation when most people will ever use a standalone backend, some usage notes might be in order:

See the postgres reference page for more information.

Usage

Recreate the indexes on the table mytable:

     REINDEX TABLE mytable;
   

Rebuild a single index:

    REINDEX INDEX my_index;
   

Rebuild all system indexes (this will only work in a standalone backend):

    REINDEX DATABASE my_database FORCE;
   

Compatibility

SQL92

There is no REINDEX in SQL92.

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