SHOW INDEXES

Lists all the indexes in your account for which you have access privileges.

See also:

CREATE HYBRID TABLE , CREATE INDEX , DROP INDEX , DROP TABLE , DESCRIBE TABLE , SHOW HYBRID TABLES

Syntax

SHOW [ TERSE ] INDEXES
  [ LIKE '<pattern>' ]
  [ IN { ACCOUNT | DATABASE [ <database_name> ] | SCHEMA [ <schema_name> ] | TABLE | TABLE <table_name> } ]
  [ STARTS WITH '<name_string>' ]
  [ LIMIT <rows> [ FROM '<name_string>' ] ]
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Parameters

TERSE

Returns only a subset of the output columns:

  • created_on

  • name

  • kind

  • database_name

  • schema_name

LIKE 'pattern'

Optionally filters the command output by object name. The filter uses case-insensitive pattern matching, with support for SQL wildcard characters (% and _).

For example, the following patterns return the same results:

... LIKE '%testing%' ...
... LIKE '%TESTING%' ...

. Default: No value (no filtering is applied to the output).

IN { ACCOUNT | DATABASE [ database_name ] | SCHEMA [ schema_name ] | TABLE | TABLE table_name }

Filters the output by the specified database, schema, table, or account.

If you specify the keyword ACCOUNT, then the command retrieves records for all schemas in all databases of the current account.

If you specify the keyword DATABASE, then:

  • If you specify a db_name, then the command retrieves records for all schemas of the specified database.

  • If you do not specify a db_name, then:

    • If there is a current database, then the command retrieves records for all schemas in the current database.

    • If there is no current database, then the command retrieves records for all databases and schemas in the account.

If you specify the keyword SCHEMA, then:

  • If you specify a qualified schema name (e.g. my_database.my_schema), then the command retrieves records for the specified database and schema.

  • If you specify an unqualified schema_name, then:

    • If there is a current database, then the command retrieves records for the specified schema in the current database.

    • If there is no current database, then the command displays the error SQL compilation error: Object does not exist, or operation cannot be performed.

  • If you do not specify a schema_name, then:

    • If there is a current database, then:

      • If there is a current schema, then the command retrieves records for the current schema in the current database.

      • If there is no current schema, then the command retrieves records for all schemas in the current database.

    • If there is no current database, then the command retrieves records for all databases and all schemas in the account.

If you specify the keyword TABLE without a table_name, then:

  • If there is a current database, then:

    • If there is a current schema, then the command retrieves records for the current schema in the current database.

    • If there is no current schema, then the command retrieves records for all schemas in the current database.

  • If there is no current database, then the command retrieves records for all databases and all schemas in the account.

If you specify a <table_name> (with or without the keyword TABLE), then:

  • If you specify a fully-qualified <table_name> (e.g. my_database_name.my_schema_name.my_table_name), then the command retrieves all records for the specified table.

  • If you specify a schema-qualified <table_name> (e.g. my_schema_name.my_table_name), then:

    • If a current database exists, then the command retrieves all records for the specified table.

    • If no current database exists, then the command displays an error similar to Cannot perform SHOW <object_type>. This session does not have a current database....

  • If you specify an unqualified <table_name>, then:

    • If a current database and current schema exist, then the command retrieves records for the specified table in the current schema of the current database.

    • If no current database exists or no current schema exists, then the command displays an error similar to: SQL compilation error: <object> does not exist or not authorized..

Default: Depends on whether the session currently has a database in use:

  • Database: DATABASE is the default (i.e. the command returns the objects you have privileges to view in the database).

  • No database: ACCOUNT is the default (i.e. the command returns the objects you have privileges to view in your account).

STARTS WITH 'name_string'

Optionally filters the command output based on the characters that appear at the beginning of the object name. The string must be enclosed in single quotes and is case-sensitive.

For example, the following strings return different results:

... STARTS WITH 'B' ...
... STARTS WITH 'b' ...

. Default: No value (no filtering is applied to the output)

LIMIT rows [ FROM 'name_string' ]

Optionally limits the maximum number of rows returned, while also enabling “pagination” of the results. The actual number of rows returned might be less than the specified limit. For example, the number of existing objects is less than the specified limit.

The optional FROM 'name_string' subclause effectively serves as a “cursor” for the results. This enables fetching the specified number of rows following the first row whose object name matches the specified string:

  • The string must be enclosed in single quotes and is case-sensitive.

  • The string does not have to include the full object name; partial names are supported.

Default: No value (no limit is applied to the output)

Note

For SHOW commands that support both the FROM 'name_string' and STARTS WITH 'name_string' clauses, you can combine both of these clauses in the same statement. However, both conditions must be met or they cancel out each other and no results are returned.

In addition, objects are returned in lexicographic order by name, so FROM 'name_string' only returns rows with a higher lexicographic value than the rows returned by STARTS WITH 'name_string'.

For example:

  • ... STARTS WITH 'A' LIMIT ... FROM 'B' would return no results.

  • ... STARTS WITH 'B' LIMIT ... FROM 'A' would return no results.

  • ... STARTS WITH 'A' LIMIT ... FROM 'AB' would return results (if any rows match the input strings).

Output

Column

Description

created_on

Date and time when the index was created.

name

Name of the index.

is_unique

Whether the index is a unique index.

columns

List of indexed columns.

included_columns

List of covered columns.

table

Name of the table.

database_name

Database in which the index is stored.

schema_name

Schema in which the index is stored.

owner

Role that owns the index.

owner_role_type

Role type of the owner.

Examples

These SHOW INDEX examples use the current database and schema.

Return a terse list of indexes that contain the string DEVICE in their names:

SHOW TERSE INDEXES LIKE '%DEVICE%';
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+-------------------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------+---------------+-------------+
| created_on                    | name                                  | kind            | database_name | schema_name |
|-------------------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------+---------------+-------------|
| 2024-08-29 12:24:49.197 -0700 | SYS_INDEX_SENSOR_DATA_DEVICE1_PRIMARY | KEY_VALUE_INDEX | HT_SENSORS    | HT_SCHEMA   |
| 2024-08-29 12:24:49.197 -0700 | DEVICE_IDX                            | KEY_VALUE_INDEX | HT_SENSORS    | HT_SCHEMA   |
| 2024-08-29 14:03:36.537 -0700 | SYS_INDEX_SENSOR_DATA_DEVICE2_PRIMARY | KEY_VALUE_INDEX | HT_SENSORS    | HT_SCHEMA   |
| 2024-08-29 14:03:36.537 -0700 | DEVICE_IDX                            | KEY_VALUE_INDEX | HT_SENSORS    | HT_SCHEMA   |
+-------------------------------+---------------------------------------+-----------------+---------------+-------------+

Only return indexes that have covered columns (included_columns). Use the RESULT_SCAN function to select specific rows and columns from the full output of the SHOW INDEXES command.

SHOW INDEXES;
SELECT
    "name", "is_unique", "table", "columns", "included_columns", "database_name", "schema_name"
  FROM TABLE(RESULT_SCAN(LAST_QUERY_ID()))
  WHERE "included_columns" != '[]';
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The following output shows the SELECT query result only. One index qualifies for the WHERE clause condition:

+------------+-----------+---------------------+-------------+------------------+---------------+-------------+
| name       | is_unique | table               | columns     | included_columns | database_name | schema_name |
|------------+-----------+---------------------+-------------+------------------+---------------+-------------|
| DEVICE_IDX | N         | SENSOR_DATA_DEVICE2 | [DEVICE_ID] | [TEMPERATURE]    | HT_SENSORS    | HT_SCHEMA   |
+------------+-----------+---------------------+-------------+------------------+---------------+-------------+
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