CREATE TABLE reference

To create a new table in the database, the CREATE TABLE keywords followed by column definitions are used.

Syntax

To create a table by manually entering parameters and settings:

Flow chart showing the syntax of the CREATE TABLE keyword

note

Checking table metadata can be done via the tables() and table_columns() functions which are described in the meta functions documentation page.

To create a table by cloning the metadata of an existing table:

Flow chart showing the syntax of the CREATE TABLE LIKE keyword

Examples

The following examples demonstrate creating tables from basic statements, and introduces feature such as partitioning, designated timestamps and data deduplication. For more information on the concepts introduced to below, see

This first iteration of our example creates a table with a designated timestamp and also applies a partitioning strategy, BY DAY:

Basic example, partitioned by day
CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
PARTITION BY DAY;

Next, data deduplication is enabled to discard duplicates for the timestamp and ticker columns:

With deduplication, adding ticker as an upsert key.
CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
PARTITION BY DAY
DEDUP UPSERT KEYS(timestamp, symbol);

Finally, we add additional parameters for our SYMBOL type:

Adding parameters for symbol type
CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL CAPACITY 256 NOCACHE INDEX CAPACITY 1048576,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
PARTITION BY DAY;
DEDUP UPSERT KEYS(timestamp, symbol);

Write-Ahead Log (WAL) Settings

By default, created tables are Write-Ahead Log enabled. While we recommend WAL-enabled tables, it is still possible to create non-WAL-enabled tables.

CREATE TABLE's global configuration setting allows you to alter the default behaviour via cairo.wal.enabled.default:

  • true: Creates a WAL table (default)
  • false: Creates a non-WAL table

And on an individual basis, you can also use BYPASS WAL.

Designated timestamp

The timestamp function allows for specifying which column (which must be of timestamp type) should be a designated timestamp for the table. For more information, see the designated timestamp reference.

The designated timestamp column cannot be changed after the table has been created.

Partitioning

PARTITION BY allows for specifying the partitioning strategy for the table. Tables created via SQL are not partitioned by default (NONE) and tables can be partitioned by one of the following:

  • NONE: the default when partition is not defined.
  • YEAR
  • MONTH
  • WEEK
  • DAY
  • HOUR

The partitioning strategy cannot be changed after the table has been created.

Deduplication

When Deduplication is enabled, QuestDB only inserts rows that do not match the existing data. When rows are inserted into a table with the deduplication option configured, QuestDB searches for existing rows to match using the specified UPSERT KEYS. If a match is found, the existing rows are replaced with the new row. If no match is found, the new rows are inserted into the table.

Deduplication can only be enabled for Write-Ahead Log (WAL) tables.

It is possible to include multiple columns of different types in the UPSERT KEYS list.

However, there are a few limitations to keep in mind:

  • The designated timestamp column must be included in the list of columns
  • Columns of STRING and BINARY types cannot be used in UPSERT KEYS list

After table creation the deduplication configuration can be changed at any time using ALTER table:

Examples

Creating a table for tracking ticker prices with daily partitions and upsert deduplication
CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
PARTITION BY DAY
DEDUP UPSERT KEYS(timestamp, symbol);
Enabling dedup on an existing table, for timestamp and ticker columns
ALTER TABLE trades DEDUP ENABLE UPSERT KEYS(timestamp, symbol);
Disabling dedup on the entire table
ALTER TABLE trades DEDUP DISABLE;
Checking whether a table has dedup enabled
SELECT dedup FROM tables() WHERE table_name = '<the table name>';
Checking whether a column has dedup enabled
SELECT `column`, upsertKey from table_columns('<the table name>');

IF NOT EXISTS

An optional IF NOT EXISTS clause may be added directly after the CREATE TABLE keywords to indicate that a new table should be created if one with the desired table name does not already exist.

CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
PARTITION BY DAY;

Table name

Internally the table name is used as a directory name on the file system. It can contain both ASCII and Unicode characters. The table name must be unique and an error is returned if a table already exists with the requested name.

In addition, table names are case insensitive: example, exAmPlE, EXAMplE and EXAMPLE are all treated the same. Table names containing spaces or period . character must be enclosed in double quotes, for example:

CREATE TABLE "example out of.space" (a INT);
INSERT INTO "example out of.space" values (1);

Column name

As with table names, the column name is used for file names internally. Although it does support both ASCII and Unicode characters, character restrictions specific to the file system still apply.

Tables may have up to 2,147,483,647 columns. Column names are also case insensitive. For example: example, exAmPlE, EXAMplE and EXAMPLE are all treated the same. However, column names must be unique within each table and must not contain a period . character.

Type definition

When specifying a column, a name and type definition must be provided. The symbol type may have additional optional parameters applied.

Flow chart showing the syntax of the different column types

Symbols

Optional keywords and parameters may follow the symbol type which allow for further optimization on the handling of this type. For more information on the benefits of using this type, see the symbol overview.

Symbol capacity

CAPACITY is an optional keyword used when defining a symbol type on table creation to indicate how many distinct values this column is expected to have. When distinctValueEstimate is not explicitly specified, a default value of cairo.default.symbol.capacity is used.

distinctValueEstimate - the value used to size data structures for symbols.

CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL CAPACITY 50,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
PARTITION BY DAY;

The symbol capacity is not to be confused with index capacity described in column indexes below.

CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL CAPACITY 50 INDEX capacity 256,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

Symbol caching

CACHE | NOCACHE is used to specify whether a symbol should be cached. The default value is CACHE unless otherwise specified.

CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL CAPACITY 50 NOCACHE,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

Casting types

castDef - casts the type of a specific column. columnRef must reference existing column in the selectSql

Flow chart showing the syntax of the cast function

CREATE TABLE test AS (
SELECT x FROM long_sequence(10)
), CAST (x AS DOUBLE);

Column indexes

Index definitions (indexDef) are used to create an index for a table column. The referenced table column must be of type symbol.

Flow chart showing the syntax of the index function

CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
), INDEX(symbol) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

An index capacity may be provided for the index by defining the index storage parameter, valueBlockSize:


CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
), INDEX (symbol CAPACITY 128) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

-- equivalent to

CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL INDEX CAPACITY 128,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

See Index for more information about index capacity.

OWNED BY

Enterprise only.

When a user adds a column to a table, they automatically get permissions for that column. However, if the OWNED BY clause is used, the permissions instead go to the user, group, or service account named in that clause.

CREATE GROUP analysts;
CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL INDEX CAPACITY 128,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp) PARTITION BY DAY
OWNED BY analysts;

CREATE TABLE AS

Creates a table, using the results from the SELECT statement to determine the column names and data types.

Create table as select
CREATE TABLE new_trades AS(
SELECT *
FROM
trades
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

We can use keywords such as IF NOT EXISTS, PARTITION BY..., as needed for the new table. The data type of a column can be changed:

Clone an existing wide table and change type of cherry-picked columns
CREATE TABLE new_trades AS(
SELECT *
FROM
trades
), CAST(price AS LONG) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

Here we changed type of price to LONG.

note

Since QuestDB v7.4.0, the default behaviour for CREATE TABLE AS has been changed.

Previously, the table would be created atomically. For large tables, this requires a significant amount of RAM, and can cause errors if the database runs out of memory.

By default, this will be performed in batches. If the query fails, partial data may be inserted.

If this is a problem, it is recommended to use the ATOMIC keyword (CREATE ATOMIC TABLE). Alternatively, enabling deduplication on the table will allow you to perform an idempotent insert to re-insert any missed data.

ATOMIC

Tables can be created atomically, which first loads all of the data and then commits in a single transaction.

This requires the data to be available in memory all at once, so for large inserts, this may have performance issues.

To force this behaviour, one can use the ATOMIC keyword:

Create atomic table as select
CREATE ATOMIC TABLE new_trades AS(
SELECT *
FROM
trades
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

BATCH

By default, tables will be created with data inserted in batches.

The size of the batches can be configured:

  • globally, by setting the cairo.sql.create.table.model.batch.size configuration option in server.conf.
  • locally, by using the BATCH keyword in the CREATE TABLE statement.
Create batched table as select
CREATE BATCH 4096  TABLE new_trades AS(
SELECT *
FROM
trades
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

One can also specify the out-of-order commit lag for these batched writes, using the o3MaxLag option:

Create table as select with batching and O3 lag
CREATE BATCH 4096 o3MaxLag 1s TABLE new_trades AS(
SELECT *
FROM
trades
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp);

Turning unordered data into ordered data

As an additional example, let's assume we imported a text file into the table taxi_trips_unordered and now we want to turn this data into time series through ordering trips by pickup_time, assign dedicated timestamp and partition by month:

Create table as select with data manipulation
CREATE TABLE taxi_trips AS(
SELECT * FROM taxi_trips_unordered ORDER BY pickup_time
) TIMESTAMP(pickup_time)
PARTITION BY MONTH;

CREATE TABLE LIKE

The LIKE keyword clones the table schema of an existing table without copying the data. Table settings and parameters such as designated timestamp, symbol column indexes, and index capacity will be cloned, too.

Create table like
CREATE TABLE new_table (LIKE my_table);

WITH table parameter

Flow chart showing the syntax of keyword to specify WITH table parameter

The parameter influences how often commits of out-of-order data occur. It may be set during table creation using the WITH keyword.

maxUncommittedRows - defines the maximum number of uncommitted rows per-table to keep in memory before triggering a commit for a specific table.

The purpose of specifying maximum uncommitted rows per table is to reduce the occurrences of resource-intensive commits when ingesting out-of-order data.

The global setting for the same parameter is cairo.max.uncommitted.rows.

Setting out-of-order table parameters via SQL
CREATE TABLE trades(
timestamp TIMESTAMP,
symbol SYMBOL INDEX CAPACITY 128,
price DOUBLE,
amount DOUBLE
) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
PARTITION BY DAY
WITH maxUncommittedRows=250000;

Checking the values per-table may be done using the tables() function:

List all tables
SELECT id, table_name, maxUncommittedRows FROM tables();
idnamemaxUncommittedRows
1trades250000
2sample_table50000

Table target volume

The IN VOLUME clause is used to create a table in a different volume than the standard. The table is created in the specified target volume, and a symbolic link is created in the table's standard volume to point to it.

Flow chart showing the syntax of keywords to specify a table target volume

The use of the comma (,) depends on the existence of the WITH clause:

  • If the WITH clause is present, a comma is mandatory before IN VOLUME:

    CREATE TABLE trades(
    timestamp TIMESTAMP,
    symbol SYMBOL INDEX CAPACITY 128,
    price DOUBLE,
    amount DOUBLE
    ) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
    PARTITION BY DAY
    WITH maxUncommittedRows=250000,
    IN VOLUME SECONDARY_VOLUME;
  • If no WITH clause is used, the comma must not be added for the IN VOLUME segment:

    CREATE TABLE trades(
    timestamp TIMESTAMP,
    symbol SYMBOL INDEX CAPACITY 128,
    price DOUBLE,
    amount DOUBLE
    ) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
    PARTITION BY DAY
    IN VOLUME SECONDARY_VOLUME;

The use of quotation marks (') depends on the volume alias:

  • If the alias contains spaces, the quotation marks are required:

    CREATE TABLE trades(
    timestamp TIMESTAMP,
    symbol SYMBOL INDEX CAPACITY 128,
    price DOUBLE,
    amount DOUBLE
    ) TIMESTAMP(timestamp)
    PARTITION BY DAY
    IN VOLUME 'SECONDARY_VOLUME';
  • If the alias does not contain spaces, no quotation mark is necessary.

Description

The table behaves the same way as if it had been created in the standard (default) volume, with the exception that DROP TABLE removes the symbolic link from the standard volume but the content pointed to is left intact in its volume. A table using the same name in the same volume cannot be created again as a result, it requires manual intervention to either remove or rename the table's directory in its volume.

Configuration

The secondary table target volume is defined by cairo.volumes in server.conf. The default setting contains an empty list, which means the feature is not enabled.

To enable the feature, define as many volume pairs as you need, with syntax alias -> volume-root-path, and separate different pairs with a comma. For example:

cairo.volumes=SECONDARY_VOLUME -> /Users/quest/mounts/secondary, BIN -> /var/bin

Additional notes about defining the alias and volume root paths:

  • Aliases are case-insensitive.
  • Volume root paths must be valid and exist at bootstrap time and at the time when the table is created.
  • Aliases and/or volume root paths can be single quoted, it is not required.