Using the new TRUNCATE statement
In the earlier version of DB2, in order to empty the tables, we used the DELETE
statement. The DELETE
statement logs everything, so it's not efficient when we are dealing with a large volume of data. An alternate solution is to load the table using a null file and replacing the table data with it. In DB2 9.7, the TRUNCATE
command is introduced, which deletes the data from a table quickly and does not log the activity, resulting in very good performance.
We need one of the following privileges to execute the TRUNCATE
command:
DELETE
privilege
CONTROL
privilege
DATAACCESS
authority
TRUNCATE
is just a simple command that can also be embedded in any host language.
Truncating a table with REUSE STORAGE:
We can use the REUSE STORAGE
clause in the TRUNCATE
command, if we do not want to drop the storage. In this case, the space remains allocated to the table and can be used for the new data.
The following screenshot illustrates the sample output for the TRUNCATE
command:
The TRUNCATE
statement cannot be rolled back, as with the DELETE
statement. This is very useful if you have tons of records to be deleted, saving archive log space and time.
The sample table used in this recipe had 0.2 million rows. TRUNCATE
deleted all rows in a second, where the same set of records DELETE
would take 10 seconds or more on an average-performing system, and sometimes we may hit the condition when the transaction log is full and may need to change the LOGSECOND/LOGFILSZ
parameter.
One can use TRUNCATE
on a table, which is present on the current server. The TRUNCATE
statement cannot be used against the following database objects:
Cataloged table
Nickname
View
Sub table
Staging table
System MQT
Range Clustered table
If the table that we are truncating is a root table in the hierarchy, then all tables in the hierarchy are truncated.
The DROP STORAGE
or REUSE STORAGE
clause specifies whether to drop or reuse the existing allocated storage space for the table.
The IMMEDIATE
clause is mandatory, where it specifies if the TRUNCATE
operation is processed immediately and cannot be undone. Always and always, the TRUNCATE
statement should be the first statement in the transaction. If we have many statements inside the transaction, other operations can be undone, except the TRUNCATE
operation.
IGNORE DELETE TRIGGERS
or RESTRICT WHEN DELETE TRIGGERS
specifies if any delete triggers, which are defined on the table, would not be activated by the TRUNCATE
operation and is the default behavior. Otherwise, an error is returned in the case of RESTRICT WHEN DELETE TRIGGER
.
There are different ways to delete the data without logging the activity in the transaction logs other than TRUNCATE
. They are explained as follows:
Disable logging for a table: ACTIVATE NOT LOGGED INITIALLY
is an attribute of the table for a unit-of-work operation. During this, any changes made to the table by INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, CREATE INDEX, DROP INDEX
, and ALTER TABLE
are not logged.
Now let's see how we can delete the table data without logging:
Now that we know we have many ways to delete data, we should be using the right method in the right situation. For example, when one uses the ACTIVATE NOT LOGGED INITIALLY
option and the unit of work fails, the table has to be rebuilt and the data is lost. In any DB2 High Availability and Disaster Recovery (HADR) setup, be very sure that only tables (the data of which can be easily reproducible) can be marked as NOT LOGGED INITIALLY
if required, else we may end up losing the data upon a DR switch. Also, be very cautious while working in a huge data warehouse environment in LOAD
with the REPLACE
clause. When the data is distributed across multiple partitions, one can expect the APPLHEAPSZ
error and the table may go inaccessible. There is also the issue of running out of the utility's heap space UTIL_HEAP_SZ
, if you have many data range partitions.