The STATISTICS
table provides
information about table indexes.
The STATISTICS
table has these
columns:
TABLE_CATALOG
The name of the catalog to which the table containing the index belongs. This value is always
def
.TABLE_SCHEMA
The name of the schema (database) to which the table containing the index belongs.
TABLE_NAME
The name of the table containing the index.
NON_UNIQUE
0 if the index cannot contain duplicates, 1 if it can.
INDEX_SCHEMA
The name of the schema (database) to which the index belongs.
INDEX_NAME
The name of the index. If the index is the primary key, the name is always
PRIMARY
.SEQ_IN_INDEX
The column sequence number in the index, starting with 1.
COLUMN_NAME
The column name. See also the description for the
EXPRESSION
column.COLLATION
How the column is sorted in the index. This can have values
A
(ascending),D
(descending), orNULL
(not sorted).CARDINALITY
An estimate of the number of unique values in the index. To update this number, run
ANALYZE TABLE
or (forMyISAM
tables) myisamchk -a.CARDINALITY
is counted based on statistics stored as integers, so the value is not necessarily exact even for small tables. The higher the cardinality, the greater the chance that MySQL uses the index when doing joins.SUB_PART
The index prefix. That is, the number of indexed characters if the column is only partly indexed,
NULL
if the entire column is indexed.NotePrefix limits are measured in bytes. However, prefix lengths for index specifications in
CREATE TABLE
,ALTER TABLE
, andCREATE INDEX
statements are interpreted as number of characters for nonbinary string types (CHAR
,VARCHAR
,TEXT
) and number of bytes for binary string types (BINARY
,VARBINARY
,BLOB
). Take this into account when specifying a prefix length for a nonbinary string column that uses a multibyte character set.For additional information about index prefixes, see Section 8.3.4, “Column Indexes”, and Section 13.1.14, “CREATE INDEX Statement”.
PACKED
Indicates how the key is packed.
NULL
if it is not.NULLABLE
Contains
YES
if the column may containNULL
values and''
if not.INDEX_TYPE
The index method used (
BTREE
,FULLTEXT
,HASH
,RTREE
).COMMENT
Information about the index not described in its own column, such as
disabled
if the index is disabled.INDEX_COMMENT
Any comment provided for the index with a
COMMENT
attribute when the index was created.
Notes
There is no standard
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table for indexes. The MySQL column list is similar to what SQL Server 2000 returns forsp_statistics
, except thatQUALIFIER
andOWNER
are replaced withCATALOG
andSCHEMA
, respectively.
Information about table indexes is also available from the
SHOW INDEX
statement. See
Section 13.7.5.22, “SHOW INDEX Statement”. The following statements are
equivalent:
SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.STATISTICS
WHERE table_name = 'tbl_name'
AND table_schema = 'db_name'
SHOW INDEX
FROM tbl_name
FROM db_name