Oracle® Database SQL Reference 10g Release 2 (10.2) Part Number B14200-02 |
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Use the allocate_extent_clause
clause to explicitly allocate a new extent for a database object.
Explicitly allocating an extent with this clause does not change the values of the NEXT
and PCTINCREASE
storage parameters, so does not affect the size of the next extent to be allocated implicitly by Oracle Database. Please refer to storage_clause for information about the NEXT
and PCTINCREASE
storage parameters.
You can allocate an extent in the following SQL statements:
ALTER
CLUSTER
(see ALTER CLUSTER)
ALTER
INDEX
: to allocate an extent to the index, an index partition, or an index subpartition (see ALTER INDEX)
ALTER
MATERIALIZED
VIEW
: to allocate an extent to the materialized view, one of its partitions or subpartitions, or the overflow segment of an index-organized materialized view (see ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW)
ALTER
MATERIALIZED
VIEW
LOG
(see ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW LOG)
ALTER
TABLE
: to allocate an extent to the table, a table partition, a table subpartition, the mapping table of an index-organized table, the overflow segment of an index-organized table, or a LOB storage segment (see ALTER TABLE)
This section describes the parameters of the allocate_extent_clause
. For additional information, refer to the SQL statement in which you set or reset these parameters for a particular database object.
You cannot specify the allocate_extent_clause
and the deallocate_unused_clause
in the same statement.
Specify the size of the extent in bytes. The value of integer
can be 0 through 2147483647. To specify a larger extent size, use an integer within this range with K
, M
, G
, or T
to specify the extent size in kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes, or terabytes.
For a table, index, materialized view, or materialized view log, if you omit SIZE
, then Oracle Database determines the size based on the values of the storage parameters of the object. However, for a cluster, Oracle does not evaluate the cluster's storage parameters, so you must specify SIZE
if you do not want Oracle to use a default value.
Specify one of the datafiles in the tablespace of the table, cluster, index, materialized view, or materialized view log to contain the new extent. If you omit DATAFILE
, then Oracle chooses the datafile.
Use this parameter only if you are using Oracle with Real Application Clusters.
Specifying INSTANCE
integer
makes the new extent available to the freelist group associated with the specified instance. If the instance number exceeds the maximum number of freelist groups, then Oracle divides the specified number by the maximum number and uses the remainder to identify the freelist group to be used. An instance is identified by the value of its initialization parameter INSTANCE_NUMBER
.
If you omit this parameter, then the space is allocated to the table, cluster, index, materialized view, or materialized view log but is not drawn from any particular freelist group. Instead, Oracle uses the master freelist and allocates space as needed.
Note:
If you are using automatic segment-space management, then theINSTANCE
parameter of the allocate_extent_clause
may not reserve the newly allocated space for the specified instance, because automatic segment-space management does not maintain rigid affinity between extents and instances.See Also:
Oracle Real Application Clusters Administrator's Guide for more information on setting theINSTANCE
parameter of allocate_extent_clause