The TABLES
table provides information about tables in databases.
Columns in TABLES
that represent table statistics hold cached values. The information_schema_stats_expiry
system variable defines the period of time before cached table statistics expire. The default is 86400 seconds (24 hours). If there are no cached statistics or statistics have expired, statistics are retrieved from storage engines when querying table statistics columns. To update cached values at any time for a given table, use ANALYZE TABLE
. To always retrieve the latest statistics directly from storage engines, set information_schema_stats_expiry
to 0
. For more information, see Section 8.2.3, “Optimizing INFORMATION_SCHEMA Queries”.
If the innodb_read_only
system variable is enabled, ANALYZE TABLE
may fail because it cannot update statistics tables in the data dictionary, which use InnoDB
. For ANALYZE TABLE
operations that update the key distribution, failure may occur even if the operation updates the table itself (for example, if it is a MyISAM
table). To obtain the updated distribution statistics, set information_schema_stats_expiry=0
.
The TABLES
table has these columns:
TABLE_CATALOG
The name of the catalog to which the table belongs. This value is always def
.
TABLE_SCHEMA
The name of the schema (database) to which the table belongs.
TABLE_NAME
The name of the table.
TABLE_TYPE
BASE TABLE
for a table, VIEW
for a view, or SYSTEM VIEW
for an INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table.
The TABLES
table does not list TEMPORARY
tables.
ENGINE
The storage engine for the table. See Chapter 15, The InnoDB Storage Engine, and Chapter 16, Alternative Storage Engines.
For partitioned tables, ENGINE
shows the name of the storage engine used by all partitions.
VERSION
This column is unused. With the removal of .frm
files in MySQL 8.0, this column now reports a hardcoded value of 10
, which is the last .frm
file version used in MySQL 5.7.
ROW_FORMAT
The row-storage format (Fixed
, Dynamic
, Compressed
, Redundant
, Compact
). For MyISAM
tables, Dynamic
corresponds to what myisamchk -dvv reports as Packed
.
TABLE_ROWS
The number of rows. Some storage engines, such as MyISAM
, store the exact count. For other storage engines, such as InnoDB
, this value is an approximation, and may vary from the actual value by as much as 40% to 50%. In such cases, use SELECT COUNT(*)
to obtain an accurate count.
TABLE_ROWS
is NULL
for INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables.
For InnoDB
tables, the row count is only a rough estimate used in SQL optimization. (This is also true if the InnoDB
table is partitioned.)
AVG_ROW_LENGTH
The average row length.
DATA_LENGTH
For MyISAM
, DATA_LENGTH
is the length of the data file, in bytes.
For InnoDB
, DATA_LENGTH
is the approximate amount of space allocated for the clustered index, in bytes. Specifically, it is the clustered index size, in pages, multiplied by the InnoDB
page size.
Refer to the notes at the end of this section for information regarding other storage engines.
MAX_DATA_LENGTH
For MyISAM
, MAX_DATA_LENGTH
is maximum length of the data file. This is the total number of bytes of data that can be stored in the table, given the data pointer size used.
Unused for InnoDB
.
Refer to the notes at the end of this section for information regarding other storage engines.
INDEX_LENGTH
For MyISAM
, INDEX_LENGTH
is the length of the index file, in bytes.
For InnoDB
, INDEX_LENGTH
is the approximate amount of space allocated for non-clustered indexes, in bytes. Specifically, it is the sum of non-clustered index sizes, in pages, multiplied by the InnoDB
page size.
Refer to the notes at the end of this section for information regarding other storage engines.
DATA_FREE
The number of allocated but unused bytes.
InnoDB
tables report the free space of the tablespace to which the table belongs. For a table located in the shared tablespace, this is the free space of the shared tablespace. If you are using multiple tablespaces and the table has its own tablespace, the free space is for only that table. Free space means the number of bytes in completely free extents minus a safety margin. Even if free space displays as 0, it may be possible to insert rows as long as new extents need not be allocated.
For NDB Cluster, DATA_FREE
shows the space allocated on disk for, but not used by, a Disk Data table or fragment on disk. (In-memory data resource usage is reported by the DATA_LENGTH
column.)
For partitioned tables, this value is only an estimate and may not be absolutely correct. A more accurate method of obtaining this information in such cases is to query the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PARTITIONS
table, as shown in this example:
SELECT SUM(DATA_FREE) FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARTITIONS WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'mydb' AND TABLE_NAME = 'mytable';
For more information, see Section 26.3.21, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA PARTITIONS Table”.
AUTO_INCREMENT
The next AUTO_INCREMENT
value.
CREATE_TIME
When the table was created.
UPDATE_TIME
When the data file was last updated. For some storage engines, this value is NULL
. For example, InnoDB
stores multiple tables in its system tablespace and the data file timestamp does not apply. Even with file-per-table mode with each InnoDB
table in a separate .ibd
file, change buffering can delay the write to the data file, so the file modification time is different from the time of the last insert, update, or delete. For MyISAM
, the data file timestamp is used; however, on Windows the timestamp is not updated by updates, so the value is inaccurate.
UPDATE_TIME
displays a timestamp value for the last UPDATE
, INSERT
, or DELETE
performed on InnoDB
tables that are not partitioned. For MVCC, the timestamp value reflects the COMMIT
time, which is considered the last update time. Timestamps are not persisted when the server is restarted or when the table is evicted from the InnoDB
data dictionary cache.
CHECK_TIME
When the table was last checked. Not all storage engines update this time, in which case, the value is always NULL
.
For partitioned InnoDB
tables, CHECK_TIME
is always NULL
.
TABLE_COLLATION
The table default collation. The output does not explicitly list the table default character set, but the collation name begins with the character set name.
CHECKSUM
The live checksum value, if any.
CREATE_OPTIONS
Extra options used with CREATE TABLE
.
CREATE_OPTIONS
shows partitioned
for a partitioned table.
Prior to MySQL 8.0.16, CREATE_OPTIONS
shows the ENCRYPTION
clause specified for tables created in file-per-table tablespaces. As of MySQL 8.0.16, it shows the encryption clause for file-per-table tablespaces if the table is encrypted or if the specified encryption differs from the schema encryption. The encryption clause is not shown for tables created in general tablespaces. To identify encrypted file-per-table and general tablespaces, query the INNODB_TABLESPACES
ENCRYPTION
column.
When creating a table with strict mode disabled, the storage engine's default row format is used if the specified row format is not supported. The actual row format of the table is reported in the ROW_FORMAT
column. CREATE_OPTIONS
shows the row format that was specified in the CREATE TABLE
statement.
When altering the storage engine of a table, table options that are not applicable to the new storage engine are retained in the table definition to enable reverting the table with its previously defined options to the original storage engine, if necessary. The CREATE_OPTIONS
column may show retained options.
TABLE_COMMENT
The comment used when creating the table (or information as to why MySQL could not access the table information).
For NDB
tables, the output of this statement shows appropriate values for the AVG_ROW_LENGTH
and DATA_LENGTH
columns, with the exception that BLOB
columns are not taken into account.
For NDB
tables, DATA_LENGTH
includes data stored in main memory only; the MAX_DATA_LENGTH
and DATA_FREE
columns apply to Disk Data.
For NDB Cluster Disk Data tables, MAX_DATA_LENGTH
shows the space allocated for the disk part of a Disk Data table or fragment. (In-memory data resource usage is reported by the DATA_LENGTH
column.)
For MEMORY
tables, the DATA_LENGTH
, MAX_DATA_LENGTH
, and INDEX_LENGTH
values approximate the actual amount of allocated memory. The allocation algorithm reserves memory in large amounts to reduce the number of allocation operations.
For views, most TABLES
columns are 0 or NULL
except that TABLE_NAME
indicates the view name, CREATE_TIME
indicates the creation time, and TABLE_COMMENT
says VIEW
.
Table information is also available from the SHOW TABLE STATUS
and SHOW TABLES
statements. See Section 13.7.7.38, “SHOW TABLE STATUS Statement”, and Section 13.7.7.39, “SHOW TABLES Statement”. The following statements are equivalent:
SELECT TABLE_NAME, ENGINE, VERSION, ROW_FORMAT, TABLE_ROWS, AVG_ROW_LENGTH, DATA_LENGTH, MAX_DATA_LENGTH, INDEX_LENGTH, DATA_FREE, AUTO_INCREMENT, CREATE_TIME, UPDATE_TIME, CHECK_TIME, TABLE_COLLATION, CHECKSUM, CREATE_OPTIONS, TABLE_COMMENT FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE table_schema = 'db_name
' [AND table_name LIKE 'wild
'] SHOW TABLE STATUS FROMdb_name
[LIKE 'wild
']
The following statements are equivalent:
SELECT TABLE_NAME, TABLE_TYPE FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE table_schema = 'db_name
' [AND table_name LIKE 'wild
'] SHOW FULL TABLES FROMdb_name
[LIKE 'wild
']