The STATISTICS
table provides
information about table indexes.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
Name |
SHOW
Name |
Remarks |
TABLE_CATALOG |
def |
|
TABLE_SCHEMA |
= Database | |
TABLE_NAME |
Table |
|
NON_UNIQUE |
Non_unique |
|
INDEX_SCHEMA |
= Database | |
INDEX_NAME |
Key_name |
|
SEQ_IN_INDEX |
Seq_in_index |
|
COLUMN_NAME |
Column_name |
|
COLLATION |
Collation |
|
CARDINALITY |
Cardinality |
|
SUB_PART |
Sub_part |
MySQL extension |
PACKED |
Packed |
MySQL extension |
NULLABLE |
Null |
MySQL extension |
INDEX_TYPE |
Index_type |
MySQL extension |
COMMENT |
Comment |
MySQL extension |
Notes:
There is no standard table for indexes. The preceding list is
similar to what SQL Server 2000 returns for
sp_statistics
, except that we replaced the
name QUALIFIER
with
CATALOG
and we replaced the name
OWNER
with SCHEMA
.
Clearly, the preceding table and the output from
SHOW INDEX
are derived from the
same parent. So the correlation is already close.
The following statements are equivalent:
SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.STATISTICS WHERE table_name = 'tbl_name
' AND table_schema = 'db_name
' SHOW INDEX FROMtbl_name
FROMdb_name
User Comments
Quite handy if you want to view all indices in a database:
SELECT table_name, index_name, column_name FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.STATISTICS WHERE table_schema = 'dbname' ORDER BY table_name, index_name, seq_in_index
Add your own comment.