After you create a table, you can query its definition and schema or query all tables in the database by using SQL statements.
Query all tables in a database
You can use the SHOW TABLES statement to query all tables in a database. Here is a sample statement:
SHOW [EXTENDED] [FULL] TABLES [{FROM | IN} database_name];
where:
EXTENDEDspecifies to show hidden tables. This keyword does not take effect because the current version of OceanBase Database does not generate hidden tables.FULLspecifies to show the table type.database_namespecifies the name of the database whose tables are to be queried.
The following example queries all tables in the test database.
SHOW TABLES FROM test;
The query result is as follows:
+----------------+
| Tables_in_test |
+----------------+
| t1 |
+----------------+
1 row in set
For more information about the SHOW TABLES statement, see SHOW.
Query the definition of a table
After you create a table, you can use the SHOW CREATE TABLE statement to query the definition of the table.
The following example queries the definition of the test table.
obclient [test]> SHOW CREATE TABLE test;
The query result is as follows:
+-------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Table | Create Table |
+-------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| test | CREATE TABLE `test` (
`id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`name` char(50) DEFAULT NULL
) DEFAULT CHARSET = utf8mb4 ROW_FORMAT = DYNAMIC COMPRESSION = 'zstd_1.3.8' REPLICA_NUM = 1 BLOCK_SIZE = 16384 USE_BLOOM_FILTER = FALSE TABLET_SIZE = 134217728 PCTFREE = 0 |
+-------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1 row in set
where
DEFAULT CHARSET = utf8mb4indicates that the default character set isutf8mb4.ROW_FORMAT = DYNAMICindicates that data encoding is enabled.COMPRESSIONindicates the compression method of the table.PCTFREEindicates the space reserved for updating this data block.
Query the schema of a table
After you create a table, you can use the SHOW COLUMNS/FIELDS statement to query the schema of the table. Here is a sample statement:
SHOW [EXTENDED] [FULL] {COLUMNS | FIELDS}
{FROM | IN} table_name
[{FROM | IN} database_name];
where:
EXTENDEDspecifies to show hidden columns.FULLspecifies to show the collation, privileges, and comments of columns.table_namespecifies the name of the table whose schema is to be queried.database_namespecifies the name of the database to which the table belongs.
Here are two examples:
The following example queries the schema of the
testtable.obclient [test]> SHOW COLUMNS FROM test;The query result is as follows:
+-------+----------+------+-----+---------+-------+ | Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra | +-------+----------+------+-----+---------+-------+ | id | int(11) | YES | | NULL | | | name | varchar(50) | YES | | NULL | | +-------+----------+------+-----+---------+-------+ 2 rows in setThe following example views all columns, including hidden columns, in the
testtable.obclient [test]> SHOW EXTENDED COLUMNS FROM test;The query result is as follows:
+----------------+-----------------+------+-----+---------+-------+ | Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra | +----------------+-----------------+------+-----+---------+-------+ | id | int(11) | YES | | NULL | | | name | char(50) | YES | | NULL | | | __pk_increment | bigint unsigned | NO | PRI | NULL | | +----------------+-----------------+------+-----+---------+-------+ 3 rows in set
For more information about the SHOW COLUMNS/FIELDS statement, see SHOW.