DB2 10.5 for Linux, UNIX, and Windows

Table reorganization

After many changes to table data, logically sequential data might reside on nonsequential data pages, so that the database manager might need to perform additional read operations to access data. Also, if many rows have been deleted, additional read operations are also required. In this case, you might consider reorganizing the table to match the index and to reclaim space.

You can also reorganize the system catalog tables.

Because reorganizing a table usually takes more time than updating statistics, you could execute the RUNSTATS command to refresh the current statistics for your data, and then rebind your applications. If refreshed statistics do not improve performance, reorganization might help.

The following factors can indicate a need for table reorganization:
Note: With DB2® V9.7 Fix Pack 1 and later releases, higher data availability for a data partitioned table with only partitioned indexes (except system-generated XML path indexes) is achieved by reorganizing data for a specific data partition. Partition-level reorganization performs a table reorganization on a specified data partition while the remaining data partitions of the table remain accessible. The output from the REORGCHK command for a partitioned table contains statistics and recommendations for performing partition-level reorganizations.
REORG TABLE commands and REORG INDEXES ALL commands can be issued on a data partitioned table to concurrently reorganize different data partitions or partitioned indexes on a partition. When concurrently reorganizing data partitions or the partitioned indexes on a partition, users can access the unaffected partitions but cannot access the affected partitions. All the following criteria must be met to issue REORG commands that operate concurrently on the same table:
  • Each REORG command must specify a different partition with the ON DATA PARTITION clause.
  • Each REORG command must use the ALLOW NO ACCESS mode to restrict access to the data partitions.
  • The partitioned table must have only partitioned indexes if issuing REORG TABLE commands. No nonpartitioned indexes (except system-generated XML path indexes) can be defined on the table.

In IBM® Data Studio Version 3.1 or later, you can use the task assistant for reorganizing tables. Task assistants can guide you through the process of setting options, reviewing the automatically generated commands to perform the task, and running these commands. For more details, see Administering databases with task assistants.