Learn CockroachDB SQL

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This tutorial guides you through some of the most essential CockroachDB SQL statements using an interactive SQL shell connected to a temporary, single-node CockroachDB cluster.

For a complete list of supported SQL statements and related details, see SQL Statements.

Note:

This tutorial is for Self-Hosted users. If you are working with a cluster in CockroachDB Cloud, refer to CockroachDB Cloud: Learn CockroachDB SQL.

Start CockroachDB

If you haven't already, install CockroachDB.

Then run the cockroach demo command:

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$ cockroach demo

This starts a single-node, temporary cluster with the movr dataset pre-loaded.

Show tables

To see all tables in the active database, use the SHOW TABLES statement or the \dt shell command:

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> SHOW TABLES;
  schema_name |         table_name         | type  | estimated_row_count
--------------+----------------------------+-------+----------------------
  public      | promo_codes                | table |                1000
  public      | rides                      | table |                 500
  public      | user_promo_codes           | table |                   0
  public      | users                      | table |                  50
  public      | vehicle_location_histories | table |                1000
  public      | vehicles                   | table |                  15
(6 rows)

Create a table

Suppose that you want MovR to offer ride-sharing services, in addition to vehicle-sharing services. You'll need to add a table for drivers to the movr database. To create a table, use CREATE TABLE followed by a table name, the column names, and the data type and constraint, if any, for each column:

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> CREATE TABLE drivers (
    id UUID NOT NULL,
    city STRING NOT NULL,
    name STRING,
    dl STRING UNIQUE,
    address STRING,
    CONSTRAINT "primary" PRIMARY KEY (city ASC, id ASC)
);

Table and column names must follow these rules. Also, when you do not explicitly define a primary key, CockroachDB will automatically add a hidden rowid column as the primary key.

To avoid an error in case the table already exists, you can include IF NOT EXISTS:

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> CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS drivers (
    id UUID NOT NULL,
    city STRING NOT NULL,
    name STRING,
    dl STRING UNIQUE,
    address STRING,
    CONSTRAINT "primary" PRIMARY KEY (city ASC, id ASC)
);

To show all of the columns from a table, use the SHOW COLUMNS FROM <table> statement or the \d <table> shell command:

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> SHOW COLUMNS FROM drivers;
  column_name | data_type | is_nullable | column_default | generation_expression |         indices          | is_hidden
--------------+-----------+-------------+----------------+-----------------------+--------------------------+------------
  id          | UUID      |    false    | NULL           |                       | {drivers_dl_key,primary} |   false
  city        | STRING    |    false    | NULL           |                       | {drivers_dl_key,primary} |   false
  name        | STRING    |    true     | NULL           |                       | {primary}                |   false
  dl          | STRING    |    true     | NULL           |                       | {drivers_dl_key,primary} |   false
  address     | STRING    |    true     | NULL           |                       | {primary}                |   false
(5 rows)

Insert rows

To insert a row into a table, use INSERT INTO followed by the table name and then the column values listed in the order in which the columns appear in the table:

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> INSERT INTO drivers VALUES
    ('c28f5c28-f5c2-4000-8000-000000000026', 'new york', 'Petee', 'ABC-1234', '101 5th Ave');

If you want to pass column values in a different order, list the column names explicitly and provide the column values in the corresponding order:

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> INSERT INTO drivers (name, city, dl, address, id) VALUES
    ('Adam Driver', 'chicago', 'DEF-5678', '201 E Randolph St', '1eb851eb-851e-4800-8000-000000000006');

To insert multiple rows into a table, use a comma-separated list of parentheses, each containing column values for one row:

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> INSERT INTO drivers VALUES
    ('8a3d70a3-d70a-4000-8000-00000000001b', 'seattle', 'Eric', 'GHI-9123', '400 Broad St'),
    ('9eb851eb-851e-4800-8000-00000000001f', 'new york', 'Harry Potter', 'JKL-456', '214 W 43rd St');

Default values are used when you leave specific columns out of your statement, or when you explicitly request default values. For example, both of the following statements create a row where the name, dl, and address entries each contain their default value, in this case NULL:

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> INSERT INTO drivers (id, city) VALUES
    ('70a3d70a-3d70-4400-8000-000000000016', 'chicago');
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> INSERT INTO drivers (id, city, name, dl, address) VALUES
    ('b851eb85-1eb8-4000-8000-000000000024', 'seattle', DEFAULT, DEFAULT, DEFAULT);
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> SELECT * FROM drivers WHERE id in ('70a3d70a-3d70-4400-8000-000000000016', 'b851eb85-1eb8-4000-8000-000000000024');
                   id                  |  city   | name |  dl  | address
+--------------------------------------+---------+------+------+---------+
  70a3d70a-3d70-4400-8000-000000000016 | chicago | NULL | NULL | NULL
  b851eb85-1eb8-4000-8000-000000000024 | seattle | NULL | NULL | NULL
(2 rows)

Create an index

Indexes help locate data without having to look through every row of a table. They're automatically created for the primary key of a table and any columns with a UNIQUE constraint.

To create an index for non-unique columns, use CREATE INDEX followed by an optional index name and an ON clause identifying the table and column(s) to index. For each column, you can choose whether to sort ascending (ASC) or descending (DESC).

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> CREATE INDEX name_idx ON users (name DESC);

You can create indexes during table creation as well; just include the INDEX keyword followed by an optional index name and the column(s) to index:

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> CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS drivers (
    id UUID NOT NULL,
    city STRING NOT NULL,
    name STRING,
    dl STRING,
    address STRING,
    INDEX name_idx (name),
    CONSTRAINT "primary" PRIMARY KEY (city ASC, id ASC)
);

Show indexes

To show the indexes on a table, use SHOW INDEX FROM followed by the name of the table:

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> SHOW INDEX FROM users;
  table_name | index_name | non_unique | seq_in_index | column_name | direction | storing | implicit | visible
-------------+------------+------------+--------------+-------------+-----------+---------+----------+----------
  users      | name_idx   |     t      |            1 | name        | DESC      |    f    |    f     |    t
  users      | name_idx   |     t      |            2 | city        | ASC       |    f    |    t     |    t
  users      | name_idx   |     t      |            3 | id          | ASC       |    f    |    t     |    t
  users      | users_pkey |     f      |            1 | city        | ASC       |    f    |    f     |    t
  users      | users_pkey |     f      |            2 | id          | ASC       |    f    |    f     |    t
  users      | users_pkey |     f      |            3 | name        | N/A       |    t    |    f     |    t
  users      | users_pkey |     f      |            4 | address     | N/A       |    t    |    f     |    t
  users      | users_pkey |     f      |            5 | credit_card | N/A       |    t    |    f     |    t
(8 rows)

Query a table

To query a table, use SELECT followed by a comma-separated list of the columns to be returned and the table from which to retrieve the data. You can also use the LIMIT clause to restrict the number of rows retrieved:

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> SELECT name FROM users LIMIT 10;
        name
+-------------------+
  William Wood
  Victoria Jennings
  Tyler Dalton
  Tony Ortiz
  Tina Miller
  Taylor Cunningham
  Susan Morse
  Steven Lara
  Stephen Diaz
  Sarah Wang DDS
(10 rows)

To retrieve all columns, use the * wildcard:

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> SELECT * FROM users LIMIT 10;
                   id                  |   city    |        name        |            address             | credit_card
+--------------------------------------+-----------+--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------+
  c28f5c28-f5c2-4000-8000-000000000026 | amsterdam | Maria Weber        | 14729 Karen Radial             | 5844236997
  c7ae147a-e147-4000-8000-000000000027 | amsterdam | Tina Miller        | 97521 Mark Extensions          | 8880478663
  cccccccc-cccc-4000-8000-000000000028 | amsterdam | Taylor Cunningham  | 89214 Jennifer Well            | 5130593761
  d1eb851e-b851-4800-8000-000000000029 | amsterdam | Kimberly Alexander | 48474 Alfred Hollow            | 4059628542
  19999999-9999-4a00-8000-000000000005 | boston    | Nicole Mcmahon     | 11540 Patton Extensions        | 0303726947
  1eb851eb-851e-4800-8000-000000000006 | boston    | Brian Campbell     | 92025 Yang Village             | 9016427332
  23d70a3d-70a3-4800-8000-000000000007 | boston    | Carl Mcguire       | 60124 Palmer Mews Apt. 49      | 4566257702
  28f5c28f-5c28-4600-8000-000000000008 | boston    | Jennifer Sanders   | 19121 Padilla Brooks Apt. 12   | 1350968125
  80000000-0000-4000-8000-000000000019 | chicago   | Matthew Clay       | 49220 Lisa Junctions           | 9132291015
  851eb851-eb85-4000-8000-00000000001a | chicago   | Samantha Coffey    | 6423 Jessica Underpass Apt. 87 | 9437219051
(10 rows)

To filter the results, add a WHERE clause identifying the columns and values to filter on:

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> SELECT id, name FROM users WHERE city = 'san francisco';
                   id                  |       name
---------------------------------------+-------------------
  75c28f5c-28f5-4400-8000-000000000017 | William Wood
  7ae147ae-147a-4000-8000-000000000018 | Alfred Garcia
  80000000-0000-4000-8000-000000000019 | Matthew Clay
  851eb851-eb85-4000-8000-00000000001a | Samantha Coffey
  8a3d70a3-d70a-4000-8000-00000000001b | Jessica Martinez
(5 rows)

To sort the results, add an ORDER BY clause identifying the columns to sort by. For each column, you can choose whether to sort ascending (ASC) or descending (DESC).

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> SELECT city, type, current_location FROM vehicles ORDER BY city, type DESC;
      city      |    type    |        current_location
+---------------+------------+--------------------------------+
  amsterdam     | skateboard | 19202 Edward Pass
  boston        | scooter    | 19659 Christina Ville
  chicago       | skateboard | 69721 Noah River
  detroit       | scooter    | 43051 Jonathan Fords Suite 36
  los angeles   | skateboard | 49164 Anna Mission Apt. 38
  minneapolis   | scooter    | 62609 Stephanie Route
  minneapolis   | scooter    | 57637 Mitchell Shoals Suite 59
  new york      | skateboard | 64110 Richard Crescent
  new york      | scooter    | 86667 Edwards Valley
  paris         | skateboard | 2505 Harrison Parkway Apt. 89
  rome          | bike       | 64935 Matthew Flats Suite 55
  san francisco | skateboard | 81472 Morris Run
  san francisco | scooter    | 91427 Steven Spurs Apt. 49
  seattle       | bike       | 37754 Farmer Extension
  washington dc | scooter    | 47259 Natasha Cliffs
(15 rows)

Update rows

To update rows in a table, use UPDATE followed by the table name, a SET clause identifying the columns to update and their new values, and a WHERE clause identifying the rows to update:

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> UPDATE promo_codes SET (description, rules) = ('EXPIRED', '{"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}') WHERE expiration_time < '2019-01-22 03:04:05+00:00';
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> SELECT code, description, rules FROM promo_codes LIMIT 10;
             code            | description |                    rules
-----------------------------+-------------+----------------------------------------------
  0_explain_theory_something | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
  100_address_garden_certain | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
  101_system_skin_night      | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
  102_card_professional_kid  | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
  103_now_project_focus      | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
  104_long_become_prove      | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
  105_republican_guess_arm   | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
  106_court_especially_plan  | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
  107_she_matter_ten         | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
  108_wind_marriage_for      | EXPIRED     | {"type": "percent_discount", "value": "0%"}
(10 rows)

If a table has a primary key, you can use that in the WHERE clause to reliably update specific rows; otherwise, each row matching the WHERE clause is updated. When there's no WHERE clause, all rows in the table are updated.

Delete rows

To delete rows from a table, use DELETE FROM followed by the table name and a WHERE clause identifying the rows to delete:

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> DELETE FROM promo_codes WHERE description = 'EXPIRED';
DELETE 669

Just as with the UPDATE statement, if a table has a primary key, you can use that in the WHERE clause to reliably delete specific rows; otherwise, each row matching the WHERE clause is deleted. When there's no WHERE clause, all rows in the table are deleted.

Remove a table

When you no longer need a table, use DROP TABLE followed by the table name to remove the table and all its data:

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> DROP TABLE drivers;

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