SET
and RESET
¶
Change and restore settings at runtime. To get an overview of available CrateDB
settings, see Configuration. Only settings documented with Runtime: yes
can be changed.
Table of contents
Synopsis¶
SET [ SESSION | LOCAL ] setting_ident { = | TO } { setting_value | 'setting_value' | DEFAULT }
SET GLOBAL [ PERSISTENT | TRANSIENT ] { setting_ident [ = | TO ] { value | ident } } [, ...]
RESET GLOBAL setting_ident [, ...]
Description¶
SET GLOBAL
can be used to change a global cluster setting, see
Cluster-wide settings, to a different value. Using RESET
will reset
the cluster setting to its default value or to the setting value defined in the
configuration file, if it was set on a node start-up. The global cluster
settings can be applied to a cluster using PERSISTENT
and TRANSIENT
keywords to set a persistent level.
SET/SET SESSION
may affect the current session if the setting is supported.
Setting the unsupported settings will be ignored and logged with the WARN
logging level. See search_path, to get an
overview of the supported session setting parameters.
SET LOCAL
does not have any effect on CrateDB configurations. All SET
LOCAL
statements will be ignored by CrateDB and logged with the WARN
logging level.
SET SESSION/LOCAL
are introduced to be compliant with third-party
applications which use the PostgresSQL wire protocol.
Parameters¶
- setting_ident
The full qualified setting ident of the setting to set / reset.
- value
The value to set for the setting.
- ident
The ident to set for the setting.
- setting_value
The new value for the setting. It can be specified as string constants, identifiers, numbers, or comma-separated list of these, as appropriate for the particular setting.
- DEFAULT
Used for resetting the parameter to its default value.
Persistence¶
The default is TRANSIENT
. Settings that are set using the TRANSIENT
keyword will be discarded if the cluster is stopped or restarted.
Using the PERSISTENT
keyword will persist a value of the setting to a disk,
so that the setting will not be discarded if the cluster restarts.
Note
The persistence keyword can only be used within a SET
statement.