38

Doing my databases reading when I read...

Schema: Is a container for objects

Tablespace: A logical storage unit for objects

Can anyone explain the difference between these?

3 Answers 3

62

A schema is a namespace - a logical thing. It is used to organize the names of database objects. It has nothing to do with the way the data is stored.

A tablespace is a physical thing. It's a container for data and has nothing to do with the logical organization of the database objects.

A single object (e.g. a table) could be spread across multiple tablespaces (depending on the DBMS being used) but it can only be defined in a single schema. The table schema_1.table_1 is a different table than schema_2.table_1 - although the "plain" name is the same, the fully qualified name is different and therefore those are two different tables.

Objects that are organized in the same schema are not necessarily stored in the same tablespace. And a single tablespace can contain objects from different schemas.

Schemas (and catalogs, which are another level of namespace) are part of the SQL language and are defined in the SQL standard.

Tablespaces are part of the physical storage and are DBMS-specific (although nearly all DBMS support a concept like that) and are not part of the SQL query language (as defined by the SQL standard). They are, however, defined and managed through vendor-specific SQL/DDL statements.

8

Schema operates the logical structures.
While Tablespaces operate physical datafiles that constitute the database.

From Oracle documentation:

Schema:
A schema is a collection of database objects. A schema is owned by a database user and has the same name as that user. Schema objects are the logical structures that directly refer to the database's data. Schema objects include structures like tables, views, and indexes. (There is no relationship between a tablespace and a schema. Objects in the same schema can be in different tablespaces, and a tablespace can hold objects from different schemas.)

Tablespaces:
A database is divided into one or more logical storage units called tablespaces. Tablespaces are divided into logical units of storage called segments, which are further divided into extents. Extents are a collection of contiguous blocks. The size of a tablespace is the size of the datafiles that constitute the tablespace. The size of a database is the collective size of the tablespaces that constitute the database.

You can enlarge a database in three ways:

Add a datafile to a tablespace

Add a new tablespace

Increase the size of a datafile
1

There is no relationship between schemas and tablespaces: a tablespace can contain objects from different schemas, and the objects for a schema can be contained in different tablespaces.

FROM ORACLE DOCUMENTATION. https://docs.oracle.com/cd/B10500_01/server.920/a96524/c11schem.htm

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.