The SET
statement can modify one of the session configuration variables. These can also be queried via SHOW
.
SET
statements are lost. It is therefore more reliable to configure the session in the client's connection string. For examples in different languages, see the Build an App with CockroachDB tutorials.Required privileges
No privileges are required to modify the session settings.
Synopsis
SET
statement for session settings is unrelated to the other SET TRANSACTION
and SET CLUSTER SETTING
statements.Parameters
The SET <session variable>
statement accepts two parameters: the
variable name and the value to use to modify the variable.
The variable name is case insensitive. The value can be a list of one or more items. For example, the variable search_path
is multi-valued.
Supported variables
Variable name | Description | Initial value | Modify with
SET
? |
View with
SHOW
? |
application_name
|
The current application name for statistics collection. | Empty string, or cockroach for sessions from the built-in SQL client. |
Yes | Yes |
bytea_output
|
The mode for conversions from STRING to BYTES . |
hex | Yes | Yes |
database
|
The current database. | Database in connection string, or empty if not specified. | Yes | Yes |
default_int_size
|
The size, in bytes, of an INT type. |
8
|
Yes | Yes |
default_transaction_isolation
|
All transactions execute with SERIALIZABLE isolation. See Transactions: Isolation levels. |
SERIALIZABLE
|
No | Yes |
default_transaction_read_only
|
The default transaction access mode for the current session. If set to on , only read operations are allowed in transactions in the current session; if set to off , both read and write operations are allowed. See SET TRANSACTION
for more details. |
off
|
Yes | Yes |
distsql
|
The query distribution mode for the session. By default, CockroachDB determines which queries are faster to execute if distributed across multiple nodes, and all other queries are run through the gateway node. |
auto
|
Yes | Yes |
extra_float_digits
|
The number of digits displayed for floating-point values. Only values between -15 and 3 are supported. |
0
|
Yes | Yes |
reorder_joins_limit
|
Maximum number of joins that the optimizer will attempt to reorder when searching for an optimal query execution plan. For more information, see Join reordering. |
4
|
Yes | Yes |
force_savepoint_restart |
When set to true , allows the SAVEPOINT statement to accept any name for a savepoint. |
off
|
Yes | Yes |
node_id
|
The ID of the node currently connected to. This variable is particularly useful for verifying load balanced connections. |
Node-dependent | No | Yes |
optimizer
|
The mode in which a query execution plan is generated. If set to on , the cost-based optimizer is enabled by default and the heuristic planner will only be used if the query is not supported by the cost-based optimizer; if set to off , all queries are run through the legacy heuristic planner. |
on
|
Yes | Yes |
results_buffer_size
|
The default size of the buffer that accumulates results for a statement or a batch of statements before they are sent to the client. This can also be set for all connections using the 'sql.defaults.results_buffer_size' cluster setting. Note that auto-retries generally only happen while no results have been delivered to the client, so reducing this size can increase the number of retriable errors a client receives. On the other hand, increasing the buffer size can increase the delay until the client receives the first result row. Setting to 0 disables any buffering. |
16384
|
Yes | Yes |
search_path
|
A list of schemas that will be searched to resolve unqualified table or function names. For more details, see SQL name resolution. |
public
|
Yes | Yes |
server_version
|
The version of PostgreSQL that CockroachDB emulates. | Version-dependent | No | Yes |
server_version_num
|
The version of PostgreSQL that CockroachDB emulates. | Version-dependent | Yes | Yes |
session_user
|
The user connected for the current session. | User in connection string | No | Yes |
sql_safe_updates
|
If false , potentially unsafe SQL statements are allowed, including DROP of a non-empty database and all dependent objects, DELETE without a WHERE clause, UPDATE without a WHERE clause, and ALTER TABLE .. DROP COLUMN . See Allow Potentially Unsafe SQL Statements for more details. |
true for interactive sessions from the built-in SQL client,false for sessions from other clients |
Yes | Yes |
statement_timeout
|
The amount of time a statement can run before being stopped. This value can be an int (e.g., 10 ) and will be interpreted as milliseconds. It can also be an interval or string argument, where the string can be parsed as a valid interval (e.g., '4s' ). A value of 0 turns it off. |
0s
|
Yes | Yes |
timezone
|
The default time zone for the current session. This session variable was named "time zone" (with a space) in CockroachDB 1.x. It has been renamed for compatibility with PostgreSQL. |
UTC
|
Yes | Yes |
tracing
|
The trace recording state. |
off
|
Yes | |
transaction_isolation
|
All transactions execute with SERIALIZABLE isolation. See Transactions: Isolation levels. This session variable was called transaction isolation level (with spaces) in CockroachDB 1.x. It has been renamed for compatibility with PostgreSQL. |
SERIALIZABLE
|
No | Yes |
transaction_priority
|
The priority of the current transaction. See Transactions: Isolation levels for more details. This session variable was called transaction priority (with a space) in CockroachDB 1.x. It has been renamed for compatibility with PostgreSQL. |
NORMAL
|
Yes | Yes |
transaction_read_only
|
The access mode of the current transaction. See Set Transaction for more details. |
off
|
Yes | Yes |
transaction_status
|
The state of the current transaction. See Transactions for more details. This session variable was called transaction status (with a space) in CockroachDB 1.x. It has been renamed for compatibility with PostgreSQL. |
NoTxn
|
No | Yes |
client_encoding
|
(Reserved; exposed only for ORM compatibility.) |
UTF8
|
No | Yes |
client_min_messages
|
(Reserved; exposed only for ORM compatibility.) |
notice
|
No | Yes |
datestyle
|
(Reserved; exposed only for ORM compatibility.) |
ISO
|
No | Yes |
integer_datetimes
|
(Reserved; exposed only for ORM compatibility.) |
on
|
No | Yes |
intervalstyle
|
(Reserved; exposed only for ORM compatibility.) |
postgres
|
No | Yes |
max_index_keys
|
(Reserved; exposed only for ORM compatibility.) |
32
|
No | Yes |
standard_conforming_strings
|
(Reserved; exposed only for ORM compatibility.) |
on
|
No | Yes |
server_encoding
|
(Reserved; exposed only for ORM compatibility.) |
UTF8
|
Yes | Yes |
Special syntax cases:
Syntax | Equivalent to | Notes |
---|---|---|
USE ... |
SET database = ... |
This is provided as convenience for users with a MySQL/MSSQL background. |
SET NAMES ... |
SET client_encoding = ... |
This is provided for compatibility with PostgreSQL clients. |
SET SCHEMA <name> |
SET search_path = <name> |
This is provided for better compatibility with PostgreSQL. |
SET SESSION CHARACTERISTICS AS TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL ... |
SET default_transaction_isolation = ... |
This is provided for compatibility with standard SQL. |
SET TIME ZONE ... |
SET timezone = ... |
This is provided for compatibility with PostgreSQL clients. |
Examples
Set simple variables
The following demonstrates how SET
can be used to configure the
default database for the current session:
> SET database = bank;
> SHOW database;
+----------+
| database |
+----------+
| bank |
+----------+
(1 row)
Set variables to values containing spaces
The following demonstrates how to use quoting to use values containing spaces:
> SET database = "database name with spaces";
> SHOW database;
+---------------------------+
| database |
+---------------------------+
| database name with spaces |
+---------------------------+
(1 row)
Set variables to a list of values
The following demonstrates how to assign a list of values:
> SET search_path = pg_catalog,public;
> SHOW search_path;
+---------------------------+
| search_path |
+---------------------------+
| pg_catalog, public |
+---------------------------+
(1 row)
Reset a variable to its default value
RESET
to reset a session variable as well.> SHOW search_path;
+-------------+
| search_path |
+-------------+
| public |
+-------------+
(1 row)
> SET search_path = 'app';
> SHOW search_path;
+-------------+
| search_path |
+-------------+
| app |
+-------------+
(1 row)
> SET search_path = DEFAULT;
> SHOW search_path;
+-------------+
| search_path |
+-------------+
| public |
+-------------+
(1 row)
SET TIME ZONE
You can control your client's default time zone for the current session with SET TIME ZONE
. This will apply a session offset to all TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE
values.
SET TIME ZONE
, CockroachDB uses UTC as the default time zone.Parameters
The time zone value indicates the time zone for the current session.
This value can be a string representation of a local system-defined
time zone (e.g., 'EST'
, 'America/New_York'
) or a positive or
negative numeric offset from UTC (e.g., -7
, +7
). Also, DEFAULT
,
LOCAL
, or 0
sets the session time zone to UTC
.
Example: Set the default time zone via SET TIME ZONE
> SET TIME ZONE 'EST'; -- same as SET "timezone" = 'EST'
> SHOW TIME ZONE;
+-----------+
| time zone |
+-----------+
| EST |
+-----------+
(1 row)
> SET TIME ZONE DEFAULT; -- same as SET "timezone" = DEFAULT
> SHOW TIME ZONE;
+-----------+
| time zone |
+-----------+
| UTC |
+-----------+
(1 row)
SET TRACING
SET TRACING
changes the trace recording state of the current session. A trace recording can be inspected with the SHOW TRACE FOR SESSION
statement.
Value | Description |
---|---|
off |
Trace recording is disabled. |
cluster |
Trace recording is enabled; distributed traces are collected. |
on |
Same as cluster . |
kv |
Same as cluster except that "kv messages" are collected instead of regular trace messages. See SHOW TRACE FOR SESSION . |
local |
Trace recording is enabled; only trace messages issued by the local node are collected. |
results |
Result rows and row counts are copied to the session trace. This must be specified to in order for the output of a query to be printed in the session trace. Example: SET tracing = kv, results; |