I answered this question in 2009. At that time there was no syntax in MySQL to rename an index.
Since then, MySQL 5.7 introduced an ALTER TABLE RENAME INDEX
syntax.
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/alter-table.html says in part:
RENAME INDEX old_index_name TO new_index_name
renames an index. This is a MySQL extension to standard SQL. The content of the table remains unchanged. old_index_name
must be the name of an existing index in the table that is not dropped by the same ALTER TABLE
statement. new_index_name
is the new index name, which cannot duplicate the name of an index in the resulting table after changes have been applied. Neither index name can be PRIMARY
.
Earlier versions of MySQL, e.g. 5.6 and earlier, support no syntax in ALTER TABLE
to rename an index (or key, which is a synonym).
The only solution was to ALTER TABLE DROP KEY oldkeyname, ADD KEY newkeyname (...)
.
There is no ALTER INDEX
command in MySQL. You can only DROP INDEX
and then CREATE INDEX
with the new name.
Regarding your update above: perhaps the documentation isn't precise enough. Regardless, there's no SQL syntax to rename an index.
An index is a data structure that can be rebuilt from the data (in fact it's recommended to rebuild indexes periodically with OPTIMIZE TABLE
). It takes some time, but it's a commonplace operation. Indexes data structures are separate from table data, so adding or dropping an index shouldn't need to touch the table data, as the documentation says.
Regarding the .frm
file, MySQL does not support editing the .frm
file. I wouldn't do it for any reason. You are 100% guaranteed to corrupt your table and make it unusable.
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