When you create a spatial index, you need to provide the following information:
- A name for the index
- The name of the table that contains the spatial column on which the index is to be defined
- The name of the spatial column on which the index is to be defined
- The grid sizes (only necessary for databases that use a grid index, such as Oracle or DB2)
The following are examples of creating a spatial index on an ST_Geometry column in each of the supported databases.
- Open an SQL editor and connect to your database.
- For Oracle, PostgreSQL, DB2, and Informix, use a CREATE INDEX statement to create the spatial index. For SQLite, use the CreateSpatialIndex function.
- Oracle
CREATE INDEX sa_idx ON sensitive_areas(zone) INDEXTYPE IS sde.st_spatial_index PARAMETERS('st_grids=1,3,0 st_srid=4326'); CREATE INDEX hs_idx ON hazardous_sites(location) INDEXTYPE IS sde.st_spatial_index PARAMETERS('st_grids=1,0,0 st_srid=4326');
- PostgreSQL
CREATE INDEX sa_idx ON sensitive_areas USING gist(zone st_geometry_ops); CREATE INDEX hs_idx ON hazardous_sites USING gist(location st_geometry_ops);
- DB2
CREATE INDEX sa_idx ON sensitive_areas(zone) EXTEND USING db2gse.spatial_index (1.0, 3.0, 0.0) CREATE INDEX hs_idx ON hazardous_sites(location) EXTEND USING db2gse.spatial_index (1.0, 0.0, 0.0)
- Informix
CREATE INDEX sa_ix ON sensitive_areas (zone ST_Geometry_ops) USING RTREE; CREATE INDEX hs_ix ON hazardous_sites (location ST_Geometry_ops) USING RTREE;
- SQLite
SELECT CreateSpatialIndex('mydatabase','sensitive_areas','zone','rtreexy'); SELECT CreateSpatialIndex('mydatabase','hazardous_sites','location','rtreexy');
- Oracle