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FLASHBACK TABLE

Flashback a table to an earlier version with a snapshot ID or timestamp, only involving metadata operations, making it a fast process.

By the snapshot ID or timestamp you specify in the command, Databend flashback the table to a prior state where the snapshot was created. To retrieve snapshot IDs and timestamps of a table, use FUSE_SNAPSHOT.

The capability to flash back a table is subject to these conditions:

  • The command only existing tables to their prior states. To recover a dropped table, use UNDROP TABLE.

  • Flashback a table is part of Databend's time travel feature. Before using the command, make sure the table you want to flashback is eligible for time travel. For example, the command doesn't work for transient tables because Databend does not create or store snapshots for such tables.

  • You cannot roll back after flashback a table to a prior state, but you can flash back the table again to an earlier state.

  • Databend recommends this command for emergency recovery only. To query the history data of a table, use the AT clause.

Syntax

-- Restore with a snapshot ID
ALTER TABLE <table> FLASHBACK TO (SNAPSHOT => '<snapshot-id>');

-- Restore with a snapshot timestamp
ALTER TABLE <table> FLASHBACK TO (TIMESTAMP => '<timestamp>'::TIMESTAMP);

Example

Step 1: Create a sample users table and insert data

-- Create a sample users table
CREATE TABLE users (
id INT,
first_name VARCHAR,
last_name VARCHAR,
email VARCHAR,
registration_date TIMESTAMP
);

-- Insert sample data
INSERT INTO users (id, first_name, last_name, email, registration_date)
VALUES (1, 'John', 'Doe', 'john.doe@example.com', '2023-01-01 00:00:00'),
(2, 'Jane', 'Doe', 'jane.doe@example.com', '2023-01-02 00:00:00');

Data:

SELECT * FROM users;
+------+------------+-----------+----------------------+----------------------------+
| id | first_name | last_name | email | registration_date |
+------+------------+-----------+----------------------+----------------------------+
| 1 | John | Doe | john.doe@example.com | 2023-01-01 00:00:00.000000 |
| 2 | Jane | Doe | jane.doe@example.com | 2023-01-02 00:00:00.000000 |
+------+------------+-----------+----------------------+----------------------------+

Snapshots:

SELECT * FROM Fuse_snapshot('default', 'users')\G;
*************************** 1. row ***************************
snapshot_id: c5c538d6b8bc42f483eefbddd000af7d
snapshot_location: 29356/44446/_ss/c5c538d6b8bc42f483eefbddd000af7d_v2.json
format_version: 2
previous_snapshot_id: NULL
segment_count: 1
block_count: 1
row_count: 2
bytes_uncompressed: 150
bytes_compressed: 829
index_size: 1028
timestamp: 2023-04-19 04:20:25.062854

Step 2: Simulate an accidental delete operation

-- Simulate an accidental delete operation
DELETE FROM users WHERE id = 1;

Data:

+------+------------+-----------+----------------------+----------------------------+
| id | first_name | last_name | email | registration_date |
+------+------------+-----------+----------------------+----------------------------+
| 2 | Jane | Doe | jane.doe@example.com | 2023-01-02 00:00:00.000000 |
+------+------------+-----------+----------------------+----------------------------+

Snapshots:

SELECT * FROM Fuse_snapshot('default', 'users')\G;
*************************** 1. row ***************************
snapshot_id: 7193af51a4c9423ebd6ddbb04327b280
snapshot_location: 29356/44446/_ss/7193af51a4c9423ebd6ddbb04327b280_v2.json
format_version: 2
previous_snapshot_id: c5c538d6b8bc42f483eefbddd000af7d
segment_count: 1
block_count: 1
row_count: 1
bytes_uncompressed: 87
bytes_compressed: 778
index_size: 1028
timestamp: 2023-04-19 04:22:20.390430
*************************** 2. row ***************************
snapshot_id: c5c538d6b8bc42f483eefbddd000af7d
snapshot_location: 29356/44446/_ss/c5c538d6b8bc42f483eefbddd000af7d_v2.json
format_version: 2
previous_snapshot_id: NULL
segment_count: 1
block_count: 1
row_count: 2
bytes_uncompressed: 150
bytes_compressed: 829
index_size: 1028
timestamp: 2023-04-19 04:20:25.062854

Step 3: Find the snapshot ID before the delete operation

-- Assume the snapshot_id from the previous query is 'xxxxxx'
-- Restore the table to the snapshot before the delete operation
ALTER TABLE users FLASHBACK TO (SNAPSHOT => 'c5c538d6b8bc42f483eefbddd000af7d');

Data:

SELECT * FROM users;
+------+------------+-----------+----------------------+----------------------------+
| id | first_name | last_name | email | registration_date |
+------+------------+-----------+----------------------+----------------------------+
| 1 | John | Doe | john.doe@example.com | 2023-01-01 00:00:00.000000 |
| 2 | Jane | Doe | jane.doe@example.com | 2023-01-02 00:00:00.000000 |
+------+------------+-----------+----------------------+----------------------------+

Snapshot:

SELECT * FROM Fuse_snapshot('default', 'users')\G;
*************************** 1. row ***************************
snapshot_id: c5c538d6b8bc42f483eefbddd000af7d
snapshot_location: 29356/44446/_ss/c5c538d6b8bc42f483eefbddd000af7d_v2.json
format_version: 2
previous_snapshot_id: NULL
segment_count: 1
block_count: 1
row_count: 2
bytes_uncompressed: 150
bytes_compressed: 829
index_size: 1028
timestamp: 2023-04-19 04:20:25.062854
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