# Replace An Index With A Unique Index Indexes and uniqueness constraints often go together. In fact, in Postgres, when you create a unique constraint, an index is created under the hood to support that constraint. What if you already have an index, but you want to turn it into a unique index? There is no way to alter or update the index to be unique. Instead, what you'll want to do is drop the index and then recreate it as a unique index. Here's how you can do that with the Rails migration DSL: ```ruby class ReplaceIndexWithUniqueIndex < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.2] disable_ddl_transaction! def up remove_index :users_roles, [:user_id, :role_id] add_index :users_roles, [:user_id, :role_id], unique: true, algorithm: :concurrently end def down remove_index :users_roles, [:user_id, :role_id] add_index :users_roles, [:user_id, :role_id], algorithm: :concurrently end end ``` This removes the original multi-column index and then adds back in a unique index that covers the same columns. I added `disable_ddl_transactions!` so that the new index could be added concurrently. I've also included a `down` migration that reverses the process in case a rollback is needed.