# Use Rename To Hot Swap Two Tables The [`alter table`](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-altertable.html) command can be used to [rename a table](https://www.postgresqltutorial.com/postgresql-tutorial/postgresql-rename-table/). Because it is changing the name of a reference rather than actually moving any data around, it is very fast. We can exploit the speed of a _rename_ to hot swap two tables. This is useful for a situation where we've created an identical table with a small fraction of the data of the original table. By hot swapping them, we've exchanged the large table for a smaller one without our application code noticing anything happened. Let's assume we have a massive `events` table and then a much smaller `new_events` table with the same structure. The following transaction will swap those two tables in the blink of an eye. ```sql begin; alter table events rename to old_events; alter table new_events rename to events; commit; ``` The resulting `old_events` table can then be deleted at our convenience. The other nice thing about this approach is that, before deleting `old_events`, you can easily and quickly swap them back using the same approach. It is always a comfort when huge changes like this are easy to reverse if necessary.